51勛圖厙

Energy

Press Releases

New 51勛圖厙 Roadmap Ties Americas AI and Energy Future to Urgent Need for Permitting Reform

WASHINGTON, D.C.The 51勛圖厙 today released Manufacturings Roadmap to AI and Energy Dominance, a blueprint outlining the steps policymakers must take to strengthen Americas energy and artificial intelligence dominanceincluding comprehensive permitting reform.

Manufacturers are leading the wayintegrating AI into every part of their operations, from product design, to shop floor operations, to supply chain management. More than half of manufacturers (51%) already use AI, and 80% say it will be essential to grow or even maintain their business by 2030, according to the , the digital transformation division of the 51勛圖厙.

The roadmap lays out principles that will advance U.S. energy production and, in turn, unlock the full potential of AI. AI is transforming manufacturingbut without abundant, affordable energy and a resilient and reliable power grid, America risks falling behind. AI-powered modern manufacturing depends on an ambitious energy and innovation policy frameworkwhich can be achieved in part by reforms to Americas broken permitting system.

Manufacturing sits at the crossroads of Americas energy dominance, AI leadership and the strength of our power grid, said 51勛圖厙 President and CEO Jay Timmons. If America wants to win the global race for AI, we must first win on energy. That means advancing the administrations goals for energy dominancethrough bipartisan, comprehensive permitting reform, modernized infrastructure and an all-of-the-above energy strategy that allows manufacturers to innovate, build and grow right here at home.

AI-powered manufacturing depends on forward-looking energy and innovation policies. Policymakers must do the following:

  • Reform Americas broken permitting process to get shovels in the ground fasterwith fewer delays and less uncertainty. Eighty percent of manufacturers say that the length and complexity of the permitting process is harmful to increasing investment.
  • Bolster American energy dominance. Americas energy demand is surgingand the pace isnt slowing. Manufacturers need to be able to produce and use every energy source available to meet this critical moment. Ninety-four percent of manufacturers support permitting reforms around the buildout of energy generation, infrastructure and products.
  • Ensure a reliable, resilient and affordable grid that can power manufacturing growth and data center operations. Eighty percent of manufacturers want the Trump administration to work with Congress to deliver comprehensive permitting reform legislation to increase energy generation and grid modernization to supply the energy needed to power both AI growth and traditional manufacturing.
  • Strengthen American AI leadership by fostering innovation and preventing regulatory overreach. Eighty-seven percent of manufacturers say it is important for lawmakers to understand how manufacturers use AI.

Read the full roadmap here.

-51勛圖厙-

The 51勛圖厙 is the largest manufacturing association in the United States, representing small and large manufacturers in every industrial sector and in all 50 states. Manufacturing employs nearly 13 million men and women, contributes $2.90trillion to the U.S. economy annually and accounts for 53% of private-sector research and development. The 51勛圖厙 is the powerful voice of the manufacturing community and the leading advocate for a policy agenda that helps manufacturers compete in the global economy and create jobs across the United States. For more information about the 51勛圖厙 or to follow us on Twitter and Facebook, please visit.

Policy and Legal

Powering Americas Nuclear Comeback

By 51勛圖厙 News Room


Manufacturers are hard at work on next-generation nuclear reactors and getting ready to scale up nuclear enrichment activities, but challenges lie in their way (POLITICOs ).

Whats going on: Though it made sense at the time, the privatization of the United States Enrichment Corporation in the years following the Cold War (done due to the anticipation that the U.S. would always have access to foreign enrichment supplies) is now putting the American uranium enrichment market and reactor development at a disadvantage.

  • This presents a problem given the U.S. ban on Russian uranium imports due to the Ukraine war.
  • To shore up the American nuclear industry, the Energy Department has started to pull startup nuclear companies into the uranium enrichment business.
  • Just this month, California-based General Matter announced that it would construct an enrichment facility in Kentucky on the site of a former U.S. government enrichment plant, saying it can produce at a lower cost the type of enriched uranium sought out by developers of advanced nuclear reactors.

