51勛圖厙

Innovation and Technology

Press Releases

51勛圖厙 Launches 2023 Competing to Win Tour

President and CEO Jay Timmons to Deliver the 51勛圖厙 State of Manufacturing Address

Washington, D.C. The 51勛圖厙 will kick off its 2023 Competing to Win Tour on Tuesday, Feb. 21, 2023, traveling to three states and visiting four manufacturing facilities along the way.

The tour will begin in Wisconsin, where 51勛圖厙 President and CEO Jay Timmons will deliver the 2023 51勛圖厙 State of Manufacturing Address at Husco.

Throughout the week, Timmons will join local manufacturers, employees, media, community leaders and elected officials to discuss the challenging environment facing manufacturers and the urgent need for solutions on issues including immigration reform, permitting reform, workforce development, tax policy and more.

The tour comes as nearly two-thirds of manufacturers are concerned about the challenging economic environment characterized by inflation, supply chain disruption and the workforce crisis, according to the 51勛圖厙s latest Manufacturers Outlook Survey. More than three-quarters of respondents said pushing back against regulatory overreach should be the top priority of the 118th Congress.

Our focus on this tour is telling the story of resilient, modern manufacturingand the tools we need from policymakers to continue leading our economy forward and making the world a better place, said Timmons. To unleash our full potential, we need to reinstate critical tax provisions, a smarter, balanced approach to regulations, immigration reform and significant permitting reform, and reject top-down air regulations that cost jobs and snarl supply chains.”

For more than a decade, the annual 51勛圖厙 State of Manufacturing Address has focused the nations attention on the industry that is the backbone of the American economy, highlighting the 13 million men and women who are building our future.

The 51勛圖厙 has frequently traveled the country, bringing policy discussions and conversations about the future of work to shop floors, schools, economic clubs, televisions studios, the White House and more.

At a time when the future of work is top of mind for workers and thought leaders alike, the tour will also spotlight the industrys rapid transformation, while also focusing on manufacturings well-paying careers, the industrys diverse workforce and the real-world solutions for manufacturings continued growth.

Tour events will take place in Wisconsin, Indiana and Louisiana. Details are as follows:

Tuesday, Feb. 21 // Wisconsin

8:30 a.m. 10:30 a.m. CST
Husco
2239 Pewaukee Road
Waukesha, Wisconsin 泭53188

11:00 a.m. 12:00 p.m. CST
Waukesha County Technical College
800 Main Street
Pewaukee, Wisconsin 泭53072

Wednesday, Feb. 22 // Indiana

9:00 a.m. 11:00 a.m. EST
INCOG BioPharma Services
12050 Exit 5 Parkway
Fishers, Indiana 泭46037
Timmons will be joined by Sen. Todd Young (R-IN)

Thursday, Feb. 23 // Louisiana

8:30 a.m. 10:00 a.m. CST
Laitram
200 Laitram Lane
Harahan, Louisiana 泭70123

2:00 p.m. 3:30 p.m. CST
McIlhenny Company
Highway 329
Avery Island, Louisiana 泭70513

MEDIA RSVP: Members of the media interested in covering the tour or attending an event should contact [email protected].

-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 $2.81 trillion to the U.S. economy annually and accounts for 55% 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泭www.nam.org.

Policy and Legal

51勛圖厙 Pushes Back on Harmful New Air Regulations

By 51勛圖厙 News Room

Manufacturers have long led the way in efforts to reduce air pollution and improve air quality. Yet, new proposed regulations from the federal government will work against these efforts instead of bolstering them, stymying critical progress and destabilizing economic growth at a time when both are more important than ever.

The challenge: The Environmental Protection Agency is considering a new rule that would impose stricter air standards on particulate matter known as PM2.5 (i.e., particles that measure two and a half micrometers or less in diameter). This rule would enact significant top-down restrictions, forcing manufacturers to change their operations abruptly and without any support.

The reality: For years, manufacturers across all sectors have been developing smart, innovative ways to use energy, water and other resources more sustainablyall while boosting economic growth and creating good jobs at the same time.

