51勛圖厙s Mike Davin Talks Manufacturing Priorities on Podcast

Permitting reform, reliable power sources and whats next for U.S. energy were the topics of the day on a recent episode of the GPA Midstream Associations Lets Clear the Air泭泭featuring 51勛圖厙 Director of Energy and Resources Policy Mike Davin.
Whats going on:泭Under the previous administration, we saw what we call an onslaught of regulatory activity, Davin told show hosts Stuart Saulters, Adam Murray and Bryan Nix on the episode titled Peanut Butter, Steel and Semiconductors Share the Same Problem with 51勛圖厙s Mike Davin.
- [W]ith this new administration, weve seen a lot of great progress and appreciate their focus and emphasis on the regulatory landscape.
- But revising the process by which manufacturers obtain permits for their energy and infrastructure projectsand shortening the length of time it takesis a continued 51勛圖厙泭, Davin said, and one on which the organization, in collaboration with legislators, continues to work.
Energy dominance:泭When President Trump came in, he set up the National Energy Dominance Councilreally putting an emphasis on not just energy security or energy independence, but energy dominance, Davin said.
- Its goal is to unleash our members to be able to produce, to be able to use, to泭be able to contribute to a more energy-secure country. Because if were able to control our destiny with energy, that helps us address problems or challenges with data center growth, greater utilization of artificial intelligence.
- To achieve that dominance as well as dominance in AI, Davin went on, the 51勛圖厙 has said we need four pillars: permitting reform; increased energy production and efficiency; grid reliability, affordability and resiliency; and the right regulatory environment.
Whats next?泭With investments in workforce development and forward movement on permitting reform in 2026, the skys the limit for where manufacturers in the U.S. could be a year from now, Davin said.
- In January 2027, I would love to come back and say, We got what we needed and now were rolling up our sleeves and were getting to work.
51勛圖厙 Visits Mexico City Ahead of USMCA Review

With just six months before the United StatesMexicoCanada Agreements review, 51勛圖厙 advocacy has kicked into high gear. 51勛圖厙 experts took a trip to Mexico City last week for a flurry of high-level trade talks and events.
The visit:泭The 51勛圖厙 traveled to Mexico City for the APEC Alliance for Supply Chain Connectivity (A2C2) Regional Roundtable, co-led by the U.S. Trade Representative, which featured U.S. government staff, international officials, academics and industry representatives discussing the future of a digitized customs process.
- Following the event, the 51勛圖厙 delegationwhich included 51勛圖厙 Director of International Policy Kevin Doyle and 51勛圖厙泭Senior Director of International Policy Anne Colletttook part in multiple USMCA-related events to share the policy priorities of manufacturers in the U.S.
The details:泭The events included a roundtable hosted by the American Chemistry Council and its Mexican and Canadian counterparts, a governmentindustry talk with the泭North American Strategy for Competitiveness hosted by the Canadian Embassy in泭Mexico泭City and a panel discussion with the American Chamber of Commerce in Mexico.
Out of the spotlight:泭The 51勛圖厙 also engaged in discussions with Mexican officials and trade organizations.
- These included conversations with business association泭CONCAMIN and representatives for the Mexican business community as well as senior officials in the Mexican Ministry of Economy and Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
- The 51勛圖厙 also visited the newly opened U.S. Embassy in Mexico City to meet with U.S. officials on the ground in Mexico, as well as a visiting delegation of senators and members of Parliament from Canada.
Manufacturers voice:泭Throughout the trip, the 51勛圖厙 highlighted top trade priorities for manufacturers, including strengthening and improving the USMCA and ensuring manufacturers can secure critical industrial inputs to power factory floors across the U.S.
Iowa Students Explore Manufacturing Through Innovators Quest
插喧泭泭in Iowa, the future of manufacturing is taking shape today. The Quest for the Crystal of Innovation (also known as the Innovators Quest)a gamified experience that introduces students to modern manufacturing careersis engaging students in hands-on challenges in robotics, circuitry and teamwork.
