Secretary Locke to Lead 24 U.S. Businesses on High-Tech Trade Mission to India
Twenty-four U.S. businesses will join Commerce Secretary Gary Locke for a
business development mission to India on February 6-11. The businesses joining
the trade mission are based in 13 states across the country and more than half
of them are small- and medium-sized companies.
The delegation, which also includes senior officials from the Export-Import
Bank (EX-IM) and the Trade Development Agency (TDA), will make stops in New
Delhi, Mumbai and Bangalore, where Locke will highlight export opportunities for
U.S. businesses in the advanced industrial sectors, of civil-nuclear trade,
defense and security, civil aviation, and information and communication
technologies. Locke accompanied President Obama to India in November, where they
witnessed more than $10 billion in business deals between U.S. companies and
Indian private sector and government entities, supporting 50,000 American
jobs.
“Exports are leading the U.S. economic recovery, spurring future economic
growth and creating jobs in America,” Locke said. “The business leaders joining
me on this mission see the great potential to sell their goods and services to
India, helping drive innovation and create jobs in both
countries.”
The India business development mission will help build on the exporting
success U.S. companies had 2010 – up 17 percent compared to the same period in
2009. It will be Locke’s second trade mission as Commerce Secretary; in May, he
led a clean energy business development mission to China and
Indonesia.
Exports represent a critical part of the economy and are a key component of
the Obama administration’s efforts to spur new job creation. One year ago,
President Obama outlined his National Export Initiative (NEI), which seeks to
double exports by 2015, in support of several million new U.S. jobs. The NEI
enhances the U.S. government’s trade promotion efforts, increases credit to
businesses – especially small- and medium-sized businesses – looking to export,
and continues to improve efforts to remove trade barriers for U.S. companies in
foreign markets.
The Department of Commerce, through the Trade Promotion Coordinating
Committee (TPCC), leads the administration’s trade promotion efforts. The TPCC
provides a platform for the Secretary of Commerce to advance a government-wide
agenda on trade promotion and to directly engage the heads of the other TPCC
agencies.
Commerce’s International Trade Administration helps American companies export
their products and services around the world, utilizing some 1,500 U.S.
Commercial Service staff stationed in 77 countries across the globe. Last year,
the U.S. Commercial Service helped facilitate billions of dollars in U.S. export
sales, supporting jobs across the country.
The delegation includes:
ABSi Corporation,
Rockville,
MD
Aero Controls,
Inc., Auburn,
WA
Curtiss-Wright Flow
Control, Brea,
CA
Exelon Nuclear
Partners, Kennett Square,
PA
FLIR Systems, Inc.,
Wilsonville,
OR
Fluidic Energy,
Scottsdale,
AZ
GE Hitachi Nuclear
Energy, Inc., Wilmington,
NC
Intuit Inc.,
Mountain View,
CA
Kent Displays,
Kent,
OH
Kulite
Semiconductor Products, Inc., Leonia,
NJ
Lockheed Martin
Corporation, Bethesda,
MD
nLIGHT Corporation,
Vancouver,
WA
North Star
Aerospace, Inc., Auburn,
WA
NuScale Power,
Inc., Portland,
OR
Oshkosh
Corporation, Oshkosh,
WI
Palantir
Technologies, Palo Alto,
CA
Pelican Products,
Inc., Torrance,
CA
Rajant Corporation,
Malvern,
PA
Rapiscan Systems
Inc., Torrance,
CA
The Boeing Company,
Chicago,
IL
Thermo Fisher
Scientific, Inc., Waltham,
MA
Transco Products,
Inc., Chicago,
IL
VeriSign, Inc.,
Dulles,
VA
Westinghouse
Electric Company LLC, Monroeville,
PA
Visit
the Commerce Department’s India trade mission website at http://trade.gov/indiamission2011/index.asp
for updates on the trade mission.
- Original article
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