Featured Image

MPETAC October update

On Aug. 20, 2019, the Materials Processing Equipment Technical Advisory Committee (MPETAC) met to discuss the latest matters in export control. The purpose of this committee is to advise the Office of the Assistant Secretary...
Oct 23, 2019

On Aug. 20, 2019, the Materials Processing Equipment Technical Advisory Committee (MPETAC) met to discuss the latest matters in export control. The purpose of this committee is to advise the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Export Administration on technical questions that affect the level of export controls applicable to materials processing equipment and related technology. MPETAC covers articles, materials, and suppliers of metalworking equipment, numerically controlled machine tools, and robots. One of the committee’s ongoing goals is to integrate the control definitions between the Export Administration Regulations (EAR) and International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR).

The open session consisted entirely of a presentation by AMT’s Chief Knowledge Officer Patrick McGibbon. He opened his presentation by addressing the manufacturing downstream impact portrayed by the Manufacturers Alliance for Productivity and Innovation (MAPI). “For every dollar of domestic manufacturing value-added destined for manufactured goods for final demand, another $3.60 of value-added is generated elsewhere,” McGibbon said. Upon establishing the value of the manufacturing industry, he further substantiated this claim by showing how machinery manufacturing employment is on the rise alongside the GDP by manufacturing: the United States is right under 21 percent of the World GDP regarding top manufacturing value-added countries.

The machine tool market was introduced via AMT’s U.S. Manufacturing Technology Orders (USMTO) survey of vertical machining centers, horizontal machining centers, horizontal numerically controlled lathes, grinding machines, and electrical discharge machines (EDM). McGibbon briefly touched on U.S. imports of machine tools via Trade Data Monitor (TDM). He also discussed current trade issues, focusing on dumping, Section 232, and Section 301, and how they impact the manufacturing industry in the United States.

McGibbon then turned his attention to manufacturing sectors such as automotive, aerospace, medical, off-road, agriculture, construction, and energy and power generation. He provided an outlook for each industry sector and mentioned upcoming notable projects. To conclude his presentation, he spoke about transformative technologies such as additive manufacturing (AM) and its rapid rise in the industry. Along with AM, he expounded upon artificial intelligence (AI) as part of the future of advanced automation (robotics) and augmented reality (AR). The ubiquity of AI has grown significantly, from mobile check deposits and email inbox auto-sorting features, to, more recently, mobile assistants such as Apple’s Siri, Samsung’s Bixby, and Google’s Google Assistant. Manufacturing technology is on an upswing, and it is our privilege to embrace the field.

For more information on the Bureau of Industry and Security Technical Advisory Committees (TAC) including a schedule of meetings, visit: https://www.bis.doc.gov/.

PicturePicture
Author
Stephen LaMarca
Senior Technology Analyst
Recent technology News
A hyperfast jack-o'-lantern. A digital thread can give you wings. 2,000 to 1. Burning out the fuse. AI in manufacturing, according to Google.
The organizations behind Formnext Chicago formally announce the postponement of the show, which was due to launch April 8-10, 2025, at Chicago’s McCormick Place.
Just in time for Halloween! Lockheed's rocket lab. Gridlocked: Additive in industry. The founding fathers of modern AI. Pioneering 3D printed tissue.
The 21C is fast... "Sustainable" Invar Alloys. Biting the dust. "We Own the Night".
A ban-aid for U.S. automakers. AM and the EAR. Boar's Head gets carved. Computed tomography, private eye. 3D printed cans.
Similar News
undefined
Intelligence
By Tim Shinbara | Feb 12, 2021

Company knowledge and expertise is a strategic asset and a source of competitive advantage in business. Knowledge management technologies, processes, and applications enable a company to identify, collect, store, evaluate, retrieve, and share digital...

4 min
undefined
Technology
By IMTS | Jan 04, 2021

If you missed it, check out the IMTS spark interview with Siemens USA President and CEO Barbara Humpton. She touched upon a number of subjects, but here are a few key takeaways. Barbara shared her thoughts on the role that manufacturing is playing...

2 min
undefined
Technology
By Travis Egan | Jan 15, 2021

2020 has been a year like no other. AMT worked hard to keep its members informed with the most important information and news in the industry and launched a news blog and weekly e-newsletter to make the information timely and actionable...

5 min