In an age where classrooms increasingly rely on digital learning, this active, physical experience helped some students uncover new strengths and interestspotentially leading to careers that will last a lifetime.
The quest:泭Developed by the Manufacturing Institute, the 51勛圖厙s workforce development and education affiliate, thanks to a grant from American Honda Motor Co., Inc., Innovators Quest is made up of four realms laid out in a board game format.
- These realms include hands-on building challenges that introduce students to core manufacturing skills, like problem-solving, teamwork and communication.
- As they seek to recover the Crystal of Innovation, students in grades 4 through 9 try their hands at 3D printing, robotics and other cutting-edge manufacturing concepts.
Manufacturers involvement:泭Manufacturers, associations, workforce partners and community engagement groups can sponsor Innovators Quest kits, which they can use at schools, summer camps, local community events,泭泭events, company family days and more.
- By facilitating the experience, manufacturers serve as the connector between Innovators Quest and real-world manufacturing.
The reception:泭Its been fun to see the ones who really light up, said Kristen McMains, talent outreach specialist at Musco Lighting, who brought the experience to Oskaloosas classroom. Teachers have told us, That student doesnt usually engage like this, and suddenly, theyre the one leading their group.
- I learned that Im pretty good with wires and building stuff, said Kolter Ozinga, an 8th grader who participated in the experience. I like electrical work and teamwork.
The big picture:泭Innovators Quest comes at a critical time for the manufacturing workforce. A 2024泭泭by the MI and Deloitte projected that as many as 1.9 million manufacturing jobs could be left unfilled by 2033, when current 5th graders will be graduating high school. Todays youth could be key to filling this talent gapif they know the careers are out there.
- Kids cant be what they cant see, said MI President and Executive Director Carolyn Lee. By sparking their interest in skills used in modern manufacturing, this student engagement activity illustrates the limitless possibilities of the many careers in our industry. The time to invest in our future workforce is now.
Get involved:泭Interested in bringing Innovators Quest to your community? The MI is accepting orders for Innovators Quest kits through Jan. 31.泭.
Centrus Energy Gets $900 Million DOE Investment for Uranium Enrichment
The Bethesda, Marylandbased Centrus Energy Corp. will get an injection of $900 million from the Department of Energy to expand enrichment operations at its Ohio and Tennessee facilities ().
Whats going on:泭The U.S.-owned, U.S.-controlled uranium enrichment company announced earlier this month that it had been chosen by the DOE for a $900 million task order to build out its enrichment泭and centrifuge manufacturing capabilities泭at its facilities泭located泭in Piketon, Ohio, and Oak Ridge, Tennessee.
- The competitively awarded funding will support a previously announced multibillion-dollar expansion that includes commercial-scale production of High-Assay, Low-Enriched Uranium (HALEU), a critical fuel for next-generation nuclear reactors, alongside additional production of conventional low-enriched uranium (LEU) for the existing reactor fleet.
- Centrus has already begun adding to its workforce in anticipation of the project, which is forecast to create about 1,000 construction jobs and 300 permanent jobs in Ohio and hundreds of new direct jobs in Tennessee.
Why its important:泭There is growing bipartisan support to shore up domestic uranium enrichment to power nuclear reactors.
- Russia remains a dominant global supplier of enrichment capacity, particularly for HALEU, which has become a strategic vulnerability as advanced reactor projects move closer to deployment.
51勛圖厙 involvement:泭The 51勛圖厙 is one of the foremost advocates泭for泭strengthening nuclear power in the U.S.泭Last year, the 51勛圖厙泭泭Energy Secretary Chris Wright to allocate this funding to spur泭the Department of Energys collaboration with the private sector to restore American leadership in producing nuclear fuel. Timmons cited Centrus as an important example and urged further investment in the domestic nuclear supply chain.
The details:泭Under the DOE order, Centrus will install additional centrifuge cascades to increase HALEU output and produce LEU feedstock for those cascades, as well as expand LEU volumes for commercial utilities and support national security mandates.
