Resurgence of Manufacturing Spotlights Need for Training
It’s no secret that the COVID-19 pandemic took a toll on manufacturing in America. Alongside nearly every other industry, manufacturing faced major challenges in 2020 and the years that followed, particularly with regard to supply chain problems.
Fortunately, the tide appears to be turning. In a recent Bloomberg article, authors Enda Curran and Katia Dmitrieva report that “[a]ssembly lines around the world are starting to hum again, marking a turn in a years-long manufacturing slump.” That’s good news here and abroad.
According to Curran and Dmitrieva, “[t]he nascent industrial recovery is led by the world’s two biggest economies. Chinese manufacturing has made a strong start to the year, boosting the economic outlook, and US factory activity unexpectedly expanded last month for the first time since September 2022, buoyed by rising new orders and a jump in production.”
Factory activity isn’t the only key indicator reflecting an uptick in American Manufacturing. The authors note that “JPMorgan/S&P Global’s manufacturing index notched a second month above expansionary territory in March and sits at the highest level since July 2022. If sustained, that’ll help catalyze a broader and stronger economic recovery that’s already spreading beyond the US.”
The recovery could be a bumpy ride. However, the authors believe there is reason for optimism: “While it’s still early days…the activity nonetheless marks a departure from the slowdown that took hold globally as consumer demand pivoted to spending more on services such as travel and dining out instead of buying more goods as pandemic-era restrictions ended.”
As American manufacturing ramps up during this period of recovery, manufacturers will still be faced with a labor pool that continues to have fewer highly skilled workers than employers need. Where will the workers come from? Until educational institutions expand the pipeline of skilled workers, manufacturers will have to pick up some of the slack of training workers with the skills they need to succeed.
Of course, not every manufacturer is prepared to train workers with the knowledge and hands-on skills they need to make an immediate impact in the workplace. Fortunately, employers don’t have to be training experts to launch an effective training program.
The experts at DAC Worldwide can help any manufacturer quickly and efficiently implement a training program that targets the specific skills workers need to be productive. For example, a thorough review of training systems is a great place to start. Do employees have access to hands-on training with actual components they’ll encounter on the job?
If not, partnering with established companies to provide industrial-quality training systems that will stand the test of time will help ensure a competent workforce. Be sure to check out DAC Worldwide’s variety of hands-on focused skills training systems that feature the real-world components workers will encounter in the field!
- Published in News
Foundational Electrical Skills Remain Essential in the Modern Industrial Workplace
Do you remember the good old days of the COVID-19 pandemic? Me neither. Empty store shelves devoid of your favorite products. Supply chain disruptions affecting every aspect of your modern life. No, those were not fun times.
Anyone shopping for a new or used vehicle during the pandemic probably remembers the lack of vehicle supply leading to huge price increases. In some cases, thousands of new vehicles sat in parking lots waiting for one tiny, but critical component—usually a semiconductor or “computer chip”—before they could be shipped to dealers for sale.
The fact that our auto industry relied almost exclusively on foreign suppliers for such key components did not go unnoticed by the federal government. In a recent IndustryWeek article, author Sarah Shinton notes that “[i]n 2022, the White House signed the CHIPS and Science Act into law, a bipartisan effort to increase domestic advanced semiconductor manufacturing. The legislation made a historic $52 billion investment in American semiconductor research, manufacturing and workforce development.”
Is your area one of those lucky enough to have acquired a new semiconductor manufacturing facility? If so, you may not have heard a lot about it yet. Shinton points out that “new projects are facing construction delays and permitting issues.”
More problematic, however, is the fact that there’s a larger issue looming: “the country might be unable to generate enough electricity to power new fabrication plants, leaving billions of dollars in federal funds stranded and one of its most critical supply chains vulnerable.”
Shinton notes that “[w]hile manufacturing semiconductors has always been energy-intensive, the process is becoming even more so as chips are developed to be smaller and more powerful. The most advanced semiconductors require extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography machines, which use ultraviolet light produced by rapid-fired lasers to burn fine details on silicon wafers.”
Unfortunately, “these machines consume 10 times as much power as earlier generations of equipment.” How much power is that? A lot. Shinton points out that “the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC), the world’s leading semiconductor manufacturer,…now consumes more electricity than some U.S. states.”
This presents a huge problem for future chip fabrication plants in the U.S. According to Shinton, “semiconductor manufacturing creates large pockets of demand in the areas where fabrication plants are located. A rapid increase in load presents challenges for grid operators who maintain the delicate balance between electricity supply and demand, preventing curtailments or worse, blackouts.”
The phasing out of coal-fired power plants in favor of alternative sources, such as natural gas, solar, and wind, could also be problematic. “The vast amount of electricity needed to onshore this new manufacturing comes at a time when America’s power grid is increasingly unreliable as the country undergoes rapid changes…many regulators are raising alarms that power plants are being retired faster than they are replaced, leaving the country at risk of electricity shortages.”
Moreover, “[t]hese mass retirements are also happening while electricity demand nationwide is increasing from data center growth, expansions in manufacturing and intensifying weather conditions…Over the past year, the five-year load growth forecast nearly doubled, jumping from 2.6% to 4.7%…Without expanding the high-capacity transmission system, our grid will struggle to meet this demand.”
What do these problems mean for the future workforce? Not only will dozens of semiconductor manufacturing facilities need highly skilled workers for their plants, but the industries supporting these new ventures will need thousands of workers with fundamental electrical skills as public utilities work together with industry to ensure a stable electrical grid for the future.
How do companies and schools train the next generation of professionals with the electrical skills they need to succeed in the modern workplace? A thorough review of training systems is a great place to start. Do employees and students have access to hands-on training with actual components they’ll encounter on the job?
If not, partnering with established companies to provide industrial-quality training systems that will stand the test of time will help ensure a competent workforce. Be sure to check out DAC Worldwide’s variety of hands-on electrical training systems that feature the real-world components workers will encounter in the field!
- Published in News