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C.O.B. TuesdayAuthor: Veriten
C.O.B. Tuesday is a weekly one-hour talk show that serves as a knowledge pipeline for the energy industry and the energy curious. We host honest, timely, conversations with people we believe can improve the discussion, can provide new perspectives, can share unique insights into key energy issues, and can discuss inventive, pragmatic solutions for a stronger energy future. Produced by Veriten. Language: en-us Genres: Business, Education, Investing Contact email: Get it Feed URL: Get it iTunes ID: Get it |
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"The Strait Falls Into The Perfect Use Case For Robotics" – Doug Lambert, Saronic Technologies
Episode 323
Wednesday, 15 April, 2026
Today we were pleased to welcome Doug Lambert, Co-Founder and Chief Operating Officer of Saronic Technologies. Doug, alongside Dino Mavrookas (CEO), Rob Lehman (CCO), and Vibhav Altekar (CTO), co-founded Saronic in 2022 to advance maritime superiority through intelligent autonomous systems. Saronic’s mission is to equip the U.S. and its allies with advanced autonomous surface vessels, enhancing situational awareness and enabling more effective detection, tracking, and response to emerging maritime threats. The company recently closed a $1.75B Series D at a $9.25B valuation and announced a new downtown New Orleans office to support its expanding shipbuilding operations in Louisiana. We were thrilled to spend time with Doug and explore autonomy, maritime innovation, and the future of naval and offshore operations. In our conversation, Doug provides an overview of Saronic, their product range, and rapid growth to ~1,500 employees. We discuss the convergence of enabling technologies (AI, machine learning, edge compute, and advanced sensors) that have made true maritime autonomy possible, why this moment is different from prior attempts, and the combination of technology breakthroughs, market tailwinds, and geopolitical developments that have accelerated adoption. We explore Saronic’s approach to designing purpose-built autonomous vessels, as well as their decision to vertically integrate across design, manufacturing, and operations, highlighting how scale production, control of the full system, and a data-driven flywheel are critical to driving down costs and unlocking broader adoption. We examine the strategic implications of autonomy and how these platforms act as force multipliers across defense, offshore energy, and critical infrastructure. Doug shares his perspective on the concept of a hybrid fleet, where autonomous systems augment traditional assets, extend reach, and improve safety, and how this shift could reshape maritime strategy over time. We cover the importance of edge-based decision making versus cloud reliance, and how real-world deployment and data collection underpin both performance and competitive advantage. We also touch on the broader industrial and cultural backdrop, including the reindustrialization of U.S. shipbuilding, the blending of software and skilled trades, and the growing importance of building in the physical world. We discuss workforce dynamics, labor constraints in maritime, adoption challenges, the gap between technical readiness and real-world trust as autonomy moves from concept to scaled deployment, and much more. It was a wide-ranging discussion and we’re thankful to Doug for sharing his time and unique insights. Mike Bradley started the show by noting that the 10-year bond yield had moved down to ~4.27% following a softer-than-expected March PPI report (YoY +4%). While still elevated, the print came in well below consensus and remains far below the 11.7% peak seen during the Biden Presidency. On the oil market front, WTI was trading at ~$92/bbl, down $6–$7 on the day and $4–$5 since President Trump announced the Strait of Hormuz blockade over the weekend. He noted that global oil prices also moved lower on optimism around a potential second round of Iranian peace talks, as well as a meaningful downward revision (~730 kbpd) to the IEA’s 2026 demand outlook. Traders are now less focused on how high prices could go and more focused on how low they could fall if and when the Strait of Hormuz reopens. On the broader equity market front, the S&P 500 was up ~1% on the day and trading within ~0.5% of its all-time high, highlighting a notable divergence between energy market concerns and broader market optimism. Within equities, Energy was the worst-performing S&P sector on the day and has effectively round-tripped since the onset of the Iran conflict, now down ~11% from its March peak. Looking ahead, Oil Services Q1 earnings begin next