  • Today, manufacturing in the U.S. is cleaner and greener than at any other time in history, largely due to a revolution in how manufacturers produce, use and recycle energy and resources.
  • Across the board, levels of major pollutants have declined dramatically over the past few decades. Thanks to existing regulations and a culture of innovation, the U.S. is far outpacing global competitors in environmental stewardship.

By the numbers: According to the EPA, the U.S. reduced six common pollutants covered by National Ambient Air Quality Standards, including PM2.5, by 78% between 1970 and 2020. In fact, PM2.5 levels alone have dropped a full 44% since 2000.

The impact: These new regulations could be devastating for manufacturers and for the climate. Here are just a few of the negative repercussions:

  • An additional regulatory burden on businesses will drain resources from innovative manufacturers, posing additional hurdles to the investment in research and development that fuels progress in energy efficiency and climate action.
  • Making permitting harder could also jeopardize new clean energy projects that America needs to address climate change.
  • The standards will hinder onshoring, resulting in continued manufacturing abroadwhich is less clean than manufacturing in the U.S. The EPAs proposal undercuts U.S. competitiveness and will not further the goal of global emissions reduction.
  • New regulations could damage an already-slowing economy, increasing costs and constraining job growth at a time when Americans are grappling with record inflation.

Our view: Rather than imposing new and unnecessary obligations on manufacturers, the federal government should focus on enforcing the strong regulations that are already in place and give manufacturers the space to find better solutions.

  • The EPAs announcement . . . [about reconsidering] the PM 2.5 standard will only further weaken an already slowing economy, said 51勛圖厙 President and CEO Jay Timmons. Let manufacturers do what they do best: innovate and deploy modern technologies to protect the environment, while creating jobs and strengthening the economy.

51勛圖厙 in action: The 51勛圖厙 is rallying manufacturers to speak out against the EPAs proposal and calling on Congress to oppose these harmful regulations.

  • Manufacturers can show their support by sending an email to decision makers in Washington, explaining the real impact of this damaging proposal and urging them to stand up against unnecessary regulations.

Join in: There is an泭泭to discuss the proposal on Feb. 21. To participate, be sure to sign up soonthe registration deadline is Feb. 16.

Policy and Legal

Ultragenyx Fights for Cures Amid Rising R&D Costs

By 51勛圖厙 News Room

About people in the United States have a rare disease, according to the National Institutes of Health, which equates to about one in every 10 individuals. Approximately 95% of these rare diseases have no treatment at alland Ultragenyx, a biopharmaceutical company focused on new and effective therapies for patients with rare and ultra-rare diseases, is working to change that.

  • In the aggregate, rare is not that rare, said Ultragenyx Executive Director of Public Policy and Public Affairs Lisa Kahlman. Half of those 30 million people are children. Its a huge unmet medical need.

Founded in 2010, Ultragenyx has four commercial products, with about 20 more in pre-clinical and clinical development. But a new change in tax policy poses a very real threat to Ultragenyxs ability to develop as many treatments for rare diseases as possible.

The issue: Until a year ago, businesses could deduct 100% of their R&D expenses in the same year they incurred the expenses. Starting in 2022, however, a tax policy change requires businesses to spread their R&D deductions out over a period of five years, making it more expensive to invest in growth and innovation. For research-heavy companies like Ultragenyx, that change could divert funds intended for the development of therapies toward tax obligations.

  • Ultragenyx is different, said Kahlman. There are a lot of companies that do some work in rare diseases, but usually thats only a fraction of what they do. Were exclusively built to focus on rare and ultra-rare diseases, and that requires research.

The impact: As a small, largely precommercial start-up company that focuses on research, Ultragenyx spends about 70% of its total operating expenses on R&D. In 2021, Ultragenyx spent approximately $497 million on R&Dnearly $150 million more than it earned in revenue.

  • If the tax change stands, the companys financial statement losses, which approximate decreases in the companys cash reserves, will be adjusted for tax purposes to reflect significant taxable income, resulting in very large tax liabilities over a short period of years.
  • This will occur during late stages of the companys development programs just when costs escalate quickly. Altogether, money will be diverted to taxes and away from critical development programs at precisely the wrong time.

