Jump to Navigation
Home

Main menu

  • Home
  • News
  • Markets Map
  • Sentiments
  • Topics
  • Data
  • Comments
  • Images
  • Blog
  • About

Secondary menu

  • Latest News
  • Top Rated
  • Most Popular
  • Archive
  • Discussions
  • US issuers continue assault of Europe's ETF market
  • Daily Mail publisher's print revenues slide
  • Exclusive: Glencore, Trafigura deals with Iran may have...
  • SOE profits rise in first 4 months
  • Markets fall on China data, Fed
  • Business news and markets: live
  • Weak PMI data drags down Chinese shares
  • Grexit No Longer Likely, Says Man Who Coined Phrase
  • Japan's Breathtaking 7% Plunge Is The Worst Since...
  • AMD Launches 'Kabini' And 'Temash' -...

    Secretary Locke to Lead 24 U.S. Businesses on High-Tech Trade Mission to India

    Fri, 01/14/2011 - 11:30 EDT - US Department of Commerce Blog
    • Ex-Im Bank
    • India trade mission
    • International Trade Administration
    • NEI
    • RDF10
    • Secretary Gary Locke
    • Trade Promotion Coordinating Committee
    • U.S. Trade Development Agency

    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
    • Login or register to post comments
     

    Related

    • Secretary Locke Speaks at U.S.-India Business and Entrepreneurship Summit, Announces Forthcoming Trade Mission to India

      Delivering remarks at the U.S.-India Business and Entrepreneurship Summit in Mumbai today, Commerce Secretary Gary Locke discussed ways the U.S. and India can work together to promote trade that creates opportunity and jobs in both nations. Locke remarked on the potential for a bilateral clean energy partnership, as well as the opportunities for American companies to help meet India’s healthcare and infrastructure needs.

    • Secretary Locke Arrives in Mumbai for Final Stop of High-Tech Trade Mission

      Locke meets with Chairman Ambani of Reliance Industries and other Indian CEOsCommerce Secretary Gary Locke returned to India’s business center today for the final stop of his high-technology trade mission to India – which he announced during President Obama’s trip last November. Locke is joined by a delegation of 24 U.S. businesses seeking to promote their technologies and services related to civil nuclear energy, civil aviation, defense and homeland security, and information and communications technology to India. Locke is the first Cabinet secretary to travel to India after President Obama’s visit. At a speech he delivered to members of the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FICCI) and the American Chamber of Commerce (AMCHAM) in Mumbai, Locke highlighted the U.S.-India commercial relationship and encouraged development of new business opportunities between the members of the delegation and their Indian counterparts. He also talked about the great progress India has made in opening its markets to U.S. companies but he noted that much more work needs to be done. “If India continues its walk down ‘the path of reform,’ if it continues to become more open to the investments and the innovations of foreign companies – like the 24 companies I have with me this week – it will stand a much better chance of meeting the needs of its people and of helping to lead the global economy in the 21st century,” said Secretary Locke. “We've made important progress this week, not just to lay the groundwork for more sales of U.S. goods in India, but to take another real step towards strengthening the bonds between the governments, the businesses and the people of India and the United States.” While in Mumbai, Locke also met with Indian CEOs, including Chairman Mukesh Ambani of Reliance Industries, who are part of the U.S.-India CEO Forum as a follow up from their meeting during President Obama’s trip to India in November. Locke solicited the group’s goals for the 2011 forum and they discussed a wide range of critical issues, including clean energy, standards and education.

    • Secretary Locke speaks to the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry and the American Chamber of Commerce in New Delhi

      Delivering remarks at a business innovation-focused event hosted by the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry and the American Chamber of Commerce in New Delhi today, Commerce Secretary Gary Locke discussed the economic opportunities that would result from a closer relationship between the U.S. and India, and underscored the importance of mutually beneficial, job-creating trade between the two nations.

    • High-Technology Trade Mission To India with Secretary Locke and 24 U.S. Companies Kicks Off

      Today, Secretary Locke kicked off a high-technology trade mission today in New Delhi to promote exports of leading U.S. technologies and services related to civil nuclear energy, civil aviation, defense and homeland security, and information and communications technology. The mission will continue through February 11, and also make stops in Bangalore and Mumbai.  His first stop was at a neighborhood grocery store in New Delhi that is using technology developed by a U.S. company to market its products, manage its customers and organize its business operations.  Intuit, based in Mountain View, Calif., created “GoConnect,” a new innovative mobile and web-based marketing service that is helping Indian micro and small businesses grow and improve the way they communicate with their customers. Intuit’s new application was first announced during the President Obama’s visit to India. "Intuit's GoConnect technology is a prime example of the kind of mutually beneficial trade that creates jobs in both countries, creating opportunities from the Intuit offices in Northern California to a neighborhood grocery store in the streets of New Delhi," said Secretary Locke. "We look forward to finding more commercial opportunities like these during this trade mission." GoConnect was developed in both India and the U.S. The data is hosted in Intuit's data center in Quincy, Washington. 