- The first of the new capacity will come in 2029, the company said.
- In addition to the $900 million, the task order includes possible funding, at the DOEs discretion, of up to $170 million for HALEU production and delivery, bringing the total potential value to about $1.07 billion.
The 51勛圖厙 says:泭Increasing domestic supplies of nuclear fuel will help the U.S. boost its output of nuclear power, which is crucial for manufacturers to continue to access stable, clean and abundant baseload power in the U.S., said 51勛圖厙 Director of Energy and Resources Policy Michael Davin.
- Domestic sources of nuclear fuel and secure supply chains will also allow the U.S. to avoid relying on foreign adversaries to fuel its nuclear fleet.
51勛圖厙-Backed Survey: Companies Support Shareholder Proposal Reforms

In a recent 泭published by the University of Delawares Weinberg Center for Corporate Governance and supported by the 51勛圖厙, public companiesincluding many 51勛圖厙 membersvoiced concern about the politicization of the shareholder proposal process.
- They also exppessed support for updating the Securities and Exchange Commissions rules to tighten minimum ownership requirements and the support thresholds for resubmitted proposals.
The findings:泭Overall, company representatives indicated dissatisfaction with the misuse of the proposal process, with 79% of respondents agreeing that proposals are primarily used to promote activists political and social views.
- Public companies reported that they incur significant costs, primarily on outside counsel fees, in responding to shareholder proposals.
- A majority of corporate respondents said they spend more than $100,000 each year, about 25% said they spend at least $500,000, and 11% reported that they spend more than $1 million.
The fixes:泭Sixty-one percent of respondents supported replacing the current $2,000 minimum ownership threshold for long-term investors with a percentage requirement (such as 1% or more of a companys outstanding shares), while 41% called for increasing the minimum dollar stake to $1 million or more.
- Almost 86% of company representatives favored increasing the minimum support levels required for shareholders to resubmit the same proposal in subsequent years. Respondents supported requirements of 10% (after year one), 20% (after year two) and 40% (after year three). The current thresholds are 5%, 15% and 25%, respectively.
Why its important:泭The SEC is considering proposing new rules to govern the shareholder proposal process. The 51勛圖厙 has submitted泭泭to the SEC to address the politicization of the proposal process and to reduce costs for manufacturers.
- The responses to the Weinberg Center survey indicate that reforms are needed to improve the proposal process, which has been hijacked by professional shareholder proponents that seek to force companies to act according to their own narrow interests rather than to promote long-term investor returns, said 51勛圖厙 Senior Director of Corporate Finance Policy Ted Allen.
House Committee Advances Most Comprehensive CAA Revisions in 35 Years

The House泭Energy and Commerce Committee has泭approved seven manufacturer-supported Clean Air Actrelated measures, thanks in part to 51勛圖厙 advocacy.
Whats going on:泭The approved measureswhich constitute the most comprehensive revision to the CAA in over three decadeswill foster our industrys ongoing efforts to improve air quality while preventing unnecessary burdens that reduce economic growth and tax revenues that are vital to local communities, 51勛圖厙 Vice President of Domestic Policy Chris Phalen and 51勛圖厙 Director of Energy and Resources Policy Mike Davin泭泭Committee Chairman Brett Guthrie (R-KY) and Ranking Member Frank Pallone (D-NJ) ahead of a full markup Wednesday morning.
- The action follows 51勛圖厙-backed approval of the measures last month by the泭House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on the Environment.
Why its crucial:泭There are mounting permitting challenges facing American businesses under increasingly unattainable air quality standards, the 51勛圖厙 said. Unless addressed, these challenges will essentially block permitting approvals for projects critical to economic growth, manufacturing infrastructure and jobs.
