Spending in the manufacturing sector has ballooned since the CHIPS Act was signed into law in August 2022. Projects underway include everything from plants focused on chip fabrication and electric vehicle batteries to consumer goods and cars.
Here, Construction Dive rounds up the biggest of these projects announced since August 2022, sorted by value and location, along with their contractors when available. Please check this page for regular updates.
The U. S. continues to gain ground on other countries’ manufacturing dominance a year after President Joe Biden signed the $52 billion CHIPS and Science Act in August 2022.
The renewed push to revive American manufacturing after decades of offshoring has led to over $516 billion in private company investment, according to the White House. The investments scattered across the country range from biotechnology facilities and chip fabrication plants to electric vehicle battery factories and clean energy projects.
Some major manufacturing projects added to this page over the past four weeks include Wolfspeed’s multibillion-dollar John Palmour Manufacturing Center for Silicon Carbide in Chatham County, North Carolina, and Joby Aviation’s $500 million manufacturing facility in Dayton, Ohio.
The map also lists the contractors working on these projects when they are available. Some of the notable wins since the last update include:
* Whiting-Turner’s award to begin initial sitework on the John Palmour Manufacturing Center for Silicon Carbide for owner Wolfspeed.
* McCarthy’s win on the $400 million ICL manufacturing facility in St. Louis, Missouri.
* Tippman Group’s contract on the $205 million SK Food Group’s manufacturing facility in Cleveland, Tennessee.
Through August, manufacturing construction spending increased 65.5% in 12 months, according to an Associated Builders and Contractors analysis. On a seasonally adjusted annual rate, spending in the sector hit approximately $198.45 billion in August.
That exponential growth isn’t expected to hit any speed bumps either, according to Richard Branch, chief economist at Dodge Construction Network.
”Public dollars are flooding into the manufacturing and infrastructure sectors,” said Branch. “[That’s] leading to significant growth over the last year.”
The CHIPS Act provides $52.7 billion for American semiconductor research, development, manufacturing and workforce development. This consists of $39 billion in manufacturing incentives, including $2 billion for the legacy chips used in automobiles and defense systems, $13.2 billion in research and development and workforce development and $500 million to strengthen global supply chains, according to the Biden administration. The CHIPS Act also provides a 25% investment tax credit for capital expenses for manufacturing of semiconductors and related equipment.
Additionally, several $1 billion or more manufacturing projects remain in the pipeline over the remaining months of the year. That should keep construction starts in the sector elevated for the foreseeable future, said Branch.