Reviving American Shipbuilding.

Joined March 2025
12 Photos and videos
Valstad Shipworks retweeted
Super excited to be working with the @BlueWaterShips team to advance American shipbuilding!
At Blue Water, we're rethinking shipbuilding by combining AI, autonomy, and modern manufacturing to build the next generation of naval capability. Our partner, @ValstadShip, is pushing those same boundaries by pioneering a new approach to maritime manufacturing through autonomous fabrication, robotics, and AI-driven production systems while challenging long-held assumptions about how ships are built and where production can happen. The future of shipbuilding won't be defined by a handful of facilities. It will be defined by networks—connected production capacity, intelligent automation, and the ability to move work across a distributed industrial base. The challenge facing American shipbuilding isn't a lack of demand. It's a lack of capacity. Solving that challenge will require new technology, new operating models, and new partnerships across the maritime industrial base. We're proud to be building alongside organizations that are willing to rethink the future from the ground up. That's why we're excited to partner with Valstad Shipworks. About Valstad: valstad.com About Blue Water: blw.ai
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Valstad Shipworks retweeted
Super excited to announce our partnership with @BlueWaterShips. Restoring maritime dominance requires us to rethink how we build in America. Our robotics & physical AI platform will be a critical part of that story. Teaming up with Blue Water Autonomy and Conrad Shipyard - a great American shipbuilder - will allow us to pioneer a new model for distributed shipbuilding.
American shipbuilding needs a revolution. A catalyst to bring maritime dominance back to our shores. That catalyst has arrived with the growing demand for autonomous ships. “We’re creating a production system that can move at the pace required for a modern maritime industrial base,” says CEO & Co-Founder @rylanhamilton. We can leverage shipyard capacity that exists today across many commercial yards to build this class of ship, allowing us to distribute shipbuilding and manufacturing across leading partners without opening new yards. Today, we’re proud to announce the companies joining us to help make that vision possible. The engine module shown here is one example of this strategy in practice. @CaterpillarInc provides the proven marine power systems, while Precise Power assembles and tests fully integrated engine modules before shipyard integration. @tulipinterfaces connects manufacturing operations with real-time production data. @ValstadShip advances robotic fabrication and modular structural production. Together, these partnerships are transforming shipbuilding from a linear, yard-centric process into a coordinated production system capable of building autonomous vessels faster, more efficiently, and at greater scale. This is the future of shipbuilding. And this is what Blue Water is building toward, starting with Liberty Class. Learn More 👉 blw.ai/libertyclass
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Valstad Shipworks retweeted
"...two workers controlling 20 robots are capable of matching the labor output of 1,000 personnel." Hanwha's Geoje shipyard cuts and weld *a million tons of steel a year* at a single shipyard, more than the entire US maritime industry, with 67% of those welds automated. Here's the catch, though: the Korean model presupposes purpose-built, high-volume yards producing standardized commercial hulls. Industrial robots on a clean production line are a solved problem. But that's not what US shipbuilding looks like. Outside of the inland fleet, the market is low-volume and high-mix. Traditional industrial robots have limited utility when it takes more time to program the robots than it takes to just build it manually. This is why Physical AI is so critical for reviving shipbuilding in America. We need automation - the labor force needed to scale the traditional way just doesn't exist - but it won't match the Korean model. It has to be flexible. Going from CAD model -> automated production planning -> AI-enabled robotic assembly & welding is the way we get this done. centerformaritimestrategy.or…
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Valstad Shipworks retweeted
We've never published this entire video before, but... what the hell. This is our vision for the shipyard of the future. This is how we fight back against China's shipbuilding dominance. This is how we produce 10x more in a single shipyard. From raw steel in to a full set of panels out, ready for erection. All autonomous. Every crane move, every assembly step, every weld... controlled by software we're building from the ground up. Our roadmap will see us build every part of this as modular, inexpensive cells that stretch standard industrial robots to their payload & reach limits. Cells we can build in months instead of years. We're starting in Austin, shipping out panel kits that accelerate the shipbuilding process for America's over-stretched and labor-starved shipyards. Then we'll deploy systems like this all over the country to accelerate production of everything from tank barges to tankers to unmanned surface vessels. It's possible to do this in America. I know because we're doing it. And because it must be done. Time to Accelerate American Shipbuilding.
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We're hiring a Head of Engineering to help us reinvent shipbuilding from first principles. Check it out: valstad.com/careers/head-of-…
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Valstad Shipworks retweeted
We're hiring a head of engineering! Join us on our quixotic quest to completely rethink the way America builds ships. valstad.com/careers/head-of-…
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Valstad Shipworks retweeted
Robot calibration BEGINS.
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The dogposting will continue until shipbuilding improves.
Today is ⁦⁦@ctrlssh⁩ ‘s first day as a Robotics Engineering Intern at ⁦⁦@ValstadShip⁩. Our team grows to 9.5.
