Submarines and the Future of Defense Manufacturing
24 min
•Mar 25, 202625 days agoSummary
The episode explores the critical shortage of submarine manufacturing capacity in the US, requiring 70 million labor hours to rebuild the fleet after Cold War production collapse. Chris Power of Hadrian and Vice Admiral Robert Goucher discuss how software-driven manufacturing can address the skilled workforce gap and accelerate production of Columbia and Virginia class submarines.
Insights
- The US submarine manufacturing crisis is fundamentally a skilled workforce problem, not a funding issue - nine out of ten manufacturing jobs vanished after the Cold War
- Software-driven manufacturing can potentially reduce required workforce by 50-70% while maintaining the precision needed for submarine construction
- Modern submarines serve as multi-mission platforms that can command autonomous drone networks, extending their relevance beyond traditional roles
- Creating single points of accountability (like submarine czars) dramatically accelerates decision-making in complex defense programs
- Advanced manufacturing facilities must balance high-volume productivity with the flexibility required for low-volume, high-mix submarine components
Trends
Shift from traditional defense manufacturing to software-augmented production systemsIntegration of autonomous systems with manned platforms for force multiplicationConsolidation of defense program management under single accountable leadersEmphasis on domestic manufacturing capacity rebuilding for national securityWorkforce development programs combining traditional skills with software trainingFlexible manufacturing systems for defense applications requiring rapid reconfigurationFocus on obsolete parts manufacturing to maintain existing submarine fleetsStrategic deterrence modernization across nuclear triad components
Topics
Submarine manufacturing capacity shortageDefense industrial base rebuildingSoftware-driven manufacturingNuclear deterrence and strategic submarinesSkilled workforce developmentColumbia class submarine programVirginia class submarine productionAdvanced manufacturing facilitiesDefense supply chain managementAutonomous underwater vehicles integrationSubmarine maintenance and sustainmentNuclear triad modernizationDefense program management reformManufacturing productivity optimizationObsolete parts manufacturing
Companies
Hadrian
Advanced manufacturing company building 2.25M sq ft facility for submarine component production
Anduril
Defense technology company building autonomous underwater drones and unmanned systems
Saronic
Company developing small, low-cost autonomous underwater vessels
Tesla
Source of software engineering talent being recruited for advanced manufacturing
SpaceX
Source of engineering talent and manufacturing complexity comparison point
General Electric
Source of engineering talent being recruited for submarine manufacturing
Foxconn
Traditional factory automation example contrasted with flexible manufacturing
Apple
High-volume manufacturing example contrasted with submarine production needs
Toyota
Mass production example used to illustrate manufacturing volume differences
People
Chris Power
Leading advanced manufacturing initiative for submarine component production
Robert Goucher
Pentagon's first submarine czar overseeing all submarine production programs
David Ulevitch
Moderating discussion on defense manufacturing and submarine production
Steven Feinberg
Created direct reporting portfolio manager roles including submarine czar position
Jason Potter
Involved in approving Hadrian manufacturing facility deal
Quotes
"The real advantage that submarines bring is our stealth and access. We can pretty much go anywhere in the world undetected."
Robert Goucher
"It's not a money problem. We have to get this productivity uplift by fusing workforce training and software together to go a lot faster."
Chris Power
"At the end of the Cold War, we walked away from manufacturing. The amount of work that we need now to replenish our fleet is on the order of about 70 million hours."
Robert Goucher
"We could spend $10 billion hiring 2 million welders that he needs. They just don't exist in the country."
Chris Power
"In some areas today, we are less than 50% productive. So essentially, for every two people, I'm getting one hour."
Robert Goucher
Full Transcript
4 Speakers