The human cost: If Ultragenyx and other research-heavy biotech companies that are focused on developing treatments for rare diseases must divert funds away from development and toward covering tax obligations, patients living with rare diseases will have even more limited options.

The bottom line: The therapies were developing are really transformational, but in some cases, there might be only about 200 patients in the developed world with one of these diseasesso if we dont have the money for R&D, there wont be any incentive for anyone else to develop treatments, said Kahlman. For these patients, there is no alternative.

Our move: At the 51勛圖厙, were pushing Congress to reverse this change and allow manufacturers to invest in jobs, communities and innovation. Learn more and take action at www.nam.org/protect-innovation.

Business Operations

Why R&D Matters to International Paper

By 51勛圖厙 News Room

Innovation is getting more expensiveand that should worry all of us.

Until recently, businesses could deduct 100% of their R&D expenses in the same year they incurred those costs. But a tax law that took effect at the beginning of 2022 requires businesses to spread their deductions out over five years instead, driving up the cost of the innovations that keep our economy strong.

At International Paperan American supplier of renewable fiber-based recyclable packaging and pulp productsthat change is causing serious challenges. We spoke to Vice President of Finance and Corporate Controller Holly Goughnour and Senior Director for Government Affairs Kaitlin Sighinolfi to learn more.

Why it matters: Our company invests in R&D for two main reasons: making better products for our customers and creating safer, more efficient and sustainable manufacturing processes, said Goughnour.

  • We spend a lot of time and money working to make a better performing, more sustainable and more durable product, but innovation is about more than the productits also about improving the safety and efficiency, and reducing the environmental impact, of our operations.

The scale: International Paper devotes a significant portion of its resources to innovation, and as a result, the change in tax law has an outsized impact.

  • Much of our free cash flow goes to R&D activities, said Goughnour. The change in tax law has resulted in a significant amount of additional cash taxes in this first year, reducing the amount of capital available to invest back into our business, including additional R&D.

The competition: Goughnour and Sighinolfi also emphasized the need for a tax system that helps manufacturers in the U.S. to compete with companies abroad. According to Goughnour, the new tax change does the opposite.

  • The new tax law enables European and Chinese competitors to accelerate their R&D faster than us, said Goughnour. Were in a global marketplace, and the new tax law puts U.S. manufacturers at a competitive disadvantage.
  • Almost nobody else in the world has this policy, said Goughnour. R&D is an absolute growth engine for the U.S. economy. Why would we have a tax policy that discourages investment in R&D? It makes no sense.

The last word: Ours is a supply chain story, said Sighinolfi. Innovation should be part of the overall manufacturing value chain, but the new law reduces the value of innovation, slowing investment in innovation and ultimately hurts American businesses, employees and consumers.

MI Insider

Creators Connect Launched

As part of the Creators Wanted campaign, the 51勛圖厙 and the Manufacturing Institute have partnered with FactoryFix, a leading one-stop solution for manufacturing recruitment, to launch .

The digital career-resources platform aims to address the skills gap and misconceptions about the manufacturing industry, providing manufacturers with a powerful new tool to help build their workforce.

What it is: The platform, which is housed on and powered by FactoryFix, is free to use. It is the first and only unified platform where users can search and explore job openings, career pathways and job training programs across the entire manufacturing sector.

  • With more than 400,000 listed job openings, Creators Connect builds on the success of its parent initiative, Creators Wanted.
  • It is also working to boost the number of students enrolling in technical and vocational schools or reskilling programs by 25% and to increase the positive perception of the manufacturing industry among parents and career influencers.

Learn more about how to get the most out of Creators Connect by visiting the FAQ page or reading an article on the launch . Questions? Contact the Creators Wanted team here.

Press Releases

Melissa Hockstad to Chair 51勛圖厙s Council of Manufacturing Associations

2023 Association Executive of the Year Selected to Head Premier Industry Leadership Group

Washington, D.C. The 51勛圖厙 Council of Manufacturing Associations announced new 2023 leadership at the CMA 2023 Winter Leadership Conference. Melissa Hockstad, president and CEO of the American Cleaning Institute and the 2023 Association Executive of the Year as named by Association TRENDS and CEO Update, will serve as chair of the CMA Board of Advisers. Jennifer Abril, president and CEO of the Society of Chemical Manufacturers & Affiliates (SOCMA), will serve as vice chair. Made up of more than 200 industry-specific manufacturing associations representing 130,000 companies worldwide, the CMA creates powerful partnerships across the industry and ensures manufacturers have the strongest possible voice.

