AMSC Announces $34M Of New Energy Power System Orders

AMSC® (NASDAQ:AMSC), a leading system provider of megawatt-scale power resiliency solutions that orchestrate the rhythm and harmony of power on the grid™ and protect and expand the capability

AMSC® (NASDAQ:AMSC), a leading system provider of megawatt-scale power resiliency solutions that orchestrate the rhythm and harmony of power on the grid™ and protect and expand the capability of our Navy’s fleet, today announced $34 million of new energy power systems orders. This includes orders for enclosed capacitor banks, harmonic filters, voltage controllers, rectifiers, sag mitigation solutions, and volt var optimizers. Approximately half of the revenue from these orders is expected to be recognized in fiscal year 2023.

 

“Fiscal year 2023 started with strong orders momentum for our new energy power systems,” said Daniel P. McGahn, Chairman, President and CEO, AMSC. “Our systems serve an increasingly diverse market. This series of orders represents a strong contribution from the renewables market, with wind and solar projects accounting for approximately one-third. Industrial orders, which also contributed to nearly one-third, were driven by metals, mining, and semiconductor projects. Additionally, we saw more than 10% of these new energy power systems orders come from serving the U.S. military providing efficient and reliable shore power to naval vessels. The new orders serving the U.S. military represent an exciting new opportunity for AMSC’s new energy power systems.”

AMSC’s new energy power systems include D-VAR® and D-VAR VVO® offerings as well as NEPSITM and NeeltranTM businesses. Customers utilize AMSC’s solutions to provide voltage control, power factor correction, and reactive compensation to stabilize the power grid and prevent undesirable events such as voltage collapse. The systems are designed to detect and instantaneously compensate for voltage disturbances. AMSC offers power conversion products. These products include transformers and rectifiers. Additionally, the systems help utilities manage their power quality concerns and expand grid capacity for renewable distributed generation.

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