The Resilient Energy Technology and Infrastructure (RETI) Consortium, led by West Virginia University (WVU) with partners from the University of Pittsburgh and Carnegie Mellon University, has been selected to build a next-generation industrial energy innovation hub in Appalachia. Funded through the U.S. National Science Foundation’s (NSF) Regional Innovation Engines program, the initiative is designed to accelerate energy resilience where industry, research, and workforce development converge.
After a competitive two-year process, NSF announced the RETI Engine as one of 12 U.S. Regional Innovation Engines award recipients on July 14. The program’s model emphasizes regional coalitions that can translate research breakthroughs into scalable technologies with real economic impact.
RETI will receive a total of $321 million in combined public and private support. Over the next decade, NSF will provide up to $160 million, while an additional $161 million will come from RETI’s industry, workforce, philanthropy, state government, and community partners.
The effort is aimed at an increasingly strained power system. Demand is surging due to artificial intelligence growth, data-center expansion, and reshoring of U.S. manufacturing—conditions that challenge grid capacity and reliability. RETI’s strategy responds with technical development focused on how energy systems are managed, stored, secured, and deployed.
A central goal is to advance grid management technologies and energy storage solutions, alongside cybersecurity innovations for operational resilience. The consortium plans to develop hardware, software, and AI methods to help operators predict stress, mitigate failures, and maintain secure control across energy infrastructure.
RETI also targets commercialization pathways for energy technologies and deep-tech entrepreneurship. By strengthening links between laboratories and emerging companies, the consortium intends to reduce the distance from experimental prototypes to deployable industrial systems.
Carnegie Mellon’s leadership highlights priorities in advanced manufacturing and AI, as well as cybersecurity and energy technology. The consortium’s approach aligns industrial competitiveness with technical readiness for next-generation production needs.
The projected outcomes include 21,000 jobs, 150 startups, and more than $1 billion in regional economic growth. NSF Engine leadership frames the work as an effort to reinforce U.S. energy security while building innovation infrastructure for the long term.
Located at the WVU Innovation Corporation site in Morgantown with a branch office at Pittsburgh’s Energy Innovation Center, RETI is positioned to scale cross-border collaboration between Pennsylvania and West Virginia. The NSF Engines program, initiated by NSF’s Technology, Innovation and Partnerships initiative, seeks to replicate this regional ecosystem strategy nationwide.
Subject of Research: Energy resilience; grid management and cybersecurity; industrial energy innovation
Article Title: NSF Selects RETI Consortium to Build Industrial Energy Innovation Hub in Appalachia
News Publication Date: July 14
Web References: https://reticonsortium.org/ ; https://www.nsf.gov/tip/latest ; https://innovation.wvu.edu/
References: Resilient Energy Technology and Infrastructure (RETI) Consortium; U.S. National Science Foundation Regional Innovation Engines program
Image Credits: WVU Photo
Keywords: energy infrastructure, grid resilience, energy storage, cybersecurity, artificial intelligence, advanced manufacturing, economic development, entrepreneurship, NSF Engines, industrial competitiveness

