More Than 50 CEOs Urge President Biden and Secretary Raimondo to Take Action to Improve Electronics Manufacturing Ecosystem

Secretary Raimondo to Hold Summit with Industry Leaders Today to Address Chips Shortage Crisis

More than 50 CEOs urged Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo to take concrete steps to address challenges confronting the entire U.S. electronics supply chain.                            

The letter organized by members of IPC, a global electronics manufacturing association, urges Sec. Raimondo to address “a fundamental mistake” that has characterized U.S. technology policy for decades: the idea that the United States can be a technology leader by designing electronic products that cannot be domestically manufactured.                                                             

The letter argues that despite the outsized importance of electronics in the modern economy, for decades, the United States has failed to sufficiently value the importance of electronics manufacturing. U.S. policy bolstered specific components of the electronics supply chain – especially semiconductors – without fully appreciating that electronics is a sophisticated ecosystem. Like any ecosystem, each component must be resilient for the entire ecosystem to thrive.

“The electronics industry is encouraged by President Biden’s commitment to boost investment in American manufacturing and semiconductor research,” said John Mitchell, IPC president and CEO. “U.S. investment in semiconductors is much needed, but so, too, is investing in the broader supply chain involved in packaging silicon and electronics components.”                                           

The signatories support the Biden administration’s efforts to shore up the semiconductors supply chain, and they encourage the administration to develop concrete steps to achieve the following goals:

  • Creation of a National Manufacturing Institute for Electronic Interconnection to scale up advanced manufacturing processes intended for consumer electronics while ensuring that reliability is increased for use in the safety-critical sectors of aerospace, defense, and transportation.
  • Direct the Office of the Secretary of Defense for Industrial Policy to enact a Title III Program focused on developing advanced circuit board manufacturing processes and techniques for advanced materials and to modernize capital equipment to handle the new material processes.  
  • Boost funding and broaden the NIST Manufacturing Extension Partnership (MEP) scope to include a specific focus on the electronics technologies segment (like they currently have for the food industry) and Supplier Scouting to help support small to medium-sized businesses in those areas.
  • Expand the CHIPS for America Act review of supply chains to ensure electronics technology, including PCB manufacturing/assembly and advanced packaging, is incorporated. 
  • Develop trusted partnerships through international agreements with allied nations and provide for multiyear procurements of military electronics, enabling American manufacturers to plan and update capital improvements to manufacture tomorrow’s electronics systems, and enhancing supply chain resilience.
  • Mandate a partnership between the Manufacturing Technologies (ManTech) Program and DARPA to provide a technology maturation and application transition pathway for leap-ahead packaging solutions developed by DARPA through a multi-year series of grand challenge events. This would enable U.S. electronics manufacturers to tackle their biggest technical challenges and develop the intellectual property to remain competitive in the future.
  • Expand existing DOD- and DOE-wide bandgap compound semiconductor technology development programs to focus on modules and packaging to firmly establish this new high-performance semiconductor packaging segment in the United States before it moves overseas. 

The electronics manufacturing industry is at the heart of the modern economy. It is a robust, vertical industry generating more than $700 billion a year in U.S. GDP and jobs for more than 5 million people. It is also a critical segment of the supply chain for every other sector of the economy, including automotive, defense, aviation, financial services, health care, consumer, telecommunications and agriculture. In today’s world, our lives depend on electronics, and that dependence is growing.                                                

The full letter and signatories can be found here.

IPC and ITI to Host Conference on Critical and Emerging Environmental Product Requirements

IPC and the Information Technology Industry Council (ITI) will host a virtual conference, “Critical and Emerging Environmental Product Requirements” on June 29 from 11:00 am to 3:30 pm EDT. The event will explore the latest environmental requirements that impact product design, manufacturing, supply chain management, and technology innovation.

Speakers will include leading environmental regulatory experts Paul Tennant, Graeme Vickery and Hermione Mackelworth from the U.K. Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA), Madalina Laxton from the European Commission, Directorate-General for the Environment, and Joel Wolf from the ‎U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).

Tennant and Vickery will provide an update on Brexit and possible environmental regulatory changes resulting from Brexit. Mackelworth will cover U.K. REACH. Laxton will address the latest policy developments on the EU’s RoHS Directive. Wolf will cover risk evaluations and risk management under the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA).

“New global environmental compliance requirements are emerging and existing requirements seem to be constantly evolving. To ensure adherence to environmental regulations, companies need to continually calibrate their compliance management functions,” said Kelly Scanlon, IPC director of environmental policy and research. “Misunderstanding these ever-changing requirements could have a disastrous impact for business. ITI and IPC’s virtual conference will provide the information compliance professionals and officers need to be up to date with legal, regulatory, and customer requirements.”

