The Industrial Science Report: Battery manufacturing system integration and supply chain resilience reshape U.S. industrial capacity

U.S. battery ecosystem scale-up integrates DOE critical minerals support, regional manufacturing hubs, workforce development, AI-driven inspection, and EV cell-to-body design.

I really like when I wake up and my cell phone battery is still charged, especially after using it the day before to record interviews, track my run, or communicate with my son's baseball team. As long as I'm paying attention, I always have power at hand. We don't realize how powerful that is. It feels ordinary, almost invisible, unless maybe the power goes off.

Beyond our personal devices, the expectation of constant, distributed access to energy is challenged. It’s showing up across transportation, data infrastructure, industrial systems, and increasingly AI-driven compute demand. The grid is already under strain, and we’re layering additional loads on top of it through electrification and digital expansion. Demand will continue to grow, so where does the power constraint emerge first: generation capacity, grid stability, or the upstream industrial systems that supply the materials and equipment everything depends on?

Across federal and regional policy and workforce infrastructure and industrial investment, the focus is on supply chain resilience and industrial energy capacity. Battery manufacturing sits directly in the center of that shift. The industry is no longer scaling in isolation (because it can’t and still compete with China) but through coordination across academia, industry, and government.

The urgency behind the industry transition has ramped up behind electric vehicle adoption, and batteries are also important for grid modernization, industrial electrification, defense systems, robotics, automation platforms, and AI-driven data center expansion. Yet much of the global battery supply chain, particularly critical minerals refining and processing, remains heavily concentrated in China, creating growing strategic vulnerabilities for U.S. manufacturing and energy systems.

Earlier this year, I wrote about energy-intensive materials processing and the dependence on overseas critical mineral infrastructure. It has turned energy resilience and grid stability into a maintenance and reliability issue. 

Investment is moving upstream into critical materials processing capacity, regional hubs are attempting to compress the distance between research and commercial production, automation vendors are helping develop real-life training opportunities, and AI-driven inspection systems are beginning to reshape quality control in continuous coating operations. At the same time, vehicle manufacturers are redesigning product architectures around structural battery integration.

Battery science and production itself is becoming less modular and more tightly integrated into manufacturing systems to support U.S. demand and make a mark on global competitiveness. The manufacturing processes for the raw materials, components, and production line machinery are also being reengineered around electrification-scale production. That's a lot to power.

That quiet expectation of always having power at hand is not a given. It is the outcome of a tightly integrated ecosystem that is now under growing pressure from electrification and compute demand.

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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