Full-Time
Posted on 9/4/2025
Develops advanced munitions and propellants.
$115k - $232k/yr
Dallas, TX, USA
In Person
Union Technologies operates in the defense sector, focusing on the development and production of advanced energetics such as munitions and propellants. Its products are designed through research and development and then manufactured for defense clients, including government and military organizations, under contracts and partnerships. The company creates high-performance energetic formulations and munitions that are integrated into weapons systems, supporting power projection for the U.S. and its allies. Unlike many competitors, Union Technologies aims to revitalize the energetics industry by collaborating with government and military partners to address stagnation and counter adversaries' advancements, with a goal of restoring and maintaining strategic balance and advantages.
Company Size
51-200
Company Stage
Seed
Total Funding
$101.3M
Headquarters
El Segundo, California
Founded
2023
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UNION and Firehawk tackle america's artillery crisis with new partnership. UNION Technologies and Firehawk Aerospace have partnered to link software-defined manufacturing with advanced energetics and propulsion production, aimed at addressing persistent gaps in the domestic defense industrial base. Under the framework, UNION's software-defined factory platform and forged metal parts capabilities would be integrated with Firehawk's manufacturing infrastructure for energetics and propulsion systems. The initial focus is the 155mm artillery ecosystem, a supply chain that has faced acute strain as Western governments race to replenish stockpiles and sustain elevated production rates. "Production is Deterrence," said Garrett Unclebach, Chief Executive Officer of UNION. "The United States must be able to produce at speed, at scale, and with full accountability. UNION builds software-defined, automated factories with traceability so the U.S. and our allies can rapidly surge critical production when required. Our alignment with Firehawk brings complementary strengths together across metal parts and energetics to strengthen readiness and reduce friction in the pathways that matter." Closing the Manufacturing Integration Gap UNION has built its platform around the modernization of forged metal part production, applying software-defined controls to manufacturing processes that have, in many cases, changed little in decades. Meanwhile, Firehawk is developing high-throughput manufacturing capacity for advanced energetics with an explicit emphasis on repeatability, safety, and certification readiness, requirements that are non-negotiable in propulsion and explosives manufacturing, where process variability carries serious consequences. The collaboration is intended to bridge those two domains. Rather than treating component production and system integration as separate problems to be solved independently, the companies are working toward a connected manufacturing approach that spans from raw metal parts through to finished propulsion and energetics assemblies. In practical terms, that means aligning interfaces, quality standards, and evaluation criteria across both organizations, work the teams plan to sustain through a structured working cadence. Near-term activity will center on 155mm-related metal parts and components, with expansion into energetics and propulsion systems described as a possibility as the relationship matures. Both companies have framed the initiative around readiness: demonstrating process control, improving manufacturability, and building the foundation for scalable, high-volume production. The constraint is specific and documented. The U.S. Army set a target of 100,000 155mm rounds per month but as of mid-2025 was producing roughly 40,000, with a critical gap between projectile output and propellant charge production identified as a primary limiting factor. The Army had historically relied on a plant in Scranton, Pennsylvania for shell production, with all explosive loading concentrated at one facility in Iowa. Expanding output has required standing up metal parts production and energetics manufacturing largely in parallel, but not always in coordination, which is precisely the integration gap UNION and Firehawk are positioning themselves to close. Reindustrializing Defense Manufacturing For decades, additive manufacturing in defense was a R&D proposition. But that is now changing. According to executives from major industrial 3D printer manufacturers including EOS, Nikon Advanced Manufacturing, and Roboze, the U.S. defense industrial base is undergoing a critical transformation driven by geopolitical tensions, supply chain fragility, and adversary innovation. The shift in conversation, as Roboze CEO Alessio Lorusso describes it, has moved from capability that is "going to be required" to "this must happen now." The consensus among industry leaders is that the question is no longer whether the military will use advanced manufacturing at scale, but how fast it can get there. The legislative response is taking shape. A congressional report accompanying the U.S. House Appropriations Committee's fiscal 2026 defense budget recommends creating a nationwide network of dual-use factories, the Civil Reserve Manufacturing Network, that would produce commercial goods in peacetime and switch to weapons production during conflict. The committee cited concern over China's manufacturing dominance and what it described as the "calcification" of the U.S. defense acquisition system. Over $131.7 million has been proposed across Army, Air Force, and defense-wide research and development accounts to launch the initiative. 3D Printing Industry is inviting speakers for its 2026 Additive Manufacturing Applications (AMA) series, covering Energy, Healthcare, Automotive and Mobility, Aerospace, Space and Defense, and Software. Each online event focuses on real production deployments, qualification, and supply chain integration. Practitioners interested in contributing can complete the call for speakers form here. Explore the full Future of 3D Printing and Executive Survey series from 3D Printing Industry, featuring perspectives from CEOs, engineers, and industry leaders on the industrialization of additive manufacturing, 3D printing industry trends 2026, qualification, supply chains, and additive manufacturing industry analysis. Featured image shows a 155mm howitzer. Photo via US Army.
UNION Technologies, a U.S.-based defense manufacturer, secured a $51.3 million seed round to enhance its munitions production platform. Saudi Arabia's Nadrah Trading Co. participated, aligning with the Kingdom's Vision 2030. This partnership aims to bolster industrial and defense ties between Saudi Arabia and the U.S. UNION will use the funds to scale its Dallas factory, producing 155mm artillery shells, and expand its robotics and software platforms.
UNION Technologies announced a $50 million Seed round led by Bravo Victor Venture Capital, with Regulus as a strategic co-lead. The company aims to revitalize American manufacturing with its Factories-as-a-StockpileTM model, focusing on munitions production. Key achievements include pre-ordering machinery, developing breakthrough technologies, and securing strategic partnerships. UNION's first factory in Dallas, TX, is underway, aiming to restore America's industrial strength and deterrence capabilities.