The Denver Post

Biden plugs manufactur­ing initiative at metal company

- By Aamer Madhani

HAMILTON, OHIO » President Joe Biden traveled to the industrial Midwest on Friday to announce that five major U.S. manufactur­ers have made commitment­s to boost their reliance on small and medium American firms for 3-D printing.

The White House said GE Aviation, Honeywell, Lockheed Martin, Raytheon and Siemens Energy have agreed to take part in the program, which Biden is highlighti­ng with a visit to United Performanc­e Metals in Hamilton, Ohio.

The president toured the factory with executives, making bold prediction­s about the future of U.S. industry that could be made possible through greater use of cutting-edge equipment and domestic manufactur­ers.

“It’s going to revolution­ize the whole world,” Biden said during the tour.

The promise of 3-D printing is that it could reverse the outsourcin­g of factory jobs and industrial production, allowing for more components to be manufactur­ed in the U.S.

An analysis by the consulting firm Kearney estimated that the technology could produce $600 billion to $900 billion in economic value by enabling more production domestical­ly.

The president is pressing Congress to approve a stalled competitio­n and innovation bill that the Democratic president says is critical to bolstering domestic manufactur­ing and helping solve a semiconduc­tor shortage that has delayed production of life-saving medical devices, smartphone­s, video game consoles, laptops and other modern convenienc­es.

“I’m determined to make sure the United States holds the technologi­cal high ground in competitio­n with other nations, especially China, as we move forward,” Biden said this week.

His comments on the Bipartisan Innovation Act came during a visit Tuesday to an Alabama Lockheed Martin plant building Javelin antitank weapon systems.

GE Aviation and Raytheon set a goal of looking to small and medium firms for 50% of their requests for quotes for products requiring 3-D printing or related technologi­es.

Siemens Energy committed to targeting 20% to 40% of externally sourced 3-D print parts and will work with 10 to 20 small and medium-size firms to help improve their capability. Lockheed Martin has agreed to work with smaller suppliers on research to improve the use of 3-D printing as an alternativ­e to castings and forgings. Honeywell is offering technical assistance including part design, data generation, machine opera

tion and post-processing to small and medium suppliers it works with.

The semiconduc­tor chip problem has been building since pandemic-related lockdowns shut down major Asian chip factories more than two years ago. Now it could extend past this year, despite the semiconduc­tor industry’s efforts to catch up with demand.

There is bipartisan support for boosting domestic chip production, but lawmakers in the Senate and the House still need to negotiate over difference­s.

The House in February passed a version of the legislatio­n that could pump $52 billion in grants and subsidies to the semiconduc­tor industry to help boost U.S. production.

The bill must now be reconciled with a Senate version passed eight months ago.

House Democrats also tucked in other priorities that have raised Republican concerns about the bill’s cost and scope.

The bill includes $8 billion for a fund that helps developing countries adjust to climate change, $3 billion for facilities to make the U.S. less reliant on Chinese solar components, $4 billion to help communitie­s with significan­tly higher unemployme­nt than the national average and $10.5 billion for states to stockpile drugs and medical equipment.

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