“From Brexit to a new administration in the U.S., recent changes to governments are having a real impact on environmental compliance regulations across the globe,” said Chris Cleet, ITI vice president of policy for environment, sustainability, and regulatory. “This conference will give companies a unique opportunity to hear directly from government officials and experts about the current policy landscape and provide critical information and resources compliance professionals need to effectively navigate new regulations and stay ahead of future changes.”

The event is sponsored by The Compliance Map, Benchmark ESG ǀ Gensuite, Total Parts Plus (TPP), and iPoint.

For detailed information on the agenda, speakers or to register for the “ITI and IPC Conference on Critical and Emerging Environmental Product Requirements,” visit https://www.ipc.org/environmental-conference-2021.

Newly Appointed IPC APEX EXPO Technical Program Committee Calls for IPC APEX EXPO 2022 Participation

The newly appointed IPC APEX EXPO Technical Program Committee (TPC) is inviting engineers, researchers, academics, technical experts, and industry leaders to submit technical conference abstracts for IPC APEX EXPO 2022 to be held at the San Diego Convention Center. The technical conference will take place January 25–27, 2022.

“The TPC – comprised of top technical leadership and subject matter experts from across the electronics industry – continues to build and strengthen the IPC APEX EXPO technical conference. A new committee chair and co-chair, expanded committee size, and a new structure enables the group to be future focused and provide a stronger technical voice spanning various technologies and the supply chain,” said Matt Kelly, IPC chief technologist. “The TPC’s mission is to deliver strong, relevant, and valuable technical programming that balances conventional technology advances with next-generation disruptive technologies. With these upgrades to the TPC, I’m excited to see what the IPC APEX EXPO 2022 technical conference has in store.”

Led by Beverley Christian, Ph.D., HDP User Group (Chair) and Stanton Rak, Ph.D., SF Rak Co. (Co-Chair) the 24-person committee comprises the following members: Bhanu Sood, Ph.D., NASA Goddard Space Flight Center; Cheryl Tulkoff, NI; Chris Jorgensen, IPC; Hans-Peter Tranitz, Ph.D., Continental Automotive GmbH; Jason Keeping, Celestica Inc.; Jerry Magera, Motorola Solutions; Martin Goetz, Northrop Grumman Corporation; Matt Kelly, IPC; Michael Ford, Aegis Industrial Software; Michael Carano, RBP Chemical Technology, Inc.; Milos Lazic, Indium Corporation; Paige Fiet, Michigan Technological University; Paul Cooke, Asahi Glass Co. Ltd.; Radu Diaconescu, Swissmic SA; Raymond Whittier Jr., BAE Systems; Robert Kinyanjui, Ph.D., John Deere Electronic Solutions; Russell Nowland, Nokia; Sarah Czaplewski, IBM; Steven Bowles, Lockheed Martin Corporation; Tim Burke, Ph.D., Arch Systems Inc.; Todd MacFadden, Bose Corporation; Toya Richardson, IPC; and Udo Welzel, Robert Bosch GmbH.

Technical conference paper abstracts are due June 18, 2021. An approximate 300-word technical conference abstract summarizing original and previously unpublished work covering case histories, research and discoveries must be submitted. The submission should describe significant results from experiments and case studies, emphasize new techniques, discuss trends of interest and contain appropriate technical test results. To submit an abstract, visit www.IPCAPEXEXPO.org/CFP.

How IPC Membership Benefits Your Company | Free Webinar

Date
- (9:00 - 9:30am CDT)

Join us for a FREE 30-minute webinar for an inside look at how IPC membership can provide great value for your company! There are many exciting benefits included with an IPC membership that will help your company build electronics better.

In this webinar, Sanjay Huprikar, president, Europe and South Asia operations, and Philippe Leonard, senior director, IPC Europe, will provide information on how IPC membership meets the needs of the electronics manufacturing industry.

Webinar discussion topics include how to:

  • Receive a 50% discount on first-time membership
  • Claim one free industry standard
  • Benefit from implementation of IPC’s collection of industry standards and guidelines for quality, reliability, and consistency
  • Ensure all company locations and employees receive member benefits with our new company membership structure
  • Receive up to 50% discount on IPC standards, plus up to 25% discount on training and education
  • Be a leader in standards development, participate in advocacy through global government relations, and learn from valuable industry intelligence studies
  • Harness the power of two memberships, IPC and WHMA, for the price of one

15:00 UK, 16:00 CET, 17:00 EET

Leveraging USG Trade Assets for Sales Support

Date
-

The good news is the U.S. Government (USG) has a program for every part of your sales cycle--from new business generation, to advocacy support, to financing, to USG underwritten training grants to A/R recovery. The bad news is these assets are spread among 15 agencies.

