Hartford Business Journal

May 2, 2016

Issue link: https://nebusinessmedia.uberflip.com/i/672754

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 3 of 23

4 Hartford Business Journal • May 2, 2016 www.HartfordBusiness.com w w w. H a r t f o r d B u s i n e s s . c o m (860) 236-9998 E D I T O R I A L Greg Bordonaro Editor, ext. 139 gbordonaro@HartfordBusiness.com Gregory Seay News Editor, ext. 144 gseay@HartfordBusiness.com Matt Pilon News Editor, ext. 143 mpilon@HartfordBusiness.com John Stearns Staff Writer, ext. 145 jstearns@HartfordBusiness.com Keith Griffin Digital Producer/Reporter, ext. 127 kgriffin@HartfordBusiness.com Stephanie Meagher Research Director Heide Martin Research Assistant B U S I N E S S Joe Zwiebel President and Publisher, ext. 132 jzwiebel@HartfordBusiness.com Donna Collins Associate Publisher, ext. 121 dcollins@HartfordBusiness.com Jessica Baker Office Manager, ext. 122 jbaker@HartfordBusiness.com Amy Orsini Events Manager, ext. 134 aorsini@HartfordBusiness.com Christian J. Renstrom Advertising Director, ext. 126 crenstrom@HartfordBusiness.com David Hartley Sr. Accounts Manager, ext. 130 dhartley@HartfordBusiness.com William C. Lambot Sr. Accounts Manager, ext. 128 wlambot@HartfordBusiness.com John Vuillemot Sr. Accounts Manager, ext. 133 jvuillemot@hartfordbusiness.com Anabela Maia Account Manager, ext. 131 amaia@HartfordBusiness.com Raki Zwiebel Credit and Collections Manager Valerie Clark Accounting Assistant/Office Manager Kim Vautour HR Director Gail Lebert Chair, Executive Advisory Board P R O D U C T I O N Lynn Mika Production Director/Marketing Coordinator, ext. 140 lmika@HartfordBusiness.com Christopher Wallace Art Director, ext. 147 cwallace@HartfordBusiness.com William DeVito Digital Ad Manager/Graphic Designer, graphics@HartfordBusiness.com Peter Stanton CEO pstanton@nebusinessmedia.com Joseph Zwiebel President & Group Publisher, ext. 132 jzwiebel@HartfordBusiness.com Mary Rogers Chief Financial Officer; mrogers@nebusinessmedia.com Subscriptions: Annual subscriptions are $84.95. To subscribe, visit HartfordBusiness.com, email hartfordbusiness@ cambeywest.com, or call (845) 267-3008. Advertising: For advertising information, please call (860) 236-9998. Please address all correspondence to: Hartford Business Journal, 15 Lewis Street, Suite 200, Hart ford CT 06103. News Department: If you have a news item: Call us at (860) 236-9998, fax us at (860) 570-2493, or e-mail us at news@HartfordBusiness.com Hartford Business Journal accepts no responsibility for unsolicited manuscripts or materials and in general does not return them to the sender. Hartford Business Journal (ISSN 1083-5245) is published weekly, 52 x per year — including two special issues in December — by New England Business Media LLC, 15 Lewis Street, Suite 200, Hartford CT 06103. Periodicals postage paid at Hartford, CT. Tel: (860) 236-9998 • Fax (860) 570-2493 Copyright 2016. All rights reserved. Postmaster: Please send address changes to: Hartford Business Journal P.O. Box 330, Congers, NY 10920-9894 www.copyright.com MFG4 DEPTH IN ENERGY LAW Murtha Cullina's comprehensive Energy Group has years of practical experience representing: CONTACT: Paul McCary 860.240.6037 | pmccary@murthalaw.com P R A C T I C A L E X P E R I E N C E . S T R AT E G I C A P P RO A C H . MURTHA CULLINA LLP ATTORNEYS AT LAW MURTHALAW.COM BOSTON HARTFORD NEW HAVEN STAMFORD WHITE PLAINS WOBURN Industrial Facilities Merchant Generators Municipal Renewable Facilities Renewable Energy Developers Retail Electricity Suppliers Schools and Universities global demand for Pratt & Whitney Co.'s commercial geared turbofan jet engine and a recently expanded contract to deliver engines for America's F-135 Joint Strike fight- er program, plus Electric Boat's plethora of submarine orders are among the bright spots for Connecticut manufacturers, Gioia said. More Pratt and EB orders typically ripple through the state's economy in the form of increased orders and production for in-state Tier 1 and Tier 2 subcontractors and suppli- ers, and small machine shops. "There's a lot of business opportunity out there and that's positive,'' Gioia said. Other perspectives Cronus Partners is a New York investment bank with long and deep advisory connections to Connecticut's aerospace sector. Managing Partner Jeffrey Rubin said the anticipated growth in demand for new airplanes equipped with fuel-efficient engines hasn't materialized to the level that the industry expected. Last year's steep fall in crude prices, Rubin said, made gasoline, heating oil and jet fuel less expensive, stemming much of the airline industry's urgency to shelve older, fuel-thirsty airliners. There are more reasons aero-manufac- turers aren't too giddy right now. Though the sector is dominated by small, family-run shops, they, along with bigger aeroparts mak- ers, Rubin said, are scrambling to keep pace with the vortex of demand for low-cost but high-quality components from bigger manu- facturers such as Pratt and General Electric. Also, aero-suppliers of all sizes must adhere to strict federal requirements for tracing the origin or source of tens of thou- sands of parts, Rubin said. The costly trace- ability requirement allows investigators to trace the source, say, of defective compo- nents identified in air disasters, he said. "They're probably relieved that there's growth," Rubin said. "But they're not putting on second or third shifts or expanding their plants." Events details According to SME, this year's forum/expo will draw attendees from 12 countries. Also being introduced will be 85 new products from 197 attending companies that, said SME Executive Director Jeffrey Krause, represent three "manufacturing verticals": aerospace, defense and medical devices. "These three verticals,'' Krause said, "come together to showcase what has been done in manufacturing technology and to stir up more innovation. We're convening a lot of knowledge and expertise in advanced manufacturing.'' It, too, is an opportunity for manufacturing professionals to network and to develop and exchange ideas for solving shared challenges, ranging from product life cycles, stringent reg- ulations, mission-critical quality control, and a continuing need to have access to advanced- manufacturing technology, Krause said. n Attendees examine a product at Hartford's "Mfg4" event in 2014. P H O T O S | S O C I E T Y F O R M A N U F A C T U R I N G E N G I N E E R S

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Hartford Business Journal - May 2, 2016