
Manufacturing Britain's Future: Inside Isembard's Industrial Revolution
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From the King Charles III Space Station, Tom and Calum welcome Alex Fitzgerald, founder of Isembard - a micro-factory startup that's building Britain's manufacturing future one CNC machine at a time.
Alex explains how Britain's manufacturing crisis isn't just about big factories closing - it's about the hidden supply chain of small family-owned machine shops that actually make the parts for everything from F-35 jets to AirPods. With 95% of CNC machines owned by small businesses, and those business owners now retiring en masse, the West faces a manufacturing capacity cliff just as geopolitical tensions increase demand.
“Fundamentally, how you build great product is having engineers ingest pain and then output product.”
The episode explores:
* Whether distributed manufacturing is more resilient than centralized factories
* How Britain's hidden aerospace and defense supply chains actually work
* Why small machine shops are the real manufacturing base, not big assembly plants
* The role of risk capital in building trillion-dollar manufacturing businesses
* How software and AI are transforming traditional machining and production
* What young engineers can do to build world-changing manufacturing businesses
Further reading
Isembard - Faster, Cheaper, Greener Manufacturing
The Manufacturing Manifesto
Careers at Isembard
This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit anglofuturism.substack.com