GE Faces Antitrust Lawsuit Over Unlawful Efforts to Monopolize U.S. Variable Speed Wind Turbine Market
Additional lawsuit filed on patent infringement
NEW YORK, May 20 /PRNewswire/ -- Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Ltd. and Mitsubishi Power Systems Americas, Inc., a United States Delaware corporation, today filed an antitrust lawsuit in United States District Court against General Electric Company (GE). The complaint charges GE with a scheme to monopolize the market for variable speed wind turbines in the United States. Mitsubishi seeks damages that will be calculated during litigation but are expected to be in the hundreds of millions of dollars and probably be in excess of a billion.
In the complaint filed in the U.S. District Court's Western District of Arkansas, Mitsubishi alleges that after Mitsubishi gained a foothold in the United States market in 2006, GE embarked on an unlawful anticompetitive scheme to drive Mitsubishi suppliers out of the U.S. market.
In addition, attorneys for Mitsubishi Heavy Industry, Ltd. (MHI) today filed suit in United States District Court's Middle District of Florida against General Electric Company charging them with infringing a key Mitsubishi patent for variable speed wind turbines, alleging that GE has been making, using, selling and offering to sell infringing turbines without any authorization or license to do so.
As the nation is poised to embrace new wind turbines – a GE strategy to monopolize
Mitsubishi's complaint alleges that GE used their lawsuits as a marketing tool. Company spokeswoman Sonia Williams explained, "GE's patent infringement lawsuit deterred customers from purchasing variable speed wind turbines from Mitsubishi. Our lawsuit documents how GE representatives intimidated Mitsubishi customers by advising them to either purchase license agreements from GE or face infringement risk."
Ms. Williams noted that Mitsubishi has signed a development agreement with the State of Arkansas to construct and operate a wind turbine manufacturing plant in Fort Smith, Arkansas, on 100 acres of land formerly part of Fort Chaffee. Mitsubishi is expected to invest well over $100 million dollars in this project. The plant, once built, will employ over three hundred people to build the very variable speed wind turbine technology that is at the center of GE's attacks. "If GE's unlawful conduct continues, the plant will have to sit idle, as there may be no U.S. demand for Mitsubishi turbines at a time when America is moving forward with an energy strategy that seeks to harness the power of the wind."
Throwing up sham lawsuits to freeze the market
The complaint further alleges that, as part of its unlawful scheme, GE made baseless claims of patent infringement against Mitsubishi. Ms. Williams stated that "GE brought these meritless claims against Mitsubishi and frightened potential wind turbine purchasers from purchasing Mitsubishi's turbines, preventing Mitsubishi's entry into the U.S. market. GE's scheme has worked, to the disadvantage of competition and Mitsubishi's innovative variable speed turbines." GE launched its first lawsuit for patent infringement against Mitsubishi in February 2008, claiming Mitsubishi's 2.4 MW wind turbine infringed three of GE's patents. "Prior to the initiation of GE's first lawsuit against Mitsubishi, Mitsubishi had sales of approximately $2 billion per year of variable speed wind turbines in the United States. Since GE's litigation campaign began over two years ago, MPSA has not sold a single variable speed turbine in the United States," Ms. Williams said.
According to the complaint, the primary patent claim that GE has asserted against Mitsubishi – the '039 patent – is based on the same technology that GE disclosed in a public report in the early 1980s as part of a taxpayer funded research program. Ms. Williams states that "the invention asserted in the patent claim was not an original idea. GE knew that its '039 patent was invalid because of its own prior, publicly funded work in the 1980s. Despite this, GE filed and aggressively litigated suits against Mitsubishi for infringing the '039 patent."
Ms. Williams says the complaint explains that, only weeks after GE lost before the U.S. International Trade Commission on its patent infringement claims, GE filed a new lawsuit against Mitsubishi alleging infringement of two other GE patents not mentioned in its first suit. GE's new lawsuit prolonged the period of uncertainty over Mitsubishi wind turbines in the U.S. market. At the time of filing this new lawsuit, GE led potential customers to believe that each time Mitsubishi defeats GE's claims of infringement in court, GE will simply file more patent claims.
Confronting GE
"Given the enormous role of variable speed turbines, GE has shortchanged the American consumer by attempting to position itself as the sole supplier of these machines to a nation that is demanding green alternative sources of energy. This lawsuit calls upon the court to end GE's unlawful practices," concluded Ms. Williams.
SOURCE Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Ltd.; Mitsubishi Power Systems Americas, Inc.
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