The Navy Just Formalized Its Commitment to the Submarine Industrial Base. Here’s What That Means.

The U.S. Navy established a dedicated Submarine Industrial Base Program Office in April 2026 to strengthen the supply chain, workforce, and manufacturing capacity needed to build the nation’s submarine fleet. For suppliers like GSM and skilled trades professionals in New Hampshire, this is a clear signal: the mission is growing, and the commitment is real.
The U.S. Navy Needs 250,000 Skilled Workers. Here’s What That Means for New Hampshire.

New Hampshire sits at the center of the submarine supply chain. GSM breaks down the workforce gap, what’s being done about it, and what it means if you’re a skilled machinist or welder in the Granite State.
US Navy’s Submarines: Deterrence in a Changing World

GSM produces life-critical systems found on every U.S. Navy submarine. Here’s why the submarine program matters for national security — and what GSM’s role looks like from the inside.
Diving Deep: US Navy’s NASCAR Campaign Makes Waves for the Sub Industry

The U.S. Navy partnered with RFK Racing in a NASCAR sponsorship campaign to raise awareness of the Submarine Industrial Base and career opportunities in defense manufacturing. Here’s what it means for New Hampshire.