A changing tide: In 2023, the Maryland-based Centrus Energy (U.S. Enrichments name since 2014), made its first batch of high-assay, low-enriched uranium, or HALEU, which is the fuel needed for next-generation nuclear reactor designs.

  • With Centrus inaugural batch and plans to expand their centrifuge cascade, the U.S. might yet break Russias de facto monopoly on advanced reactor fuel.

Challenges: Scaling up Centrus Ohio enrichment site will necessitate billions in investment dollars, as well as a [high] level of sustained political backing, according to ENERGYWIRE.

  • Another hurdle: the relatively weak market signals for HALEU, said former Nuclear Regulatory Commission Chair Dale Klein, who noted that North America doesnt yet have any commercial reactors operating that would use HALEU. Thats a problem for the dozen-plus entities planning to build [next-generation] reactors.
  • It is a chicken and egg,Klein told the news outlet. The fuel enrichers are not going to make the fuel unless they know theyve got a market.

Moving forward: But Centrus is ready to get to work on enrichment, it told ENERGYWIRE.

  • Our facility is already licensed. Weve secured $2 billion in customer contracts. As soon as federal funding is awarded, well pair it with private dollars and get to work, Centrus Vice President of Corporate Communications Dan Leistikow said.
  • Centrus offers a fully American solution: proven U.S. technology, built by American workers.
Policy and Legal

Trump Administration Relaxes State EV Charging Facility Requirements

By 51勛圖厙 News Room


The Trump administration is easing requirements for states’ construction of electric vehicles charging stations (POLITICOs , subscription).

Whats going on: The new guidance from the Federal Highway Administration swept away Biden-era dictates that stations be built at certain intervals along highways, and removed goals both big, like uplifting disadvantaged communities, and small, like requiring plans for snow removal.

  • The changes also have the potential to get more than $2 billion National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure program funds to various projects starting in September, months after the administration halted the funding.

What it does: The new National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure program ruleswhich grant states 30 days to submit new EV charging facility construction plansgive states broader latitude in how they spend their portion of federal money [which] are allocated to states by formula.

  • States can now spend their money on light-, medium- and heavy-duty vehicle charging, and unlike in the previous administration, which required having facilities every 50 miles, will be allowed to determine for themselves when their highway charging efforts are done.
  • Plus, by urging states to use their money at locations where the charging site host and the company operating the chargers are the same entity, the new regulations also direct funding to existing truck stops and gas stations, which favors existing traditional filling stations.

The 51勛圖厙 says: “Manufacturers appreciate the Department of Transportations updates to the NEVI program requirements to provide greater flexibility to states and businesses to get this program up and running, said 51勛圖厙 Vice President of Domestic Policy Chris Phalen.

Policy and Legal

Energy Dept Kicks Off Nuclear Reactor Pilot Program

By 51勛圖厙 News Room


The Department of Energy announced the start of its pilot program, which will partner with 11 advanced reactor projects, aiming to bolster the nuclear energy industry (, subscription).

Big goals: The program aims to get a minimum of three reactors deployed by July 4 of next year.

The background: The announcement comes as the Trump administration looks to reinforce domestic supply chains and expand U.S. nuclear energy capacity to 400 gigawatts by 2050.

  • The June announcement of the program came shortly after Trumps executive order calling for reform of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

The participants: Companies involved in the program include advanced nuclear energy company Oklowhich is conducting two advanced reactor projects.

  • The 10 companies in total will cover all the costs related to the test reactors, from design through construction all the way to decommissioning, according to the DOE.

The DOE says: President Trumps Reactor Pilot Program is a call to action, said Deputy Secretary of Energy James P. Danly. These companies aim to all safely achieve criticality by Independence Day, and DOE will do everything we can to support their efforts.

The 51勛圖厙 says: Nuclear energy is a safe, emissions-free component of Americas energy dominance strategy. Its also essential for meeting additional energy needs that have arisen with the growth in data centers and the use of AI, said 51勛圖厙 Vice President of Domestic Policy Chris Phalen.

