The recent new highs of leading players in the overseas wind power sector are worth paying attention to.
I mentioned this company's movements as early as September last year, when it just completed the bidding for a large-scale wind power project in Australia. By the third quarter of 2025, the scale of overseas projects had reached 7,161.72MW, and more importantly, the overseas gross profit margin remained at a high level—this indicates that going overseas is not only about scale expansion but also maintaining stable profitability.
This company's vision is indeed forward-looking. It is not only leading in the wind power field but also seizing opportunities in multiple frontier areas. Take green alcohol as an example; the company first achieved a complete industrial chain closed-loop of wind power—green hydrogen—green alcohol/green ammonia in Inner Mongolia, and has signed long-term supply agreements with Maersk and Hapag-Lloyd for 500,000 tons and 250,000 tons annually, respectively. These are solid commercial orders.
They also have a layout in the commercial aerospace sector, holding shares related to Blue Arrow Aviation. From wind power to green hydrogen and then to aerospace, the industry matrix is becoming clearer. Such companies are entirely driven by fundamentals. The implementation of industry analysis data in 2024 makes valuation support more concrete.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
12 Likes
Reward
12
8
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
FUDwatcher
· 18h ago
Damn, that's really impressive. Can the profit margin for offshore wind power still be this stable?
View OriginalReply0
DeFiDoctor
· 12-29 14:58
The consultation records show that this company's stable overseas gross profit margin is what truly warrants attention — it's not just a symptom of scale.
View OriginalReply0
DegenWhisperer
· 12-29 14:55
Offshore wind power of 7161MW can still maintain high profitability, now that's a truly impressive story.
View OriginalReply0
wrekt_but_learning
· 12-29 14:51
Green hydrogen + green alcohol + aerospace, this pattern is indeed fierce. The profit margin from going overseas has also remained stable, indicating it's not a money-burning strategy to gain scale.
View OriginalReply0
NFTregretter
· 12-29 14:47
Uh... the green alcohol industry chain closed-loop is indeed solid, and Maersk signing the contract is no small matter.
View OriginalReply0
liquidation_watcher
· 12-29 14:36
This company does have some real substance; I understand the closed-loop logic of green hydrogen and green alcohol.
---
Export of 7,161MW still maintaining gross profit margin, this is true strength.
---
Wait, Blue Arrow Aviation? Wind power crossing into aerospace? That's a bit far-fetched...
---
Maersk and Hapag-Lloyd's orders are solidified, not just PPT pie-in-the-sky.
---
The industry matrix is clear and well-organized, but could being too greedy cause setbacks?
---
Last year's Australian project showed that this company is playing a big chess game.
---
Green hydrogen is truly the future, but the key now is whether mass production and stable supply can be achieved.
---
Fundamentals are the real driver; those who tell stories will eventually face a backlash.
---
Inner Mongolia wind power and green hydrogen integration... this combo punch is indeed excellent.
---
The question is, how do they maintain gross profit margins? With such fierce overseas competition, can they really stay steady?
View OriginalReply0
LiquidityNinja
· 12-29 14:32
A true industry chain closed loop—this is what you call strategic planning, not just hype.
View OriginalReply0
FlashLoanKing
· 12-29 14:32
I've long been confident in this logic. Offshore wind power + green hydrogen closed-loop is truly a winning combination.
The recent new highs of leading players in the overseas wind power sector are worth paying attention to.
I mentioned this company's movements as early as September last year, when it just completed the bidding for a large-scale wind power project in Australia. By the third quarter of 2025, the scale of overseas projects had reached 7,161.72MW, and more importantly, the overseas gross profit margin remained at a high level—this indicates that going overseas is not only about scale expansion but also maintaining stable profitability.
This company's vision is indeed forward-looking. It is not only leading in the wind power field but also seizing opportunities in multiple frontier areas. Take green alcohol as an example; the company first achieved a complete industrial chain closed-loop of wind power—green hydrogen—green alcohol/green ammonia in Inner Mongolia, and has signed long-term supply agreements with Maersk and Hapag-Lloyd for 500,000 tons and 250,000 tons annually, respectively. These are solid commercial orders.
They also have a layout in the commercial aerospace sector, holding shares related to Blue Arrow Aviation. From wind power to green hydrogen and then to aerospace, the industry matrix is becoming clearer. Such companies are entirely driven by fundamentals. The implementation of industry analysis data in 2024 makes valuation support more concrete.