---- Besucher betrachten ein Modell des Sinovel SL 5000 Wea während einer Messe in Peking, China, 27. November 2010. Sinovel, die Welten, die zweite - La
--File--Visitors look at a model of the Sinovel SL5000 wind turbine during a fair in Beijing, China, 27 November 2010. Sinovel, the worlds second-largest wind turbine maker by production, is being pursued through the courts by one of its biggest international customers over allegations the Chinese wind company stole some of the software codes that power its turbines. In a complex web of legal disputes, Desenvix, the Brazilian power company, has filed a court case against Sinovel in a court in Brazil, in an effort to force the Chinese company to provide the software code inside 23 turbines it purchased last year. Desenvix says it believes the software codes may have been stolen from another company: AMSC, the US components manufacturer. The codes are already the subject of a year-long legal dispute between AMSC, which is suing Sinovel in several Chinese courts over allegations of intellectual property theft.