Bryan Erwin, former Director of the Trade Advocacy Center in the Obama Administration, Founder/Managing Partner at BlueWave Merchant Partners, and current member of IPC’s Thought Leaders program, will provide information on how best to leverage these assets to augment your company’s sales. Erwin will also walk through how using these assets can affect policy outcomes here in the United States.

PCB Design for Embedded Components

Date
- (5:30 - 7:30pm CDT)

Every Monday and Wednesday 5/24/2021-6/30/2021

This course provides the skills necessary to effectively implement designs requiring embedded components in accordance with product requirements. The class also focuses on PWB/PBA designs that require advanced or complex packaging, have reduced available board area, reduced physical component count, and require improved signal integrity performance. Participants will also consider the impact of these designs on manufacturing and assembly techniques, documentation, and manufacturing file generation. 

Supply Chain Disruption, Economic Recovery, and What to Expect in the Post-Pandemic World

Date
- (12:00 - 1:00pm CDT)

COVID-19 disrupted nearly every facet of our lives, halting economic activity, and ushering in a severe recession. It also exerted tremendous pressure on supply chains as we quarantined in our homes and demand shifted from services to goods. While all sectors of the economy have been impacted, some are feeling it more acutely than others. We are moving from recession to recovery, but myriad uncertainties remain.

This webinar will explore the unique nature of the recession and the subsequent recovery and what to expect in the months and years ahead. Discover how and why supply chains have been impacted as they have been and what lies ahead as IPC Chief Economist Shawn DuBravac shares the latest economic data, trends, and risks and possible scenarios for 2021 and beyond.

What you will learn:

  • What made this recession unique and how it has framed the current environment.
  • What to expect in the economic recovery over the next year.
  • How have supply chains been impacted and how will they evolve in the years to come.
  • What other related changes from the pandemic can we expect in the decade ahead.

 

2022 WHMA 29th Annual Wire Harness Conference

Date
-

Over the past 29 years, the WHMA Annual Wire Harness Conference has become one of few investments that give an opportunity to learn, grow, share, and discover new approaches to many aspects of the wire harness industry. The conference features a number of timely presentations on topics important to wire harness manufacturers, OEMs and suppliers. It also includes peer-to-peer networking, best-practices roundtables and a tradeshow with industry leading suppliers. It’s a conference you do not want to miss! 

Westin La Paloma Resort & Spa

3800 E Sunrise Dr
Tucson, AZ 85718
United States

Westin La Paloma Resort & Spa

Westin La Paloma Resort & Spa
3800 E Sunrise Dr
Tucson, AZ 85718
United States

Alternative Manufacturing Inc. Earns Qualified Manufacturers Listing to IPC J-STD-001 and IPC-A-610

IPC's Validation Services Program has awarded an IPC J-STD-001 and IPC-A-610 Qualified Manufacturers Listing (QML) to Alternative Manufacturing Inc. (AMI) located in Winthrop, Maine. An employee-owned company whose products are found worldwide, AMI places an emphasis on continuous improvement and exceeding expectations. By following these simple rules the company successfully completed an intensive audit, based on two of IPC's foremost standards: IPC J-STD-001, Requirements for Soldered Electrical and Electronic Assemblies and IPC-A-610, Acceptability of Electronic Assemblies.

Moving forward with the QML certification allowed the company to tighten up their processes and products, emphasizing their goals of continuous improvement. AMI met or exceeded the requirements for the electronics industry's rigorous classification, Class 2, which is intended for dedicated service electronics products. As a result, the company becomes an IPC-trusted source capable of manufacturing in accordance with industry best practices. You can find AMI on the trusted sources list of suppliers found on IPC's QML/QPL (Qualified Product Listing) database at www.ipcvalidation.org.

Greg Boyd, president and CEO of AMI stated, “We appreciated the collaborative approach that Randy Cherry, director of validation services, brought to the IPC-J-STD-001 and IPC-A-610 process on site.” He further stated, “His insight and depth of knowledge provided tangible recommendations that contribute to our company motto, ‘A Little Better Everyday.’ We are proud to achieve the certification recognition and remain convinced that this service continues to add value to our organization.”                              

IPC's Validation Services QPL/QML Program was developed to promote supply chain verification. It also provides auditing and certification of electronics companies' products and identifies processes which conform to IPC standards.                     

“Different from other audit programs, IPC's Validation Services programs uniquely provide technical and in-depth assessments of products and processes in accordance with IPC standards,” said Randy Cherry, IPC director of Validation Services. “We are pleased to especially recognize the QML for AMI on becoming a member of IPC's network of trusted QML suppliers.”                                                         

For more information about IPC's Validation Services QPL/QML Program, visit www.ipcvalidation.org or contact Randy Cherry at RandyCherry@ipc.org or +1 847-597-2806.