Government Policy is Impacting Industries
A recent report examines several industries and changes taking place within them that might influence innovative initiatives. Certainly, it has been a time of disruption to the status quo. From changing climate policies to canceling wind power programs to swings in consumer regulations, the Trump administration has been aggressive and disruptive in its policies. Innovators should take note as they advance their own corporate initiatives and navigate various headwinds.
Lux Research dove into this topic in its blog, “How Trump’s Second Term Is Reshaping Innovation Across 5 Industries.” It’s based off a report the company recently released, entitled “One Year of Trump: The Biggest Impacts on Innovation and What’s Coming Next,” which can be downloaded here.
Change is certainly happening at an accelerated pace with this administration, whether it’s shifting deregulation, setting tariffs, or altering federal incentives. Lux Research notes that nimble companies are responding, adjusting research and development priorities, supply chains and investment strategies.
As Lux Research advises, “The biggest lesson for innovation leaders is simple: Technology alone no longer determines success. Policy alignment and strategic flexibility are becoming equally important drivers of innovation outcomes.”
Disruption Means Changes for Innovation
Lux Research took a closer look at several industries that have been influenced by the evolving focus of the current administration, including:
Energy: Energy priorities are moving from decarbonization to affordability and grid reliability. Government support has risen for domestic production and oil and gas expansion.
For 2026, electricity reliability and grid capacity take center stage. Innovation opportunities are emerging around grid infrastructure, transmission reform, and technologies that help balance growing demand with stable power supply.
Chemical: Chemical innovation is aligning with semiconductor demand, defense technologies, and domestic supply security. Last year marked the start of regulatory reform discussions around the Toxic Substances Control Act. Policymakers began pushing for faster chemical review processes and restructuring parts of the Environmental Protection Agency to address evaluation backlogs.
As geopolitical tensions reshape supply chains, governments and corporations are prioritizing domestic supply security for critical materials. Chemicals companies that can support semiconductor manufacturing, advanced electronics, and defense technologies are positioned to benefit.
Agrifood and Health: Agrifood innovation is shifting toward clean-label ingredients and stricter scrutiny of additives and ultra processed foods. Agrifood and health policy narratives around consumer health began influencing food innovation strategies in 2025. The “Make America Healthy Again” movement pushed regulators and companies to focus on food formulation, ingredient transparency, and additive safety.
In 2026, policy alignment will likely reshape the value chain, from farm practices to packaged goods. Regenerative agriculture is expected to shift from an environmental, social, and governance-driven movement to one tied directly to subsidy structures and agricultural policy incentives.
Medical: Health care manufacturing is prioritizing resilient supply chains, reshoring, and traceability. In healthcare manufacturing, supply chain risk moved from an operational concern to a strategic one in 2025. Scrutiny into pharmaceuticals, medical devices, and personal protective equipment triggered renewed interest in reshoring production and reducing dependence on global suppliers.
In 2026, healthcare supply chains will likely shift toward regional resilience rather than pure cost optimization. This shift could reshape procurement standards and create opportunities for suppliers offering transparent, resilient manufacturing networks.
Industrials: Industrial strategy is focusing on critical minerals and localized supply chains. Governments prioritized extraction, recycling, and refining technologies for key materials needed in advanced manufacturing and energy systems.
In 2026, industrial companies are expected to accelerate localization strategies for mineral supply chains. Joint ventures between companies and governments may become more common as organizations try to manage geopolitical risk.
Navigating Shifting Policy Signals
While changes across an entire industry don’t happen overnight, governmental policies can have an impactful influence on national, local, and global research and development operations.
As Lux observes, “Across sectors, the pattern is clear. Innovation success increasingly depends on how well companies align technology development with policy signals.”
Whether it’s an energy company, a food innovator, or a chemicals manufacturer, corporations must navigate this new reality in a responsive, adaptive way as they expand (or contract) their own innovation efforts. But uncertainty is sure to remain in both the short-term and long-term for innovation strategy and investment, given the geopolitical environment.
“Organizations that design flexible assets, diversified supply chains, and multipurpose technology platforms will be best positioned to respond to this volatile environment,” says Lux Research.
Lux Research’s report, “One Year of Trump: The Biggest Impacts on Innovation and What’s Coming Next,” can be downloaded here.
Video: “One Year of Trump: The Biggest Impacts on Innovation and What’s Coming Next,” courtesy of Lux Research Marketing.
Contributor
-
Matthew Kramer is the Digital Editor for All Things Insights & All Things Innovation. He has over 20 years of experience working in publishing and media companies, on a variety of business-to-business publications, websites and trade shows.
View all posts
























































