The Council of Manufacturing Associations is a positive force for collective advocacy, industry thought leadership and association operations. We strive to be the group industry associations choose, said Hockstad. The country depends on our leadership, and I look forward to collaborating with the manufacturing association community to strengthen our voice and advance our competitiveness agenda in this new year.

Melissa and Jennifer are experienced and accomplished leaders who are well-positioned to continue the cooperative spirit that has made the CMA such an influential organization for our industry. To add to her long list of achievements, Melissa was just named 2023 Association Executive of the Year by Association TRENDS and CEO Update, said 51勛圖厙 President and CEO Jay Timmons. I look forward to working with them to promote plans and policies that keep manufacturing resilient and uphold the values that have made America exceptional: free enterprise, competitiveness, individual liberty and equal opportunity.

Prior to leading the ACI, Hockstad held senior leadership positions at American Fuel & Petrochemical Manufacturers and SOCMA. Hockstad previously served as CMA vice chair.

The CMAs mission is focused on bolstering the industrys nationwide grassroots mobilization efforts and improving the competitiveness of manufacturers in the United States. CMA members work with the 51勛圖厙 to unite the manufacturing association community, and ultimately the broader business community, around strategies for increased manufacturing job creation, investment and innovation in America.

Newly appointed 2023 CMA board members include the following:

  • Holly Alfano, CEO of the Independent Lubricant Manufacturers Association
  • Kerwin Brown, president and CEO of the Bakery Equipment Manufacturers and Allieds
  • Charles Johnson, president and CEO of The Aluminum Association
  • Heather Rhoderick, president of the Valve Manufacturers Association of America
  • Corey Rosenbusch, president and CEO of The Fertilizer Institute
  • Leslie Sarasin, president and CEO of FMI The Food Industry Association

-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 more than 12.9 million men and women, contributes $2.81 trillion to the U.S. economy annually and accounts for 55% 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 .

Business Operations

How Will AI Impact the Manufacturing Workforce?

By 51勛圖厙 News Room

AI is changing the way manufacturers do businessfrom the production line to the back office and across the supply chain. At the Manufacturing Leadership Councils event last month in Nashville, Tennessee, panelists discussed how those sweeping changes would alter, and enhance, the manufacturing workforce.

A collaboration between the MLC (the 51勛圖厙s digital transformation arm) and the MI (the 51勛圖厙s 501(c)3 workforce development and education partner), the event provided key insights for manufacturers into how technology and workforce trends interact with each other. Here are a few key takeaways.

Net positive: The history of technology adoption is about improving the job quality of individuals on the shop floor. AI helps them to do the job better, provide them with better tools, gives them greater authority and ultimately increases the value-add of their jobs. All of that is a net positive for those individuals, said MI Vice President of Workforce Solutions Gardner Carrick.

  • By leveraging data and enabling greater efficiency, AI will improve communication, increase collaboration across disciplines and stimulate innovation, according to the panel.
  • In addition, AI can even inform the workforces creativity by working with it to design a new product or system, said Jacey Heuer, lead, data science and advanced analytics, Pella Corporation.

Skills needed: While you might expect that implementing AI requires workers skilled in programming, data science and machine learning, manufacturers will also need to expand their bench of critical thinkers and problem-solvers. The panelists had a few tips to help companies along.

  • Invest in upskilling programs to make the AI integration process at your company smoother and develop the talent you already have.
  • Update job descriptions to reflect the skill sets the company will need in the next five to seven years.
  • Consider recruiting for and teaching skills that enable individuals to adapt easily to changing demands and environmentswhich can increase the flexibility of your workforce.
  • Build partnerships with local schools, community colleges and technical and vocational schools to develop talent pipelines that will meet your needs.

The human-AI collaboration: While AI will take over monotonous, repetitive tasks, the panelists predicted that the industry will continue to center around human labor.