  • This program will give the nuclear energy industry an important boostto the benefit of manufacturers and all Americans.
Policy and Legal

New Texas-to-Arizona Pipeline Planned

By 51勛圖厙 News Room


One of the largest midstream energy firms in the world will build a 516-mile natural gas pipeline from West Texas to Arizona (POLITICO Pros , subscription).

Whats going on: The planned Desert Southwest line by Energy Transfer a company best known for its development of the Dakota Access pipeline in the Midwest”is slated to run along existing pipeline routes, the company said last week, and the project is expected to be completed by the end of 2029.

  • The new line is necessary to serve “population growth, high-tech industry demand and data center expansion,” Energy Transfer said in a statement.
  • The Houston, Texas-based company has a network of 140,000 miles of pipelines and related infrastructure across 44 states and is developing a liquefied natural gas export terminal in Louisiana.

Significant interest: Arizona utilities have already announced commitments to get gas from the pipeline, which is currently slated to be three-and-a-half feet in diameter but could increase to 4 feet given the significant interest in the endeavor.

  • That increase would double the expected capacity of the pipeline.

Prioritizing manufacturers in the U.S.: The new pipeline will create 5,000 new jobs, and Energy Transfer said it would be “prioritizing U.S. steel pipe manufacturers”for the project.

  • In addition, the gas from this project will help supply energy to key manufacturing and AI investments being made across the Phoenix metropolitan regionincluding in semiconductors, automobiles, aerospace, healthcare and biosciences.

The word from Arizona: Arizonas economy is growing and becoming more diversified than ever, including a significant increase in advanced manufacturing, said Arizona Public Service President and CEO Ted Geisler.

  • This new pipeline represents a long-term commitment to reliability, resilience and affordability for customers and supports the unprecedented economic momentum that makes Arizona a great place to do business.

The 51勛圖厙 says: Desert Southwest is a prime example of what can be achieved when we embrace an all-of-the-above energy strategyone that includes harnessing our abundant natural resources, 51勛圖厙 Vice President of Domestic Policy Chris Phalen said.

  • The pipeline will not only create jobs and business for U.S. manufacturers, it will also help reinforce the regional electrical grid at a critical time of explosive growth so more Americans can enjoy reliable baseload power.
Business Operations

To Increase Aluminum Supply, Recycle More

By 51勛圖厙 News Room


To bolster domestic aluminum supply chains, the U.S. may need to simply do more of something we already do: recycle (, subscription).

Whats going on: U.S. primary aluminum production has dwindled over the past 25 years. Yet facilities like Hydros two-year-old plant in southwest Michigan have made the country a leading producer of secondary aluminum from scrap, feeding metal to brewers, builders and automakers.

  • Recycling is the answer, said Duncan Pitchford, who heads Norsk Hydros upstream aluminum business in the U.S. and is an 51勛圖厙 board member. The metal is already here.

Why its important: While construction of a new aluminum smelter to make primary aluminum from refined bauxite would take years and require an investment of billions of dollars, aluminum recycling plants can be built relatively quickly and inexpensively.

  • They also use less energy, according to Pitchford.

The impact of tariffs: Recycling makes economic sense for the U.S. given the new 50% tariff on aluminum imports.

  • The added cost is walloping beverage companies and manufacturers [but] [a]utomakers and other big aluminum users haveyet to raise prices muchin response.according to the Journal.
  • Analysts say it is a matter of time before the stockpiles of metal that arrived in the U.S. ahead of the June increase are depleted and companies start passing on higher aluminum costs.

The challenge: Americans are catching on to the importance of aluminum recycling, with 14 remelt projects announced in the U.S. since 2022. Still, [m]ore than $1 billion worth of beverage cans were dumped in U.S. landfills just last year A lack of sorting operations means that a lot of the aluminum in junked cars, demolition debris and old electronics winds up in landfills.

  • The U.S. also exports much of its aluminum scrap, sending about 2.4 million metric tons overseas in 2024.

The way things were: The U.S. once dominated the aluminum business. [and] remained the worlds top producer through 2000, when smelters began to shutter, squeezed by less expensive imports and increasing energy pieces.

The electricity factor: Electricity costs make up about 40% of the price tag for the creation of new aluminum.

