Office of the Secretary
Department of Commerce
Washington, DC
Tuesday, May 27, 2014
U.S. Secretary of Commerce Penny Pritzker Concludes Successful Africa Trade Mission
Following stops in Ghana and Nigeria, Secretary Pritzker Focuses on AGOA Renewal in Ethiopia
AGOA is one critical tool to continue deepening trade and investment ties between the U.S. and Africa
WASHINGTON — U.S. Secretary of Commerce Penny Pritzker concluded her
visit to Africa with a stop in Ethiopia, where she met with President
Mulatu Teshome and private sector leaders to discuss ways to increase
bilateral trade and investment between the U.S. and Ethiopia. Secretary
Pritzker underscored the U.S. commitment to renewal of the African
Growth and Opportunities Act (AGOA) as one tool that will continue to
deepen trade relations between the U.S. and Ethiopia, and the entire
African continent.
AGOA allows 6,400 products from eligible Sub-Saharan African
countries to enter the U.S. duty free. In 2013, U.S. imports under AGOA
totaled $26.8 billion, and the Obama Administration is committed to
renewing AGOA before it expires in 2015. In addition to renewal, the
Administration is interested in ways to update the legislation to
encourage diversification within Africa’s economies, which will better
support the Continent’s growth, development and competitiveness.
Secretary Pritzker was joined in Ethiopia by Congresswoman Karen Bass
(D-Calif.), who sits on the House Foreign Relations Committee.
“One of the ways the United States can serve as a partner in
Ethiopia’s growth and development is through an expanded trade and
investment relationship,” said Secretary Pritzker. “In Ethiopia and
across Africa, we must ensure that our trade through AGOA is reaching
its full potential, encompassing a variety of industry sectors, and
including small and medium-sized companies and entrepreneurs.”
The fast growth in Ethiopia’s economy is also generating an increase
in the number of U.S. firms looking to do more business in the country.
Ethiopia’s gross domestic product has grown an average of 9.1 percent
over the last 10 years, making it Africa’s second fastest-growing
economy and the sixth fastest-growing economy in the world. One of the
ways the Department of Commerce helps companies take advantage of
mutually-beneficial commercial opportunities in Africa and around the
world is through the Foreign Commercial Service, teams that work out of
Embassies specifically to help American businesses find new partners and
customers overseas. The Department of Commerce recently announced that
it will nearly double the Foreign Commercial Service footprint in
Africa, opening its first-ever offices in Ethiopia, Angola, Tanzania and
Mozambique, and expanding teams in four other countries.
West Africa Trade Mission Recap
Earlier last week, Secretary Pritzker led a delegation of 20 U.S.
businesses on a trade mission to Ghana and Nigeria focused on Africa’s
energy sector. The trade mission was meant to further President Obama’s
goal, as outlined in the Administration’s Strategy Toward Sub-Saharan
Africa, of furthering trade and investment relationships across the
African continent, which is home to seven of the 10 fastest-growing
economies in the world.
“American companies are in Africa and more American companies want to
be in Africa,” said Secretary Pritzker. “This trade mission has already
helped U.S. companies take advantage of mutually-beneficial
opportunities to do business in Ghana and Nigeria, in particular.
Ensuring that American firms are primed to do business in Africa will
not only help the African people realize greater economic success, but
will also fuel growth and job creation in the United States.”
The trip included many positive outcomes:
• Charlotte-based renewable energy company SEWW was selected by
the Electricity Company of Ghana to lead a $25 million/year upgrade and
expansion project in the Greater Accra Region. The project will span
seven years and includes efforts to improve the transmission and
distribution of electricity in Ghana. Within the seven year time frame,
SEWW energy has been authorized to provide products and services in
support of the project that will include network transmission, the
rebuilding of substations, and the design of smart grids. SEWW will
spearhead solutions to reduce the cost of power supply and address
security, reliability, and efficiency. Additionally, SEWW Energy will
train local citizens in Ghana to operate and maintain the new
infrastructure.
• Environmental Chemical Corporation, based in California,
signed a Memorandum of Understanding with University College Hospital,
Ibadan for the finance, design and construction of a new,
state-of-the-art cancer institute. The University College Hospital,
Ibadan was established by an act of the Nigerian parliament in November
1952 in response to the need for the training of medical personnel and
other healthcare professionals for the country and the West African
Sub-Region. The accident and emergency (A & E) Department of the
University College Hospital averages 6,000 patients annually, and
150,000 patients are attended to through the hospital various clinics
each year.
• Ellicott Dredges, a Baltimore-based firm, signed multiple deals in Nigeria to provide dredges in-country.
U.S.-Africa CEO Forum
While in Nigeria, Secretary Pritkzer also announced that the Department
of Commerce and Bloomberg Philanthropies will co-host the inaugural
U.S.-Africa Business Forum on the first day of the U.S.-Africa Leaders
Summit in August. The Forum will focus on U.S. private sector engagement
in Africa in the areas of finance and capital investment,
infrastructure, power and energy, agriculture, consumer goods, and
information and communications technology.
Heads of state will engage with business executives from both sides
of the Atlantic in conversations about successes and solutions that will
help strengthen trade and investment in Africa.
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