Texas leading in Iran conflict, drone boat company rescues pilots, attacks Iran

Texas leading in Iran conflict, drone boat company rescues pilots, attacks Iran

Spread the love

The Austin-based drone boat company helping Texas lead the U.S. war against Iran is now building what is expected to be the largest shipyard in the country in Texas.

Saronic Technologies’ three sea drones struck an Iranian naval base on Sunday, marking the first time the United States has used this type of technology in combat. Last month, its technology was also used in another first – the rescue of downed U.S. Apache helicopter pilots near the Strait of Hormuz – all autonomously.

Now, Saronic Technologies is constructing a next-generation shipyard, expected to be the largest shipyard in the country, called Port Alpha at the Port of Brownsville.

“America’s maritime future depends on our ability to build again,” Saronic Co-Founder and CEO Dino Mavrookas said in a statement. “Port Alpha is our commitment to that mission. Built from the ground up to deliver ships at a speed and scale not seen since World War II, this investment is about more than constructing a shipyard. It is about rebuilding the industrial capacity, workforce, and manufacturing advantage required to ensure American maritime leadership for decades to come.”

Founded in Austin in 2022, Saronic Technologies combines advanced autonomy software with fast, scalable domestic manufacturing to deliver autonomous maritime systems that extend the reach, capability and efficiency of defense and commercial fleets. Its Port Alpha shipyard and advanced manufacturing facility is expected to build medium- and large-class autonomous and autonomy-capable vessels and create 10,000 new jobs.

“Today marks history with the announcement of the most advanced shipyard in the entire world,” Gov. Greg Abbott said at a press conference in Austin announcing the new venture and highlighting the many firsts in Texas under his leadership.

“We have a saying here that’s quite applicable: ‘everything is bigger in Texas,’ including now shipbuilding,” he said. When the facility is fully built out, “there will be about 10,000 more employees in Texas receiving at least a $75,000 paycheck per employee. That means Saronic will be providing annually about $750 million in paychecks to Texas employees. That’s game changing for the population in the employee network of the state of Texas.”

It’s also “adding a unique chapter to the Texas economic juggernaut story,” he said. “To frame that story, Texas ranks #1 in the United States for the most new jobs. We have the best workforce in the United States, which is one of the reasons why Saronic chose both Texas as well as the Brownsville location.

“Texas ranks #1 for most economic development projects, #1 for semiconductor manufacturing, #1 for tech exports. Texas is the number one state for capital investment and the number one state for capital markets,” Abbott said, after Texas’ new Stock Exchange came online this month, The Center Square reported.

The new facility in Brownsville adds “to all that. To be clear, no state in America has done more than Texas over the past 10 years to advance shipbuilding,” he said, highlighting Texas leading in Arctic defense. New Coast Guard cutters are being built in Galveston and Port Arthur, The Center Square reported.

Now “the most advanced shipyard in the entire world” is being built in Texas by a company that has “changed the art and the science of warfare,” he said.

Saronic says it chose Texas because of its workforce availability, infrastructure readiness, land scale, logistics and expansion potential. It’s also working with the state, Cameron County, regional technical colleges and state university systems to develop workforce training and apprenticeship programs.

It says it’s making a capital investment of $3.2 billion and received a Texas Enterprise Fund (TEF) grant of $80 million and a $78,000 Veteran Created Job Bonus. The shipyard is a qualified project under the Texas Jobs, Energy, Technology, and Innovation (JETI) program, which gives massive tax breaks and incentives to million- and billion-dollar companies.

The program allows a company to enter into an agreement “for a 10-year school district maintenance and operations (M&O) tax appraised value limitation of 50%, based on qualifying job and capital investment minimums. Projects located in qualified Opportunity Zones are eligible for an additional 25% limitation on taxable value.”

Through JETI, Saronic will pay significantly reduced taxes to the Point Isabel Independent School District, whose students are considered economically disadvantaged.

Despite this, its Superintendent Teri Capistran said, “Having Saronic in our community is a historic moment for our region and a game changer for our students. Families in the Rio Grande Valley are among the most economically disadvantaged in the state of Texas, but education remains the greatest equalizer that breaks cycles of poverty in families and generations. By partnering with Saronic, our students will now have the unprecedented opportunity to earn advanced degrees, gain cutting edge skills, and secure high-paying careers right here at home.”