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Valstad Shipworks retweeted
I submitted a statement for today's senate hearing on the SHIPS act co-sponsored by @SenMarkKelly and @SenToddYoung Introduction My name is Dustin Walper, and I’m the CEO and founder of Valstad Shipworks. We are a venture-backed startup focused on the application of AI, robotics, and advanced manufacturing to the problem of American shipbuilding. Our goal is to build a dual-use “Gigafactory for Ships”, applying technologies from the automotive and aerospace industries to rethink the way America builds ships for both commercial and military use. Our position Our organization strongly supports the SHIPS for America Act because it recognizes the existential threat to US maritime interests posed by China. We believe that strengthening the maritime industrial base is one the most important challenges we face in an era of renewed great power competition, impacting not only US shipbuilding and workers but also our ability to conduct commerce and project power in waters near and far. Analysis I will be blunt: China poses the most serious maritime threat we have ever faced as a nation. The evidence for this is overwhelming: • Measured by deadweight tonnage (DWT), China’s share of global shipbuilding in 2024 was estimated at 53.3%. It also holds 67.3% of the orderbook for new orders, suggesting increasing global dominance at the expense of allies like Japan and South Korea. • China’s shipbuilding capacity is estimated to be 232 times that of the United States, with a merchant fleet of 7,838 vessels vs. 185 US-flagged vessels. The Chinese merchant fleet can be repurposed to provide sealift capacity in the event of a conflict over Taiwan. • China has been rapidly expanding both shipbuilding capacity and capability, with new shipyards like Xinneng Shipbuilding demonstrating integration of industrial robots, computer vision, AI planning, and autonomous mobile robots like those used in Amazon warehouses. Xinneng’s website claims they can produce 400 inland vessels per year at their new 1,757 acre facility. On these and other measures, China is far ahead on ships. If we do not act now – and act decisively – we believe we could see a reorienting of alliances in the Asia-Pacific region away from “Pax Americana” towards a sinister new “Pax Sinica”. Recommendations We applaud the administration’s efforts to attract allied nations like South Korea and Japan to invest in the US maritime industrial base. We also believe that American innovators like Tesla and SpaceX prove that domestic companies – including startups like ours – are capable of truly astounding feats of reindustrialization. Our recommendations are as follows: • Expand funding to explicitly include new shipyard development. The US has not built any major new shipyards in decades, and in our view this must change – yards designed specifically to make use of modern manufacturing automation are the fastest, best way to significantly increase shipbuilding capacity. • Invest heavily in automation & new technology. Ships made in US yards are significantly less labor-efficient than comparable ships built in South Korea. To increase our total output without placing unrealistic demands on the labor supply, we must embrace automation and reduce labor hours required per compensated gross ton (CGT). • Provide dedicated funding and/or supports for new domestic entrants. We should incentivize private capital to invest in the future “SpaceX” or “Tesla” of American shipbuilding. Solutions that only focus on existing shipyards or foreign shipbuilders risk neglecting the world-beating power of our entrepreneurial ecosystem. • Accelerate the development of autonomy guidelines for US-flagged ships. The future of America’s maritime industry need not look like the past. A clear mandate for commercial vessel autonomy would drive rapid adoption of innovative technologies and create new export opportunities for US companies. Conclusion We urge the committee to pass the SHIPS for America Act without delay. China is continuing to advance rapidly, and that capabilities gap will only widen if we do not act immediately. American dynamism is one of the most powerful forces for good the world has ever seen. We have every confidence that, with the right incentives and supports, the American people can rise to the occasion and address the threat from China head-on.
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RT @DustinWalper: The magnitude of America's shipbuilding crisis demand urgent action. Here's what we're doing right now at Valstad Shipw…
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Valstad Shipworks retweeted
One small step for shipbuilding, one giant leap for Valstad. Our custom software stack is now controlling the robots. Ingest CAD model, generate robot instructions. Zero manual programming. We'll be open-sourcing the FANUC drivers we wrote to do this shortly.
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Valstad Shipworks retweeted
Space prepped. Steel delivered. Tomorrow the robots arrive. It doesn't look like much, but in this humble space lies the nascent seed of revival. It's time for America to build ships again.
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Valstad Shipworks retweeted
It's a great day to reindustrialize.
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Valstad Shipworks retweeted
On Tuesday our robotics team will grow to 3. It may not seem like much now, but this is the start of something *really* special.
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Valstad Shipworks retweeted
Austin is becoming the new Gundo. What are your favorite Austin-based startups? @AaloAtomics, @basepowerco, @pipedream_labs and obviously @ValstadShip are some of mine.
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Valstad Shipworks retweeted
The flag goes up at @ValstadShip.
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Valstad Shipworks retweeted
While we wait for the Fanuc robots to arrive, Joey the Intern has been working on automated weld seam detection & path planning.
21 Aug 2025
weld detection done, wen robot @DustinWalper
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"You can't build ships in America." Us:
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RT @DustinWalper: To achieve an order-of-magnitude leap in US shipbuilding capabilities, we need to focus on speed. Material handling is a…
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Want to build huge ships with robots? We're hiring engineers in: - Mechanical - Robotics - Controls - Electrical - Software Shoot us a CV at careers@valstad.com
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