The Industrial Science Report: Building the manufacturing workforce behind national security

From aerospace to energy, research investments aim to boost the talent pipeline in critical industries.
Jan. 9, 2026
6 min read

Key Highlights

  • Workforce development in critical industries is crucial for safeguarding supply chains, infrastructure, and economic stability amid technological complexities.
  • Strategic investments in aerospace, defense, and nuclear energy R&D foster innovation, job creation, and international collaboration.
  • Academic partnerships enhance research, education, and real-world application across critical infrastructure sectors.
  • Manufacturing technologies like the CF3D composite system are advancing materials science research in aerospace and defense industries.
  • Strengthening cybersecurity fluency among maintenance professionals is vital for infrastructure resilience and operational reliability.

National security is not only defined by military strength, it is increasingly also dependent on an industrial workforce to design, build, operate, and protect complex systems at scale. From cyber-infrastructure and nuclear energy to aerospace materials and global manufacturing ecosystems, the reliability of critical technologies hinges on the depth and adaptability of the talent behind them.

The Industrial Science Report this week highlights universities, government agencies, and industry partners that are focused on closing the skills gaps in these critical industries. Workforce development in the U.S. can become a strategic lever for safeguarding supply chains, hardening infrastructure, and sustaining economic stability in an era where technical failure can quickly become a national vulnerability.

ICIT and West Virginia University partner to strengthen critical infrastructure cybersecurity and workforce resilience

Cybersecurity risk is a growing failure point for manufacturing operations, and attackers can thrive in the growing disconnect between information technology (IT) and operational technology (OT). This new partnership between the Institute for Critical Infrastructure Technology and West Virginia University takes aim at cyber blind spots that increasingly threaten critical infrastructure. As cyber risk becomes a reliability issue, tomorrow’s maintenance and reliability professionals will need cybersecurity fluency alongside traditional mechanical and electrical skills.

The Institute for Critical Infrastructure Technology (ICIT) and West Virginia University (WVU) announced a formal academic partnership to advance research, education, and real-world impact across critical infrastructure sectors, including energy, water/wastewater, transportation, and telecommunications. The collaboration combines ICIT’s policy expertise with WVU’s dual National Security Agency (NSA)/ Department of Homeland Security (DHS)-designated National Center of Academic Excellence status and academic capabilities in cybersecurity and applied resilience. The partnership will enable cross-sector applied research, joint proposals, and the development of educational programs to cultivate future infrastructure defense and resilience leaders. By engaging government, industry, and academic stakeholders, the initiative aims to better reflect real-world operational complexity in its research and policy recommendations. 

Ohio Federal Research Network awards $10.198 M for defense and aerospace R&D projects

Defense and aerospace manufacturing leaves no room for fragile processes or short-term thinking. OFRN’s latest investment targets hypersonics, advanced materials, autonomy, and aerospace power systems, and these advanced technologies push manufacturing precision, reliability, and lifecycle performance to the limit. The research pipeline foreshadows the materials, such as ultra-heat-resistant ceramics, aerospace-grade high-voltage cable systems, and spaceborne infrared detectors, and their asset behaviors that will soon show up on production floors well beyond defense industries.

The Ohio Federal Research Network (OFRN) announced $10.198 million in funding for seven new collaborative research and development projects under Round 7, financed through the Ohio Department of Higher Education and included in the Governor’s budget. The seven projects will support technology areas such as hypersonics, human performance, aerospace power systems, commercial space, quantum technologies, autonomy, and advanced materials, involving collaborations among seven Ohio research institutions and 11 industry partners. The awards are intended to accelerate defense, aerospace, and advanced technology innovation while strengthening partnerships among Ohio’s universities, research institutions, and industry. It further notes that the selected projects are projected to create 64 new jobs, generate more than $69 million in follow-on funding, and leverage more than $3.5 million in cost share commitments.

About the Author

Anna Townshend

Anna Townshend

managing editor

Anna Townshend has been a journalist and editor for almost 20 years. She joined Control Design and Plant Services as managing editor in June 2020. Previously, for more than 10 years, she was the editor of Marina Dock Age and International Dredging Review. In addition to writing and editing thousands of articles in her career, she has been an active speaker on industry panels and presentations, as well as host for the Tool Belt and Control Intelligence podcasts. Email her at [email protected].

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