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Illinois Quick Hits: Unemployment holds at 5.1% in Illinois

Illinois Quick Hits: Unemployment holds at 5.1% in Illinois

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Based on data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the Illinois Department of Employment Security says...
Thune handed $47B national security bill with poison pill

Thune handed $47B national security bill with poison pill

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square A $47.3 billion government funding bill has cleared the U.S. House of Representatives and arrives at the Senate facing a hostile reception from Democrats. The...
Ammons pleads not guilty, wants to delay House investigation

Ammons pleads not guilty, wants to delay House investigation

By Sean Reed | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) — Illinois State Rep. Carrol Ammons, federally indicted on multiple charges of wire fraud, pleaded not guilty in...
Minnesota extends Medicaid provider pause as fraud concerns reach U.S. Senate

Minnesota extends Medicaid provider pause as fraud concerns reach U.S. Senate

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square Minnesota is extending its pause on enrolling new providers in 12 high-risk Medicaid services as the state continues efforts to crack down on fraud in...
Sonderling defends grant shift, vows fraud crackdown to senators

Sonderling defends grant shift, vows fraud crackdown to senators

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square Keith Sonderling, President Donald Trump’s nominee for secretary of the U.S. Department of Labor, vowed Thursday to stamp out workforce fraud, more efficiently spend education...
Advocate calls for stronger IDOC oversight after payroll fraud guilty plea

Advocate calls for stronger IDOC oversight after payroll fraud guilty plea

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Calls for stronger oversight of the Illinois Department of Corrections are growing after a former department...
Illinois Quick Hits: FAFSA applications rise with increase in state taxpayer funding

Illinois Quick Hits: FAFSA applications rise with increase in state taxpayer funding

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – According to the National College Attainment Network’s Free Application for Federal Student Aid Tracker for the Class...
Appeals court: Chicago’s ‘climate disinformation’ case belongs in Cook County

Appeals court: Chicago’s ‘climate disinformation’ case belongs in Cook County

By Jonathan Bilyk | Legal NewslineThe Center Square (Legal Newsline) - A federal appeals court says a lawsuit brought by the city of Chicago, seeking to extract a potentially massive...
WATCH: Polish leader discusses Ukraine, Russia at Reagan Library

WATCH: Polish leader discusses Ukraine, Russia at Reagan Library

By Dave MasonThe Center Square As a child going to bed, Radoslaw Sikorski heard the sound of a free press through the thin wall of his family’s home in Soviet-ruled...
Firefighters from 30 states battle wildfires in Colorado

Firefighters from 30 states battle wildfires in Colorado

By Joelle WebbThe Center Square Seven fires have burned through over 200,000 acres of Colorado’s expansive terrain, with over 1,800 personnel being deployed from more than 30 states to fight...
Democrats wary over DNI nominee's stances on election security

Democrats wary over DNI nominee’s stances on election security

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square A swift confirmation of Jay Clayton as the next director of National Intelligence appears less likely after multiple Democrats left his Wednesday confirmation hearing dissatisfied...
GOP, Dems compete in Arizona congressional races

GOP, Dems compete in Arizona congressional races

By Zachery SchmidtThe Center Square Arizona Republicans and Democrats in the 7th and 8th congressional districts are battling it out to see who will advance to the general election. Primaries...
Abbott directs state investigation into ICE Houston shooting

Abbott directs state investigation into ICE Houston shooting

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square Gov. Greg Abbott on Wednesday said the Texas Rangers are investigating the fatal shooting of a Mexican national in Houston last week by a U.S....
Industry leaders: Feds can more effectively combat fraud, but privacy rights at risk

Industry leaders: Feds can more effectively combat fraud, but privacy rights at risk

By Morgan SweeneyThe Center Square The federal government faces fraudsters utilizing technology more powerfully than ever before to take advantage of taxpayer-funded programs and steal taxpayer dollars. But it must...
Union sues to stop $110B Paramount-Warner Bros. merger

Union sues to stop $110B Paramount-Warner Bros. merger

By Chris WoodwardThe Center Square State attorneys general are not the only ones suing to block the acquisition of Warner Bros. Discovery by Paramount Skydance. The Writers Guild of America...