Great Britain’s far-left Labour government, led by Prime Minster Sir Keir Starmer, is cutting a deal with a Chinese wind energy company to install turbines as part of a North Sea wind farm project. British Treasury officials reportedly “brushed aside fears” that allowing a Chinese company to build critical infrastructure just off the coast of the United Kingdom poses a significant national security threat. Once complete, the Green Volt North Sea wind farm will be Europe’s largest floating so-called green energy project.
It is believed that Chancellor Rachel Reeves, roughly equivalent to U.S. Treasury Secretary, sold the plan to her Labour colleagues after China pledged to inject millions of pounds of investment into the United Kingdom if the deal was approved. “It is madness to let a hostile state install UK critical national infrastructure,” one Labour government source told The Sun. “But as far as the Treasury is concerned, it seems money is more important than security.”
“If a Chinese company supplies the turbines they have a legitimate excuse to visit any one at any time for maintenance,” a Ministry of Defence source warned. “That means they can install almost anything they like at any time. The worst case scenario is we have to assume every turbine could then be an antenna intercepting signals intelligence, or a sensor tracking ships or planes.”
CHINESE GOVT TIES.
The Chinese firm supplying the turbines—at half the cost of a European manufacturer—is Mingyang Smart Energy, China’s largest private wind turbine maker. Despite being an allegedly privately held company, Mingyang Smart Energy maintains lucrative contracts with the five largest state-owned power companies in China—suggesting the turbine company has deep ties with Chinese Communist Party (CCP) officials.
Even more concerning is Mingyang Smart Energy’s six years on the New York Stock Exchange, ending when Chairman and CEO Chuanwei Zhang moved to take the company private in 2015, completed in 2016. Zhang sheepishly admitted that his effort to take Mingyang Smart Energy private was funded not just by taking on debt and equity finance but by investment from “certain shareholders”—likely an allusion to high-ranking members of the CCP.