The Obama administration selected a Los Angeles group today to lead an effort aimed at making manufacturing companies more competitive globally by helping them consume less energy and produce less waste.
The Smart Manufacturing Leadership Coalition in Los Angeles will receive USD 70 million from the federal government to establish the ninth of 15 "manufacturing hubs" that President Barack Obama wants set up across the country. The winning team of nearly 200 partners will at least match that amount.
The private-public partnership will develop smart sensors to make all types of manufacturing more efficient, Obama said at a conference designed to showcase investment opportunities in the United States.
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"The world is smaller than it used to be because of innovation," Obama said, adding: "that is something that can work for everyone if we do it right."
Administration officials said the manufacturing industry consumes about a third of the nation's energy. Chemical production and steel manufacturing are examples of two industries with large energy costs that could benefit through new technological breakthroughs.
"One should realize that the future's manufacturing jobs are fundamentally IT jobs," Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz said.
During a week focused on innovation, Obama will also attend a global entrepreneurship summit at Stanford University later this week.
He's participating in a panel discussion with Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg and three yet-to-be named entrepreneurs.