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LM Wind Power Closing Little Rock Plant, Cutting About 470 Jobs

LM Wind Power
KATV-Channel 7

Once heralded as an advanced manufacturing success for Arkansas, LM Wind Power announced it will close its wind blade facility that has been in existence for more than a decade.

A spokesperson for GE Reneweable Energy, parent company to LM Wind Power, tells KATV television that the site will close later this year due to a decrease in demand for wind blades made at the plant.

“Due to declining demand for the specific blades made at the Little Rock facility and the need to streamline operations, GE Renewable Energy today announced that we will close our LM Wind Power site in Little Rock, Arkansas,” spokesman Tim Brown said.

“We understand that this is a difficult time to announce this decision and are taking a number of steps to provide additional support for our employees during this time, including continued pay for a minimum of four months. We will also pay their health insurance premiums for an additional six months to ensure they have coverage through at least the end of the year,” Brown said.

He added that the decision was not related to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Manufacturing will wrap up by end of April and the plant will be closed by the end of the year.

LM Wind Power was originally LM Glasfiber, a Danish company recruited to the state by former Gov. Mike Beebe. The $150 million plant was announced in July 2007 and opened in October 2008 employing over 600 workers at one time. It was originally touted to hire about 1,100 workers at a manufacturing facility in the Little Rock Port.

GE Renewable Energy closed on its acquisition of LM Wind Power in April 2017.

This story comes from the staff of Talk Business & Politics, a content partner with KUAR News. You can hear the weekly program on Mondays at 6:06 p.m.
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