Manufacturing Happy Hour

242: Industrial History and the Low-Carbon Economy of the Future with Ted Fertik, VP of Manufacturing & Industrial Policy at BlueGreen Alliance

7 snips
Jun 24, 2025
Ted Fertik, VP of Manufacturing & Industrial Policy at BlueGreen Alliance and a PhD in Economic History, shares insights on bridging industrial history and modern sustainability. He discusses lessons from Brazil and the UK, emphasizing the evolution of manufacturing and the significance of public investment. Fertik highlights the pressing need for a low-carbon economy and the electrification of industries, advocating for sustainable practices that attract talent and ensure community benefits, all while meeting rising energy demands.
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ANECDOTE

Serendipitous PhD Topic Discovery

  • Ted Fertik discovered his PhD topic by chance from papers about an American industrialist's efforts in Brazil.
  • This led him to explore global steel development projects and the public-private interplay in industrialization.
INSIGHT

Interwar Economic Nationalism Was Global

  • Economic nationalism in the interwar period was global and involved cross-national collaboration.
  • Public and private sectors had complex mutual dependencies in industrial projects, challenging the usual dichotomy.
ANECDOTE

Brazil and Britain Industrial Stories

  • Brazil debated the role of foreign capital in its industrialization while avoiding excess control loss.
  • Britain’s Bank of England led industrial modernization efforts amid economic decline, resulting in breakthroughs like the Corby steel mill.
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