President Obama is scheduled to visit aluminum producer Alcoa Inc.'s Davenport, Iowa, facility on Tuesday, as he continues to focus on the role of advanced manufacturing in creating jobs and boosting U.S. exports.
The plant, which opened in 1948 and employs 2,000 people, is "one of the most advanced manufacturing plants in the world," Alcoa boasts.
Pittsburgh-based Alcoa has spent more than $200 million over the past decade to update the plant, which makes aluminum sheet and plate for the aerospace, defense, automotive and building and construction markets.
The plant, which is the manufacturing hub of Alcoa's $3 billion aerospace business, produces high-tech alloys and wings for all major aircraft, including Airbus' A380 and Boeing's 747-8 and 777.
"Davenport remains the only facility that can manufacture airplane wings as a monolithic structure, delivering enhanced structural integrity and lighter-weight aircraft," Alcoa said in a news release.
The Davenport facility generates approximately 25% of its $800 million in annual revenues through exports.
The Davenport facility soon will begin manufacturing with the company's third-generation aluminum lithium alloys, which make planes lighter, corrosion-resistant and more cost-effective to manufacture, according to Alcoa.
"We have more jobs in Davenport today than before the crisis as we capture growing global demand for innovative products," said Alcoa Chairman and CEO Klaus Kleinfeld. "We welcome the opportunity to share with the president our American manufacturing success story."