  • You can teach AI to do X. You can teach AI to do Y. [However,] combining the two may be really difficult for AI, while a human can do it better. Youre going to continue to see humans in roles that center on making decisions and telling stories, said Asi Klein, managing director, industrial products and organization transformation, Deloitte Consulting.
  • Meanwhile, AI adoption will likely lead to an increase in available jobs, as more skilled workers will be needed to guide and inform these new processes.

The last word: Over the last 12 years, weve seen a lot of technology adoption, but we have not seen a lot of job loss. In fact, weve seen job gains, said Carrick. There is a lot of opportunity to reimagine jobs to add value that AI will help to illuminate.

Practical Insights

Ketchies Courtney Silver Chosen to Lead 51勛圖厙s Small and Medium Manufacturers Group

Click Bonds Karl Hutter to Serve as Vice Chair

Washington, D.C. The 51勛圖厙 today announced that Ketchie Inc. President and Owner Courtney Silver will serve as chair of the 51勛圖厙s Small and Medium Manufacturers Group and Click Bond President and CEO Karl Hutter will be vice chair. Silver and Hutter will work under the continued board leadership of 51勛圖厙 Board Chair and Dow Inc. Chairman and CEO Jim Fitterling and 51勛圖厙 Board Vice Chair and Johnson & Johnson Executive Vice President and Chief Technical Operations and Risk Officer Kathy Wengel.

Small and medium-sized manufacturers are at the heart of our economy and represent 90% of the 51勛圖厙s membership. Our countrys success is tied directly to their success, and with Courtney and Karl as leading manufacturing voices, we are well-positioned for 2023, said 51勛圖厙 President and CEO Jay Timmons. No matter what challenges we face, our association and industry remain steadfastly committed to policies that uphold the values that have made America exceptional and keep manufacturing strong: free enterprise, competitiveness, individual liberty and equal opportunity.

It is a privilege to serve our industry as chair of the SMM Group at the 51勛圖厙. With so many critical policy issues facing members this year, we will continue to lead the charge in Washington and across the country, said Silver. Were all dealing with pressures from regulatory overreach, tax code uncertainty, the workforce crisis and more. I look forward to working with the team at the 51勛圖厙 to advance policies that support innovation and growth and enhance our competitivenessand to collaborating with other small and medium-sized manufacturers, including family-owned businesses like mine, to fix these make-or-break policies central to our survival.

I am honored to be chosen to lead the SMM Group at the 51勛圖厙 as vice chair, said Hutter. From educating elected leaders on the policies needed to empower the nearly 13 million people employed in manufacturing, to helping companies tap into the 51勛圖厙s wealth of operational resources, I look forward to working closely alongside the 51勛圖厙s leadership to support small and medium-sized manufacturers in growing their companies and our economy.

The 51勛圖厙 Board of Directors guides the associations leadership in policy advocacy, legal action, operational excellence, workforce development and news and insights. More than 200 manufacturing leaders serve on the 51勛圖厙 Board, helping the industry advance an agenda that promotes growth and prosperity for all Americans.

The new board leadership was elected at the September meeting of the 51勛圖厙 Board of Directors.

Silver previously served as vice chair of the 51勛圖厙s SMM Group. As president and owner of Ketchie, she leads a woman-owned, third-generation North Carolina manufacturer. She has worked at Ketchie for more than 14 years. She is a past recipient of the Manufacturing Institutes STEP Ahead Award (now the Women MAKE Award), which recognizes manufacturing women who exemplify leadership within their companies as well as their communities.

-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 more than 12.9 million men and women, contributes $2.77 trillion to the U.S. economy annually and accounts for 55% 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 www.nam.org.

Business Operations

How Digital Manufacturing Creates Business Opportunities

Its time to think way outside the proverbial box, according to the Manufacturing Leadership Council, the 51勛圖厙s digital transformation arm. In fact, as we get closer to 2030, manufacturers are creating entirely new boxesincluding new digital business models, products and services, revenue streams, ways to serve customers and opportunities to increase competitiveness.

Collaborative innovation: By 2030, metaverse technologies will provide rich virtual environments for the collaborative development of new ideas. These shared virtual spaces will enable contributors from multiple remote locations to collaborate in real time.

