Polls

How to keep SSL manufacturing in the U.S.

In 2007, lighting manufacturers employed almost 60,000 people nationwide and shipped products valued at $13.5 billion. However, U.S. solid-state lighting companies are faced with economic factors that have led to the globalization of their industry, including lost jobs, a dispersal of the technology infrastructure largely built in this country, and ultimately a U.S. trade deficit.

That's why the DOE convened a workshop on how to keep SSL manufacturing in the U.S. It recently published a whitepaper outlining the results of the workshop and its conclusions. Among them:

One of the most worrisome lighting industry trends of the last 20 years has been the loss of U.S. jobs and economic stature, not to mention intellectual property foundation, to Asian countries. Several workshop participants commented that labor cost is not the main reason U.S. companies outsource high-tech manufacturing. The lighting manufacturers highlighted the following reasons for migration to China and other Far East countries:
• Proximity to the world’s highest population and economic growth markets
• Proximity to the supply chain
• Incentives offered for foreign investment in manufacturing and R&D
−−Availability of infrastructure, space in industrial parks, a trained workforce,
and low-cost loans
−−Generous government subsidies for energy and water
−−Export incentives, tax breaks, and refunds of the value-added tax
−−Tariff protections from foreign competition


You can download the complete DOE whitepaper here: http://apps1.eere.energy.gov/buildings/publications/pdfs/ssl/ssl_whitepaper_july2010.pdf

Want to use this article? Click here for options!
© 2012 Penton Media Inc.

Videos

SmartHome: Built to Save

The Cleveland Museum of Natural History and The SmartHome Project

Play Video Other Videos

Featured Suppliers

Browse Back Issues

March/April 2012

March/April 2012

January/February 2012

January/February 2012

November/December 2011

November/December 2011

September/October 2010

September/October 2011

July/August 2011

July/August 2011