BlueWind Technology is about to become something much bigger.
Henry Kelley, co-founder and president of Blue Wind Technology, made a quiet but significant announcement on this week’s episode of We Don’t Color On the Dog — one that signals a new chapter not just for his company, but potentially for manufacturing across the entire Gulf Coast.
Background: Seven years ago, Kelley and two partners started BlueWind with a clear mission: manufacture composite housings — the nacelles — for GE Vernova’s wind turbines. What they’ve built since is remarkable.
- “Seventy percent of the nation’s onshore wind turbines in the U.S. come through Pensacola,” Kelley revealed. “GE Vernova distributes to the entire nation.”
The company has grown from three founders to nearly 200 employees and earned recognition as one of GE Vernova’s top five suppliers of excellence in the world in 2025. All of that, built quietly in Pensacola.
A Rebrand Is Coming—and It’s Big
In breaking news, Kelley disclosed that BlueWind Technology is on the verge of a major rebrand, reflecting a significant expansion beyond wind energy.
- “Wind is in our blood, and BlueWind will be our wind division,” he said. “But we are branching out into other industries.”
The company’s expertise in composite materials—the same technology used in aircraft, high-speed trains, and building facades— has opened doors to new sectors, including maritime and aviation. Kelley specifically mentioned the growing manufacturing cluster at the Port of Pensacola, including American Magic’s new composites facility, as a natural fit.
- “Composites have a place in that,” he said of the maritime industrial complex taking shape locally.
$15 Million Investment in Pensacola’s Future
BlueWind has already invested more than $4 million in new equipment and has committed $12 to $15 million in new facility construction for 2027. Among the most forward-looking purchases: two large-scale additive printing machines capable of 3D printing very large objects.
- “This is where the industry is going,” Kelley explained. “Getting ready for the next generation of composite materials.”
Why Composites Matter: For anyone unfamiliar with the material, Kelley offered a simple and memorable breakdown. Steel offers maximum strength and impact resistance—but maximum weight. Aluminum provides medium performance across the board. Composites, essentially fiberglass, offer something different entirely.
- “They are strong in all directions,” he said. “You can make any shape, any color.”
The weakness—lower impact resistance compared to metals—is offset by design flexibility and weight savings, making composites ideal for wind turbines, aircraft components, boat hulls, and emerging maritime applications.
A Gulf Coast Manufacturing Corridor Takes Shape
Kelley sees BlueWind’s expansion as part of something larger — a Gulf Coast manufacturing renaissance stretching from Houston to Tampa.
- “Draw a line from Houston to Tampa — Mobile, Pensacola — you’ve got Airbus, and you’re really starting to see a lot of new manufacturing,” he said. Combined with American Magic’s composites work and the military-connected Project Britain initiative at the port, Kelley envisions BlueWind as a critical supply chain partner for the region’s industrial future.
The rebrand announcement is coming in the next few weeks. Watch this space.
Henry and I also discussed tariffs in the first part of the interview. I will have more on that later.


