|
|
NEWS RELEASE
Sept. 12, 2012
|
Legislative panel to explore ways
state can support growing composites
industry
From aircraft to
fast boats, electric
 |
| The
Boeing 787 Dreamliner, which is
assembled at the company's
Everett plant, is the first
commercial airliner made from
composites (Boeing photo). |
cars and even
guitars, the quickly emerging composites
industry in the state of Washington is
creating an opportunity for new jobs in
a field that is just beginning to take
shape, industry analysts say. The
industry will be the talk of a
three-hour work session by a legislative
panel next Friday in Tacoma.
“It
is a very rapidly growing industry, in a
highly innovative sector that has a lot
of potential,” says James Palmer, an economic development
manager for the state Department of
Commerce, who is among those
spearheading
efforts to help organize the industry in
Washington into its own economic sector.
Palmer will be the lead-off
presenter at the meeting of the
Legislative Committee on Economic
Development and International Relations
(LCEDIR) at the LeMay America’s Car
Museum beginning at 9 a.m. Sept. 21 in
Tacoma. The 13-member, bipartisan
committee, chaired by Lt. Gov. Brad
Owen, meets two or three times a year to
examine issues
and industries that impact the state’s
economy.
Palmer defines
composites as materials derived from
multiple components and advanced
processes. They can include Fiberglas,
carbon fibers, new metals or even wood.
The Boeing Company’s 787
Dreamliner is the first composite
airliner in production, with the
aircraft’s vertical tailfin and other
parts manufactured at the Boeing and
Toray plants in Frederickson. But
there are numerous other applications
beyond the aerospace industry that are
taking hold in Washington too.
For example, a
partner of auto giant BMW,
SGL,
is carbonizing nylon thread made in
Japan at its plant in Moses Lake, taking
advantage of the region’s relatively
low-cost and renewable electricity. The
thread is then shipped to BMW in Germany
for weaving fabric panels used in its
new line of BMW i3 electric vehicles.
 |
|
Rainsong acoustic guitars are
made in Woodinville. |
A company in
Woodinville,
RainSong, makes high-end acoustic
guitars from carbon fiber that are
popular with musicians in Antarctica and
other cold climates because, unlike
wood, graphite is not subject to
variations in humidity and temperature.
One of company’s biggest fans is
rock icon Steve Miller of the Steve
Miller Band, who reportedly owns 18
RainSong guitars.
Aerosmith’s
Steven Tyler played a 12-string RainSong
for a tune or two on the band’s recent
world tour. The company sells between
500 and 1,000 guitars a year.
The
Port of Port Angeles, along with area
research and manufacturing
representatives, recently proposed a
composites manufacturing demonstration
facility on about 20 acres on West
Sequim Bay and is seeking a federal
grant to fund it. The facility would be
in addition to the port's existing
Composites Manufacturing Campus near
the regional airport.
Angeles
Composite Technologies Inc., which
manufactures and distributes aircraft
parts around the world,
expanded to the airport site earlier
this year.
Among the presenters at LCEDIR
will be Lisa Janicki with Janicki
Industries, a Sedro-Woolley company that
provided tooling for most of the carbon
fiber components of the BMW ORACLE
racing yacht, winner of the 33rd
America's Cup in 2010, as well as built
the molds for its 223-foot long wing
sail.
.jpg) |
| The
BMW Oracle America's Cup 2010
winner was built in Washington. |
Professors within
the College of Engineering and
Architecture at Washington State
University in Pullman will highlight
research that will be applicable to a
range of possible new and innovative
products.
The
WSU Composite Materials and Engineering
Center has embarked on a variety of
projects aimed at making
lighter, stronger construction materials
from plastics and wood, improving
pavement and concrete, and building
stronger bridge decks in cold regions,
long-life batteries, and products made
from recyclable materials.
Similarly, the
Automobili Lamborghini Advanced
Composite Structures Laboratory at
the University of Washington was
established three years ago to analyze
the impacts of lightning, bird strikes
and severe crashes on composite
materials used in automobile and
aircraft manufacturing,
as well as conceptual design.
Aeronautical engineers at the UW
have partnered with Boeing for several
years on aerospace applications around
composites.
Palmer points out while there are a number
of companies and institutions working in
composites, the Washington-based
companies have yet to organize
into a regionally focused, industry-led
trade association. He is
encouraging Washington’s companies to
self-identify into a regional
association in order for the Commerce
department help the industry improve job
and market opportunities for Washington
companies and the state’s workforce.
Industry organization will help better
communicate the workforce training needs
for technical and community colleges
training students for high-skilled jobs,
identify funding needs for university
programs engaged in research and
development, as well as focus on new
market development and ways to help
support the international supply chain
around composites, he said.
A separate
afternoon meeting following the LCEDIR
session will be a Commerce-led
roundtable discussion among businesses
with the idea of establishing a database
of Washington companies working in
composites.
The state is not
without competition in the industry,
Palmer said. South Carolina, for
instance, has been “very aggressive” in
its recruiting of companies in the
composite business. Japan, Spain, and
Germany are producing machines that are
used in the composite manufacturing
process. Michigan has an interest
in composites due to the auto industry
there and Texas is becoming the base of
many composites companies too.
“What we want to
know is how the state of Washington can
support this important industry so we
can create jobs that will lead us into
the next century.
We will look at whether there are
any policies or laws at the state level
that are either helping or hurting,” Lt.
Gov. Owen said. “The members of our
committee are all very interested in
supporting any effort that means jobs
and opportunities for citizens of
Washington.”
The session will be
taped then air repeatedly on the state's public
affairs network, TVW, starting at 8 p.m.
Sept. 24 and can be viewed on the
TVW web site as well. A full list of
presenters can be found
on the meeting
agenda.
The LeMay
America's Car Museum is at 2702 East D.
Street in Tacoma, and the session will
be in the facilities' Banquet Room.
|
|
For media inquiries: Brian
Dirks (360) 786-7707 or
dirks.brian@leg.wa.gov
Dr. Antonio Sanchez (360) 786-7786 or
Sanchez.antonio@leg.wa.gov
Official portrait of Lt. Governor Owen
|
|