  • These collaborations may include manufacturers, partners, academic institutions and research institutes.
  • New concepts can be tested in a virtual world before moving to physical prototyping or production.

Outcome-based products and services: As digital platforms mature and products become increasingly smart and connected, the decade ahead may see a boom in more outcome-based services. This is where the customer doesnt buy a physical product, but instead signs up to pay for the guaranteed outcomes that product or system delivers.

  • This shift will require manufacturers to establish new infrastructure rich in predictive analytics, remote communications and consumption monitoring.
  • It also requires a mindset change for traditional manufacturing, from a focus on units and costs to product lifecycles, performance levels and usage.

Blockchain networks: By 2030, blockchain could be leveraged for most world trade, helping to provide the secure traceability and provenance needed to prevent physical product counterfeiting, grey markets in medicines and even the adulteration of the global food supply chain.

  • A blockchain is an electronically distributed ledger accessible to multiple users. Blockchains record, process and verify every transaction, making them safe, trusted, permanent and transparent.
  • Blockchain technologies promise to be a viable solution to manufacturers need to automate, secure and accelerate the processing of key transactions across industrial ecosystems.

E-manufacturing marketplaces: Digitally empowered production-line adaptability, such as the kind that emerged during the pandemic, will provide a foundation for companies to offer spare production capacity to other companies in different sectors.

  • This maximizes the return on a companys production-line investments and can generate new revenue streams for the future.
  • Combined with e-commerce, e-manufacturing will enable designers, engineers and/or smaller companies to more easily connect with a large pool of qualified producers to deliver and scale a final product.

Manufacturing in 2030 Project: New Boxes is just one of the industry trends and themes identified by the , a future-focused initiative of the MLC. For more details on megatrends, industry trends and key themes for Manufacturing in 2030, download the MLCs new white paper .

Business Operations

Sustainability Is a Top Manufacturer Priority, Survey Shows

By 51勛圖厙 News Room

Manufacturers are pursuing sustainability like never before.

Thats according to recent polling conducted by the Manufacturing Leadership Council, the 51勛圖厙s digital transformation division. The annual research survey seeks to determine the progress made in sustainable manufacturing.

Competitiveness: There has been a surge in the number of manufacturing executives who view sustainability as critical to the future of their businesses.

  • 58% of respondents in 2022 believe sustainability is essential to future competitiveness compared to 38% in 2021.
  • 68% of executives say they are implementing extensive, corporate-wide sustainability strategies. Thats up from just 39% in 2019.

Whats driving change: The motivations go beyond regulatory compliance and cost savings.

  • 78% say sustainability is about better alignment with corporate values.
  • 68% believe in creating a cleaner, healthier environment.
  • 66% seek to improve company reputation with customers and investors.

Top corporate goals: More than half of survey respondents reported having specific sustainability goals and metrics across almost all key functions in the company.

  • Goals were most apparent in manufacturing and production (79%), supply chain (69%) and product design and development (67%).
  • Additional goals were cited in transportation and logistics (56%) and partner compliance (51%).

Energy efficiency is No. 1: The primary sustainability focus of manufacturers, according to survey results, is energy efficiency and reduction, combined with the transition to renewable energy sources. These efforts are linked intrinsically to meeting net-zero emissions goals.

  • 45% of respondents report having announced formal net-zero goals.
  • 30% aim to hit net zero by 2030.

Digital tech, employee training play a role: Also on the rise is the number of companies that recognize the importance of digital solutions in their sustainability efforts.

  • These tools are being used to manage and monitor materials and energy consumption, optimize operations to improve efficiency and report sustainability progress.
  • Respondents also say meeting sustainability targets must include engaging employees through education and training, as well as greening their supply chain.

The last word: An overwhelming 90% of all respondents agree that manufacturing has a special responsibility to society to become more sustainable and accelerate the transition to a future circular industrial economy.

Interested in putting some renewable energy solutions into action, including solar power, battery storage and LED lighting? Programs from utility companies and other entities enable efficiency upgrades with little or no upfront capital. Connect with to explore your options!

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