Onshoring Clean Energy with Giulia Siccardo, DOE's Office of Manufacturing and Energy Supply Chains
Media Type |
audio
Categories Via RSS |
Business
Science
Technology
Publication Date |
Jun 18, 2024
Episode Duration |
01:00:05

Today's conversation is all about how the US is trying to onshore manufacturing of key clean energy supply chains, things like EV, battery metals, and the like. 

Giulia Siccardo is the Director of the US Department of Energy's Office of Manufacturing and Energy Supply Chains or MESC. 

We start out with a bit of a history lesson on why manufacturing somewhat intentionally moved offshore from the 1980s through the 20-teens and the implications of this move on the American workforce. We then talk about how and why MESC was formed and the initiatives and programs that MESC is undertaking to swing manufacturing back within America's borders. 

To give you a bit of the detail before we start the conversation, MESC was established as a new office in the DOE in 2022 with the aim of strengthening and scaling America's clean energy supply chains through investments in manufacturing capacity, workforce development, and data analysis of America's supply chain vulnerabilities. 

Giulia joined the DOE after many years with McKinsey, including having led McKinsey's green growth service line and having co-created Frontier, the advanced market commitment to buy over a billion dollars of carbon removal.

In this episode, we cover: 

  • [2:55] History of offshoring manufacturing
  • [6:08] U.S.-China tensions in clean energy manufacturing
  • [9:57] Energy supply chain and workforce intersection
  • [15:14] AI as a blue-collar workforce generator
  • [17:33] Evolution of the manufacturing workforce and training
  • [22:08] Overview of DOE's Office of Manufacturing and Energy Supply Chains (MESC)
  • [29:42] MESC's non-dilutive equity efforts
  • [35:03] Critical minerals and materials for energy transition
  • [37:18] MESC's global collaboration portfolio
  • [42:04] MESC's 48C tax credit program
  • [47:05] Considerations for companies approaching MESC during an election year
  • [48:47] Giulia's background at Frontier
  • [54:04] Data analysis on U.S. supply chain vulnerabilities
  • [58:00] MESC's plans to publicly share data and insights

Episode recorded on May 31, 2024 (Published on June 17, 2024)

Get connected with MCJ: 

*If you liked this episode, please consider giving us a review! You can also reach us via email at content@mcjcollective.com, where we encourage you to share your feedback on episodes and suggestions for future topics or guests.

Today's conversation is all about how the US is trying to onshore manufacturing of key clean energy supply chains, things like EV, battery metals, and the like. Giulia Siccardo is the Director of the US Department of Energy's Office of Manufacturing and Energy Supply Chains or MESC. We start out with a bit of a history lesson on why manufacturing somewhat intentionally moved offshore from the 1980s through the 20-teens and the implications of this move on the American workforce. We then talk about how and why MESC was formed and the initiatives and programs that MESC is undertaking to swing manufacturing back within America's borders. To give you a bit of the detail before we start the conversation, MESC was established as a new office in the DOE in 2022 with the aim of strengthening and scaling America's clean energy supply chains through investments in manufacturing capacity, workforce development, and data analysis of America's supply chain vulnerabilities. Giulia joined the DOE after many years with McKinsey, including having led McKinsey's green growth service line and having co-created Frontier, the advanced market commitment to buy over a billion dollars of carbon removal.

Today's conversation is all about how the US is trying to onshore manufacturing of key clean energy supply chains, things like EV, battery metals, and the like. 

Giulia Siccardo is the Director of the US Department of Energy's Office of Manufacturing and Energy Supply Chains or MESC. 

We start out with a bit of a history lesson on why manufacturing somewhat intentionally moved offshore from the 1980s through the 20-teens and the implications of this move on the American workforce. We then talk about how and why MESC was formed and the initiatives and programs that MESC is undertaking to swing manufacturing back within America's borders. 

To give you a bit of the detail before we start the conversation, MESC was established as a new office in the DOE in 2022 with the aim of strengthening and scaling America's clean energy supply chains through investments in manufacturing capacity, workforce development, and data analysis of America's supply chain vulnerabilities. 

Giulia joined the DOE after many years with McKinsey, including having led McKinsey's green growth service line and having co-created Frontier, the advanced market commitment to buy over a billion dollars of carbon removal.

In this episode, we cover: 

  • [2:55] History of offshoring manufacturing
  • [6:08] U.S.-China tensions in clean energy manufacturing
  • [9:57] Energy supply chain and workforce intersection
  • [15:14] AI as a blue-collar workforce generator
  • [17:33] Evolution of the manufacturing workforce and training
  • [22:08] Overview of DOE's Office of Manufacturing and Energy Supply Chains (MESC)
  • [29:42] MESC's non-dilutive equity efforts
  • [35:03] Critical minerals and materials for energy transition
  • [37:18] MESC's global collaboration portfolio
  • [42:04] MESC's 48C tax credit program
  • [47:05] Considerations for companies approaching MESC during an election year
  • [48:47] Giulia's background at Frontier
  • [54:04] Data analysis on U.S. supply chain vulnerabilities
  • [58:00] MESC's plans to publicly share data and insights

Episode recorded on May 31, 2024 (Published on June 17, 2024)

Get connected with MCJ: 

*If you liked this episode, please consider giving us a review! You can also reach us via email at content@mcjcollective.com, where we encourage you to share your feedback on episodes and suggestions for future topics or guests.

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