    • Secretary Locke Meets with Indian Ambassador to the U.S. Meera Shankar

      U.S. Commerce Secretary Gary Locke met today with India’s Ambassador to the United States, Meera Shankar, to discuss bilateral trade and investment issues. The meeting took place as Secretary Locke prepares to lead a high technology business development trade mission to India on February 6-11. Over 70 companies applied to participate in the upcoming mission, which will make stops in New Delhi, Mumbai, and Bangalore, in order to promote U.S. exports of high technology products and services in key economic sectors: civil-nuclear trade, defense and security, civil aviation, and information and communications technology.

    • Commerce Department Continues Focus on Expanding Markets for U.S. Exports

      Secretary Gary Locke will join President Obama in India this week, where they will work to deepen bilateral economic cooperation between the two countries on a regional and global level. Continuing to expand bilateral economic ties with India is an important step toward achieving the goals of the president’s National Export Initiative, which aims to double U.S. exports within the next five years in support of several million U.S. jobs. While in Mumbai, Locke will participate in the U.S.-India Business and Entrepreneurship Summit. He will then travel to New Delhi, where he will give a keynote address at a Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry and the American Chamber of Commerce event.  In 2009, U.S. trade with India totaled $37.6 billion, and trade this year has already reached $32.4 billion through August.Watch this video to hear from small business owners about their experiences partnering with the Department of Commerce.

    • Secretary Bryson Announces 16 Companies Joining his First Trade Mission to India

      U.S. Commerce Secretary John Bryson today announced the 16 companies that will join him on a business development mission to India, his first as Commerce Secretary. During the mission, Secretary Bryson will meet with senior-level Indian government officials to advocate for U.S. export opportunities in India’s rapidly expanding infrastructure sector, and promote investment opportunities in America – both key priorities of the Obama Administration. The mission will take place March 25-30 with stops in New Delhi, Jaipur and Mumbai.  

    • Secretary Locke Arrives in India for High-Tech Trade Mission

    • Secretary Locke speaks to the American Chamber of Commerce in Tokyo, Japan

      Delivering remarks at the American Chamber of Commerce in Japan (ACCJ) luncheon in Tokyo today, Commerce Secretary Gary Locke discussed strengthening the U.S.-Japan economic relationship, noting the ongoing work between the U.S. Commerce Department and Japan’s Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare, as well as the Ministry of Economy, Trade, and Industry.Locke reiterated the United States’ commitment to strengthening U.S.-Japanese trade, and the desire to see continued export expansion into Japan. Bilateral trade between the two countries totaled nearly $147 billion in 2009. Locke also remarked on the need to ease trade barriers, calling for open investment and trade environment that allows businesses, entrepreneurs and policy makers to bring their respective strengths to the table and spur the type of innovation and economic growth the U.S. cannot achieve alone. He defined economic success as the ease with which policies make it possible for innovators to exchange ideas, as well as to invest and trade.  The ACCJ luncheon marked Locke’s first stop in Japan while attending the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Summit, which is being chaired this year by Japan in Yokohama.

    • U.S. Companies Invited To Apply To Join Secretary Locke On Upcoming High-Tech Trade Mission To India

      Earlier this month in Mumbai, Secretary Locke announced that he will l

    Latest

    Campaigns Panel: Stars who offend
    Campaigns Panel: Stars who offend
    Eurozone Manufacturing Data Comes In Better-Than-Expected, But Still Ugly
    Eurozone Manufacturing Data Comes In Better-Than-...

    User login

    • Create new account
    • Request new password
    • Click on the icon to sign in with your social network login or enter your Bullfax.com login

    Our Blog

    • IMF calls on Osborne to spend on infrastructure
    • ICBC/Goldman Sachs: farewell
    • Japan’s budget deficit, Rolls-Royce, Raytheon and Sony in Our Daily Round-Up for 05/22/2013

    Markets Map

    Markets Map

    Follow Us

    Follow Us on Facebook, Twitter, Google Plus and RSS LinkedIn Facebook Twitter Google Plus RSS
    S&P 500: 1655.35 -0.83% FTSE: 6710.19 -1.94% Nikk.: 14483.98 -7.89% DAX: 8299.63 -2.79% HSI: 22669.68 -2.61% FX: EUR/GBP: 1.1701 USD/EUR: 1.2879 JPY/USD: 101.175 Commodities: Gold: 1386.55

    Bullfax.com - Market News & Analysis 2008-2011
    Contact Us | About Us | Terms & Conditions

    Follow Us on Facebook, Twitter, Google Plus and RSS LinkedIn Facebook Twitter Google Plus RSS .

    Secondary menu

    • Latest News
    • Top Rated
    • Most Popular
    • Archive
    • Discussions