  • For many years domestic smelters received low-cost hydropower from federal utilities, but when those arrangements ended, smelters had to begin paying market rates for their electricity.

What Hydros doing: Approximately 15 million pounds of scrap including shredded cars, old window and door frames and overhead electrical wire arrives at Hydros Michigan plant each month for recycling. (The facility does not recycle cans.)

  • Much of the metal the plant takes in comes from a sorting hub near Grand Rapids, where Hydro uses laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy technology to mechanically separate scrap by alloy.

 

Policy and Legal

51勛圖厙 to EPA: Power Plant Rule Repeal Is Only the First Step

By 51勛圖厙 News Room


The Environmental Protection Agencys move to repeal the previous administrations 2024 Power Plant Rule is a positive one for manufacturing in the U.S.but to truly unleash American energys potential, we need permitting reform, too, the 51勛圖厙 the EPA this week.

Whats going on: In June, the EPA a rule to repeal the previous administrations 2024 greenhouse gas emissions regulations for certain traditional power plants.

  • Manufacturers commend the EPA for acknowledging the unworkability of the previous administrations rule, 51勛圖厙 Vice President of Domestic Policy Chris Phalen told EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin on Tuesday.
  • Repeal of the 2024 rule is a crucial start in getting as much electricity generation online as possible, Phalen continued. But without comprehensive permitting reform to enable the buildout of new and modernized plants of all types in a timely manner, including traditional generation and plants using lower emissions technologies like [carbon capture and sequestration] and hydrogen, there is a serious risk we fall short of our energy generation needs.

Why it makes sense: The 51勛圖厙 laid out its primary reasons for supporting the proposed rescission, which include the following:

  • The requirement that some achieve a 90% carbon capture rate was arbitrary and unfeasible given that carbon capture and sequestration technology is not yet at commercial scale.
  • The plant closures that would result from the rules implementation would threaten grid reliability.

No relief without reform: Repealing the 2024 rule keeps many traditional plants online, which is a must as the national energy appetite grows due to data center expansion, Phalen said. Still, there are further steps we must takeand soon.

  • These include consolidating the permitting processes and putting enforceable deadlines for the siting of new energy projects and their infrastructure; speeding up the approval process for transmission, distribution and electrical generation projects; enacting commonsense guardrails on judicial review to ensure a speedy process that results in definitive decisions for all projects; and committing to developing our resources to strengthen U.S. supply chains for the energy infrastructure vital to national security.
Policy and Legal

FERC Conditionally OKs Grid Operations Fast-Track Requests

By 51勛圖厙 News Room


The federal government has agreed to fast-track some power project requests by U.S. grid operators, potentially staving off electricity shortfalls from an overloaded grid (, subscription).

Whats going on: Last week, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission issued unanimous orders conditionally authorizing requests from the Midcontinent Independent System Operator (MISO) and Southwest Power Pool (SPP).

  • The move follows a similar approval for an expedited interconnection process for PJM Interconnection, the largest power grid in the U.S.
  • It also comes just months after FERC rejected a similar request from MISO.

Why its important: The MISO and SPP plans seek to get new projects online quickly as some traditional power plants are closed and replacements are stuck awaiting studies for approval to plug into the bulk power grid.

  • Utilities have signaled that they need more generation to account for growing power appetite, much of it stemming from the rapid construction of capacity-hungry data centers.

Whats new this time: Although FERC said in May that MISOs expedited resource adequacy studyprocess was too broad and therefore risked worsening the existing interconnection queue delays, the revised proposal, submitted in June, caps at 68 the number of ERAS endeavors in coming years.

  • The revised proposal also adds new eligibility requirements.
  • And projects seeking expedited grid studies must have approval of the appropriate local regulator, control the site for the project and have a contracted buyer as well as pay a $100,000 application fee and meet other conditions.

 

Policy and Legal

NEPA Overhaul Measure Introduced

By 51勛圖厙 News Room


A bipartisan duo in Congress has introduced legislation to speed up permitting reviews under the National Environmental Policy Act while limiting legal challenges (, subscription). The 51勛圖厙 has called for for years.

