Our Locations
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USA Office
Skyline Tower, 10900 N.E. 4th Street, Suite 2300
+1 (425) 523-9880
Bellevue, WA 98004
United States -
China Office
#1201, No. 88 Changning Road
+86 021-52271616
Changning District
Shanghai, China 200050 -
Denmark Office
Fiskerihavnsgade 9
+45 70 70 76 68
6700 Esbjerg
Denmark
Case Study - Computer Vision
Drones with brains and shelves with eyes — digitalizing the physical world
In the wind energy sector, the usual way to inspect wind turbines is to send a five-person team up each tower. The technicians use ropes and harnesses to make their way up and down the blades, which could be from 40 to 80 meters long.

Recent News

In the Press
Clobotics completes $30MM capital raise to fund continued acceleration of business results
Shanghai/Seattle/Denmark – Clobotics announced today that the company has completed its Series Pre-B-4 capital raise and received an additional $30 million of investment towards its goal of “turning sight into insight” for customers in the wind and retail point of sale industries. Clobotics uses computer vision technology to help customers in two industry verticals: For […]

In the Press
Scaling Up Blade Inspections in Brazil: A Case Study
Brazil is one of the five largest wind markets in the world and growing fast. In the last decade, Brazil has gone from 2.5 GW of installed wind power capacity in 2012 to 22 GW in 2022. Since 2017, ArthWind has helped wind site managers use inspection data to drive their maintenance decision making. As […]

In the Press
2022 End of Year Review
We recently completed our look back on a very successful 2022 inspection season around the world. Across our global regions, we inspected over 32,000 wind turbines bringing the cumulative total to over 75,000 wind turbines inspected worldwide by our technology! We did some analysis of these inspections and thought we’d share a few top-line observations […]

In the Press
POV: Why DaaS beats DIY blade inspections
From the minute they appeared, camera drones joined the arsenal of tools which enterprising site operators use to figure out what’s going on with their wind turbine blades. And for good reason. Buying an off-the-shelf camera drone has become less expensive over time, becoming an expense more easily afforded within existing budgets. A “Do-It-Yourself” (DIY) […]

In the Press
Case Study: Drones with brains and shelves with eyes — digitalizing the physical world
1st November 2018: In the wind energy sector, the usual way to inspect wind turbines is to send a five-person team up each tower. The technicians use ropes and harnesses to make their way up and down the blades, which could be from 40 to 80 meters long. They visually inspect each one while dangling […]