The Nordic Additive Manufacturing Alliance (NAMA) marks the first time Finland, Sweden, Norway, and Denmark have formally united their expertise in additive manufacturing under a single cooperative framework.
Backed by Nordic Innovation through the Nordic Forward: Competitiveness and Resilience for 2050 program, the initiative runs from 2026 to 2028 and brings together four national pillars: Finnish Additive Manufacturing Ecosystem (FAME), Research Institutes of Sweden (RISE), Norwegian Additive Manufacturing Cluster, and Danish AM Hub.
Each partner contributes a distinct specialization: Sweden in materials science and metal powder production, Finland in industrial implementation and digital design, Denmark in circular business models and innovation ecosystems, and Norway in maritime and energy sector applications. Rather than duplicating existing national efforts, NAMA is designed to synthesize them, creating a combined capability no single country could replicate on its own.
“The Nordic countries already have world-class expertise in additive manufacturing, but it remains fragmented across different actors and countries. Through NAMA, we are building Nordic cooperation that strengthens industrial resilience, accelerates sustainable manufacturing, and gives the Nordic region a stronger common voice internationally,” says Eetu Holstein, Senior Ecosystem Lead of the FAME Ecosystem at DIMECC Ltd.
From Fragmented Strengths to Collective Competitiveness
The timing of NAMA is not incidental. Global supply chains have faced mounting pressure from geopolitical instability, climate-related disruptions, and logistical bottlenecks, exposing the risks of over-reliance on centralized production and long-distance sourcing. At the same time, industries across sectors face growing regulatory and market pressure to reduce emissions, improve resource efficiency, and accelerate digitalization.
Additive manufacturing directly addresses these converging demands. By enabling on-demand, localized production with minimal material waste, it reduces dependence on extended supply chains while supporting leaner, more responsive industrial operations. During the project period, partners will map Nordic capabilities, identify sector-specific industrial needs, build a shared governance model, and draft a long-term roadmap for Nordic cooperation, positioning the region as an active contributor to the future of European and global manufacturing.
“Through the Nordic AM Alliance, we are strengthening the Nordic region’s long-term competitiveness and resilience. Additive manufacturing is a critical technology for sustainability, digitalization and innovation, with each Nordic country holding complementary strengths. By bringing these strengths together, we can speed up the green transition and enhance industrial resilience across borders,” says Sindre Bornstein, Managing Director of Nordic Innovation.
The Strategic Context: Why Regional AM Alliances Are Rising
NAMA enters a landscape where the gap between AM potential and industrial scale-up remains real, and where collaborative frameworks are emerging as the preferred mechanism to close it. Nordic Innovation’s support for NAMA reflects a broader recognition that the technology’s benefits require coordinated infrastructure and shared standards to reach their full industrial impact.
Similar logic has driven parallel efforts across Europe and beyond. The European Association of Manufacturing Technologies CECIMO launched a pan-European AM initiative that unites more than ten national associations and over 700 enterprises under a single platform, framing additive manufacturing as a key enabler of the EU’s green transition and industrial digitalization.

On the transatlantic front, ASTM International and AM Europe entered a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to coordinate standards, certification, and workforce training across continents, aiming to reduce duplication and increase confidence in qualified AM production globally.
These initiatives share a common thread: fragmented national expertise, however strong, cannot alone generate the interoperability, scale, or policy influence that today’s industrial challenges demand. NAMA brings this same logic to the Nordic context, and its focus on civilian industrial sectors, from maritime and energy to circular production, positions it to contribute both regionally and to the broader European AM ecosystem.
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.
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Featured image shows Additive manufacturing. Photo via Nordic Additive Manufacturing Alliance.