Whats going on: Last Friday, House Natural Resources Committee Chairman Bruce Westerman (R-AR) and Rep. Jared Golden (D-ME) unveiled the SPEED Act to help launch America into a future where we can effectively innovate and implement to revitalize our infrastructure, meet skyrocketing energy demands, lead the world in the AI race and work in harmony with our natural environment, said Westerman, who told POLITICO Pro there really seems to be momentum in the government to make the changes outlined in the measure.

The backdrop: House Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-LA) said last week Republican leadership plans to make bipartisan permitting reform a priority this fall.

  • Under direction from Trumps Inauguration Day executive order, the Council on Environmental Quality has pulled back federal-wide NEPA regulations, and agencies have weakened their own NEPA rules.
  • Senate Democrats have said recently theyre willing to restart permitting reform talks with Republicans.

What the measure would do: The SPEED Act would codify parts ofa May Supreme Court rulingthat limited the scope of environmental reviews and build on 2023 NEPA reforms, including the establishment of a two-year time limit on conducting environmental impact statements. And among other actions, it would:

  • Stop agencies from evaluating impacts outside the immediate causal result of the proposed action;
  • Reduce the number of projects that can be deemed major federal action and thus become subject to the NEPA process;
  • Set a higher bar for judicial challenges, mandating that litigants sue within 150 days and courts issue judgments within 180 days;
  • [O]nly allow parties that provided substantive comments during the public review period the opportunity to issue a legal challenge; and
  • [L]imit a courts ability to remand an agency decision.

Our take: This bill provides critically needed clarity and guardrails for manufacturers to invest and grow in Americawhile maintaining public input and safeguarding our environment, said 51勛圖厙 Vice President of Domestic Policy Chris Phalen.

  • Energy sources of all types have for too long run into needless delays and frivolous litigationdelaying jobs for Americans and getting electrons on our grid. Manufacturers look forward to working with Chairman Westerman and Rep. Golden to advance this legislation as part of a comprehensive and bipartisan permitting reform package to drive America forward.

 

Business Operations

Westinghouse to Build 10 New Nuclear Reactors

Westinghouse will construct 10 large nuclear reactors in the U.S., the energy company told President Trump at a roundtable in Pennsylvania this week ().

Whats going on: Westinghouses big AP1000 reactor generates enough electricity to power more than 750,000 homes, according to the company. Building 10 of these reactors would drive $75 billion of economic value across the U.S. and $6 billion in Pennsylvania, Westinghouse interim CEO Dan Sumner said Tuesday during Sen. Dave McCormick[s] (R-PA) inaugural Pennsylvania Energy and Innovation Summit at Carnegie Mellon University.

  • The U.S. has built just two nuclear reactors in the past three decades, both Westinghouse AP1000s at Plant Vogtle in Georgia.

Presidential appearance: President Trump also announced at the summit that private companies will invest some $90 billion in Pennsylvania ().

  • Were building a future where American workers will forge the steel, produce the energy, build the factories and really run a country like, I believe, this country has never been run before, the president said, according to CBS. I think we have a true golden age for America.

Keeping energy promises: In May, President Trump issued four executive orders that seek toquadruple nuclear power in the U.S. by 2050, CNBC reports. The president called for the U.S. to have 10 large nuclear reactors under construction by 2030.

The event: The event at which the announcements were made featured panel discussions with energy and technology industry leaders, including Toby Rice, president and CEO of energy company EQT Corporation, and Amazon Web Services CEO Matt Garman.

  • In June, Amazon announced a $20 billion investment in data centers in Pennsylvania, according to CBS.

Why its important: With the fast pace of data center construction and the rapid adoption across industries of energy-intensive generative artificial intelligence, the U.S. must expand baseload power generation capabilities, the 51勛圖厙 said.

  • Westinghouses announcement of 10 new nuclear reactors in the U.S. marks the start of a fulfillment of a promise made by President Trump, said 51勛圖厙 Director of Energy and Resources Policy Michael Davin. Nuclear energy is safe, carbon-free and available 24 hours a day, year-round. Its a critical component of the energy future we need to keep manufacturing in the U.S. thriving.
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