The Institute for American Manufacturing & Technology (IAMT) produces applied research and policy analysis across three domains: artificial intelligence, energy & power, and manufacturing.
Three institutes. One framework.
Build. Power. Govern.
https://t.co/vPekXddwIb
The United States cannot rebuild manufacturing, expand nuclear power, grow AI infrastructure, or strengthen supply chains without rebuilding the pipeline that produces experienced workers.
Experience formation is industrial infrastructure.
Who Trains the Next Generation? The Workforce Training Commons Problem by: @EthanCopple
The United States cannot rebuild manufacturing, expand nuclear power, grow AI infrastructure, or strengthen supply chains without rebuilding the pipeline that produces experienced workers.
Experience formation is industrial infrastructure.
Who Trains the Next Generation? The Workforce Training Commons Problem by: @EthanCopple
New piece today from the Institute for American Manufacturing and Technology discussing the country's need for comprehensive energy policy.
@IAMTPolicy
Learn more: https://t.co/gwMHfh4c0C
Power policy focuses on fuel.
Coal, gas, nuclear, solar.
But the conversion cycle determines how much of that energy actually becomes electricity.
We're making 50-year infrastructure decisions while treating the conversion layer as an afterthought.
New article below by: @rashad_ahmadov_
@GovNuclear Advanced materials engineering is becoming increasingly important to the next generation of nuclear safety, resilience, and reactor performance.
@KairosPower Advanced nuclear deployment will increasingly rely on automation, robotics, and precision industrial systems alongside reactor innovation itself.
@ACC_National Reliable baseload generation will likely become increasingly important as electricity demand rises from AI infrastructure, manufacturing expansion, and broader electrification trends.
Nuclear remains one of the few scalable long term options.