PLAY PODCASTS
Manufacturing Britain's Future: Inside Isembard's Industrial Revolution
Episode 20

Manufacturing Britain's Future: Inside Isembard's Industrial Revolution

Anglofuturism · Tom Ough, Calum Drysdale, and Aeron Laffere

June 19, 20251h 17m

Audio is streamed directly from the publisher (api.substack.com) as published in their RSS feed. Play Podcasts does not host this file. Rights-holders can request removal through the copyright & takedown page.

Show Notes

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'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.anglofuturism.co/subscribe