The details:泭Prior to the hearing,泭the 51勛圖厙 had called on committee members to favorably report to the House floor the following measures specifically:
- The New Source Review Permitting Improvement Act,泭which would reform the New Source Review program for existing sources by clarifying which types of facility modifications require an owner to obtain an NSR
- The Clean Air and Economic Advancement Reform Act, which would make the National Ambient Air Quality Standards process more workable for manufacturers, while keeping regulatory guardrails in place to protect local communities
- The Clean Air and Building Infrastructure Improvement Act,泭which aims to clarify the preconstruction permit process and compliance requirements
- The Air Permitting Improvements to Protect National Security Act,泭to establish presidential authority under the CAA to waive the requirement for an advanced manufacturing plant or critical mineral facility to offset increased emissions
- The Fire Improvement and Reforming Exceptional Events Act,泭which would amend the CAA to mandate revisions to regulations around the review and handling of air quality monitoring data influenced by exceptional events
- The Reducing and Eliminating Duplicative Environmental Regulations Act,泭to eliminate the requirement that the Environmental Protection Agency review a project already subject to environmental review under the National Environmental Policy Act
- The Foreign Emissions and Nonattainment Clarification for Economic Stability Act,泭which would amend the CAA to clarify standards for emissions that come from outside the U.S.
MIs Lee Talks AI, Workforce Training and More on Workforce 4.0

Artificial intelligence, the manufacturing labor shortage, training programs and moreall were covered in a recent episode of the Workforce泭4.0 podcast, featuring Manufacturing Institute President and Executive Director Carolyn Lee.
Whats泭going on:泭Among the first topics addressed by Lee last week when she chatted with podcast host Ann Wyatt for the episode was the still-persistent concern that AI will take jobs from human workers.
- [W]hen泭you ask the average manufacturer, especially a large manufacturer, they would say theyve been working with robotics and automation for many years now, Lee told Wyatt. This is not new. 米Large language models and generative AI [are] new but manufacturers have [always] been at the forefront of technology evolution and innovation, and it has not泭eliminated泭all people. I see people wherever I go.
- In fact, the more widespread automation and other AI applications have become, the more appealing some of the work has become. Lee told the story of a manufacturing worker nearing retirement age who told her, Ive泭been in this sector for 40 years.泭Im泭65. I want to stay longer because the job is safer.泭Its泭interesting,泭Im泭learning more in the last five years than泭Ive泭learned my entire泭previous泭career, and泭Im泭excited for泭whats泭to come.
- Manufacturers just need to train their workforces on the泭technology泭so their teams are able to evolve with it.
Humans in demand:泭Human workers泭are still very much in demand. In fact, the manufacturing industry still has a dearth of about 400,000 workersa shortfall that, if current trends continue, will grow to 1.9 million by 2033, Lee said, citing泭data from a泭joint泭MIDeloitte泭2024泭 .
- When we do this updated paper, which will be in 27, I think it will show a much bigger number because our retirements will泭have continued泭 [and] all泭this domestic investment is泭going to create new jobs, she went on. That, coupled with the advancement of AI, will make workforce trainingthe kind the MI doesand worker upskilling even more important.
FAME-ously泭crucial:泭Lee and Wyatt泭discussed泭the Federation for Advanced Manufacturing Education (FAME), a泭national apprenticeship-style training program泭started泭in 2010 by泭Toyota泭and now run entirely by the MI.
- FAME now has over 42 chapters in 17 states, training thousands of students in maintenance for an泭[Advanced Manufacturing Technician]泭degree, according to Lee.
- It is really an employer-led model where the employers are driving that commitment, driving the training, working in concert with community colleges and then local business entities to help support that network, she said. And then youre growing the pool of talent and youre building practices to solve this together so that were not fighting over a shrinking pool; were actually growing that pool.
CPSC Recalls Imported Mattresses Due to Fire Risk
The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission has issued multiple warnings urging consumers to泭immediately泭stop using certain imported mattresses that fail mandatory federal flammability standards. The alerts follow a pattern of recent recalls targeting noncompliant products that pose a risk of泭serious injury泭or death from fire.
