Sunday, September 8, 2024

Montana’s Headwaters Tech Hub gets $41M grant from feds • Daily Montanan

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U.S. Sen. Jon Tester, D-Montana, announced Tuesday that a technology consortium known as the Headwaters Tech Hub will receive a $41 million grant to help build out jobs within the optical and laser technologies field in four regions of Montana.

Last October, the White House announced the Headwaters Tech Hub, led by Accelerate Montana, was one of 31 consortiums to be designated a Regional Innovation and Technology Hub and would get $500,000 to help launch a strategy.

The hub will involve photonics, which includes optical and laser technology, autonomy, artificial intelligence and machine learning. The consortium wants to figure out how to use the technology for self-driving vehicles, LiDAR emission tracking, agriculture and wildfire management, according to its proposal.

Led by Accelerate Montana at the University of Montana, the consortium has 18 members, including the Montana Department of Commerce, the Commissioner of Higher Education the Montana Chamber of Commerce, the Montana University System, Montana State University, Salish Kootenai College, and several businesses.

Tester said the $41 million in grant money, which comes from a provision in CHIPS and Science Act Tester supported in 2022, is a Phase 2 investment in the project. Only 11 other tech hubs received Phase 2 funding. Tester had pressed the Biden administration in February to award the Headwaters Tech Hub with another round of money.

“Montana is a big state that can do big things, and we’ve proven that we have what it takes to lead the nation in technological innovation that will ensure American can continue to outcompete countries like China,” Tester said in a statement.

The Headwaters Tech Hub will encompass the Kalispell, Missoula, Butte-Silver Bow and Bozeman regions. The group believes it could create 4,000 new jobs within the photonics industry and continue to grow the sector beyond the current 1,000 jobs. In the group’s application last year, it referenced needing to keep up with similar development in Asia.

“This growing market demand, and the opportunities it creates, exceeds current capacity, both in Montana and nationally, to commercialize and manufacture new technologies and train the skilled workforce needed to support the sector,” the application said. “There is an urgent need for growth in domestic photonics capabilities to offset the rapid shift toward Asia.”

Last October, members of the tech hub said it would give the state a better chance to compete for grant money. The president of the Montana Photonics and Quantum Alliance in October said the tech hub designation marked a “once-in-a-lifetime opportunity” for the coalition and industry.

Tester said that is why he’s pushed for the hub and the grant money for several years.

“Bringing good-paying jobs back to the United States, securing our domestic supply chains, and developing next generation technology starts with investments right here in the Treasure State, and I will continue to partner with the Headwaters team to make sure they have the resources they need to succeed,” he said in a statement.

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