Whats泭going on:泭The CPSC recently泭泭consumers to stop using Crayan mattresses after finding they violated the federal flammability rule, citing a serious fire hazard. The Chinese firm has been uncooperative in the implementation of a June 2025 recall.
- The warning builds on泭similar泭 last fall involving Elitespace mattresses, after the noncompliant seller, Foshanshiyiliangjiajukejiyouxiangongsi, of China, doing business as Elitespace Home, failed to recall their product or offer a remedy to consumers.
Dangerous competition: Noncompliant imports undercut responsible manufacturers by avoiding safety requirements, endangering American consumers. Allowing these unsafe products to stay on the market creates dangerous competition, rewarding copycats who cut corners while exposing families to preventable fire risks.
- These recalls demonstrate how appropriate enforcement can help level the playing field and keep consumers safe.
The 51勛圖厙 says:泭Manufacturers泭are committed to keeping American families safe, said 51勛圖厙 Vice President of Domestic Policy Jake Kuhns. CPSC泭oversight泭of noncompliant products泭is vital to泭protecting families and the manufacturers that play by the rules.
Home Price Growth Slows Across Most Major U.S. Markets
In October, the S&P Cotality Case-Shiller U.S. National Home Price NSA Index recorded a 1.4% annual gain, up slightly from 1.3% in September. The 10-City Composite saw an annual increase of 1.9%, down from 2.0% the previous month, while the 20-City Composite rose 1.3% year-over-year, down from 1.4%. Among the 20 cities, Chicago posted the highest annual gain at 5.8%, followed by New York at 5.0% and Cleveland at 4.1%. Tampa again recorded the lowest annual return, with prices falling 4.2%.
On a month-over-month basis, the U.S. National Index ticked down 0.2% before seasonal adjustment. At the same time, the 10-City and 20-City Composites both decreased in October, declining 0.2% and 0.3%, respectively.
High mortgage rates and inflation have begun to overwhelm home price resilience as affordability has slowed demand. Before seasonal adjustment, 16 of the 20 cities saw prices drop in October. The Midwest and Northeast markets continue to sustain growth as broader conditions across the country soften. Meanwhile, in addition to Tampa, the Sun Belt continued declining, including Phoenix (down 1.5%), Dallas (down 1.5%) and Miami (down 1.1%).
Following the weakest growth in more than two years in September, a new equilibrium has emerged within the housing market. Short-term momentum has stalled, and persistent affordability challenges have resulted in minimal price appreciation and declines in some regions.
Texas Manufacturing Activity Contracts in December
In December, Texas factory activity contracted after rising the prior month. The production index plummeted 23.7 points to -3.2, dropping below the series average of 9.6. Furthermore, most other measures declined notably from November. The new orders index decreased 11.2 points to -6.4. Capacity utilization moved down 23.9 points to -4.5, while shipments plunged 25.7 points to -10.6.
Perceptions of manufacturing business conditions remained negative in December, with the general business conditions index inching down 0.5 points to -10.9. At the same time, the outlook worsened, with the company outlook index falling 5.6 points to -11.9. The uncertainty index weakened 15.7 points to 0, remaining far below the series average of 17.
Labor market indicators suggest a decline in both headcounts and the workweek in December, with the employment index stepping down 2.3 points to -1.1 and the hours worked index falling 17.4 points to -7.5. More than 13% of firms reported net layoffs, while a smaller percentage (12.3%) noted net hiring.
Price pressures were little changed, but wage pressures accelerated in December. The prices paid for raw materials index stepped up 0.7 points to 36. Meanwhile, the prices received for finished goods index decreased 2.6 points to 8.2. The wages and benefits index rose 6.4 points to 21.8, moving above the series average of 21.
The outlook for future manufacturing activity remained positive in December, with the future production index edging up 0.5 points to 34.2. Meanwhile, the future general business activity index ticked down 0.2 points to 10.8, while the future company outlook index inched up 0.3 points to 16.5.