Home Business-newBusiness World Trade Center Miami Ramps Up Efforts to Promote International Commerce and Economic Development

World Trade Center Miami Ramps Up Efforts to Promote International Commerce and Economic Development

by Yucatan Times
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WTCM Joins the Florida/Mexico Working Group, which Hosted its First Meeting this Week Ahead of the U.S.-Mexico- Canada Free Trade Agreement Going into Effect

MIAMI, FL- July 1st, 2020– Yesterday, the World Trade Center Miami participated in the first meeting of the Florida/Mexico Working Group, ahead of the new United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) going into effect today, July 1st. 

The Florida/Mexico Working Group was developed as a result of a Letter of Intent (LOI) signed by FPC and the Coordinadora de Puertos in November. LOI participants pledged to create a working group of twelve maritime commerce members from Mexico and Florida to grow maritime trade between the two entities.

“I am honored to serve as part of this initiative. The establishment of this working group is a meaningful step towards significantly growing trade between Florida and Mexico,” said Alice Ancona, Senior Vice President and Chief Operating Officer of World Trade Center Miami.  “The World Trade Center Miami is committed to growing two-way trade.  In 2019, Florida trade with Mexico was valued at over $10 billion and in 2018, Mexico was Miami’s #1 trading partner.”  

“Mexico has long been one of Florida’s strongest trading partners, but we see substantial opportunities for growth in bilateral waterborne trade,” said Doug Wheeler, president and CEO of the Florida Ports Council. “The Letter of Intent that was signed in November by Florida and the Mexican gulf ports was just the first step in this process, and the meeting of the working group this week furthered our commitment to pursue benefits and solutions an all-water route will provide.”

In July 2019, delegation members from Florida Ports Council, Enterprise Florida and World Trade Center Miami traveled to Mexico City to promote the all-water trade route through Florida. Of Florida’s 15 deep-water seaports, eight sent representatives to Mexico, including those from Port Canaveral, JAXPORT, Port Manatee, PortMiami, Port Panama City, the Port of Pensacola, Port Everglades and Port Tampa Bay. FPC coordinated with Jonathan Chait Auerbach, the Consul General of Mexico in Miami, and Enterprise Florida’s Mexico City office to schedule meetings for the delegation with government officials and agencies, customs officials and the Coordinadora de Puertos.

In November, the Mexican delegation traveled to Miami where the LOI was signed.

Héctor López Gutiérrez, Coordinador General de Puertos y Marina Mercante said, “For Mexico sea routes including cabotage service and short-distance navigation are very important … for the ports of Florida and Central America, with which we have already started a new route, a very important panorama of development of intermodal chains has opened up and is convenient for all the countries that are involved; and it helps to solve many of the problems that currently appear in the mentioned chains. So I hope that the integration of the working group and the participation of the ports and agencies that participate will make it a very successful project, we could even say exemplary, in regard to national and international trade.”

“The establishment of the working group, proposed in the Letter of Intent signed by the Merchant Marine and the Florida Ports Council last November, is an example of the commitment and interest of both parties to make this relationship an axis of trade and investment between Mexico and the United States,” said Jonathan Chiat Auerbach, the Consul General of Mexico in Miami. “The selection of the participants in the working group integrally represents the commercial potential between Mexico and Florida. Undoubtedly, taking advantage of the existing maritime border between both entities will bring with it an important benefit to the well-being of the people of both countries, and particularly in Mexico, the south-southeast region of the country.”

* Working Group members include Juan Kuryla, Port Director & CEO of PortMiami; Alice Ancona, Senior Vice President & COO of the World Trade Center – Miami; Carlos Buqueras, Executive Director of Port Manatee; Alberto Cabrera, Director of Cruise and Cargo Development at JAXPORT; Alex King, Operations Manager of the Port of Panama City; Elena O. Asturias, Licensed Customs Broker and Owner of 305 Cargo Services; Alberto Azcona Gallardo, Deputy Director General of Priority Maritime Port Projects of the SCT; Karina Venizelos Toledo, Central Administrator of Customs Services and International Affairs of the SAT; Leonardo Gómez Vargas, General Director of the National Association of Private Transport (ANTP); Juan Díaz Mazadiego, General Director of Commercial Facilitation and Foreign Trade of the Ministry of Economy; Gerardo Tajonar Castro, President of the National Association of Importers and Exporters of the Mexican Republic (ANIERM); Felipe de Jesús Peña Dueñas, President of the Transportation Commission of the Confederation of Industrial Chambers of the United Mexican States (CONCAMIN); and, Fernandez Perroni, General Director of the Merchant Marine of the SCT.

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About World Trade Center Miami (WTCM)

The World Trade Center Miami (WTCM) is a member of the World Trade Centers Association, which is the preeminent global trade organization promoting two-way trade. For more than 32 years, the WTCM has facilitated international commerce in Miami-Dade County. Through trade shows, missions, special events, educational programs and other forms of assistance, the WTCM has played a leading role in spurring the growth of the region’s most important economic sector, generating more than $3.8 billion in reported international sales and stimulating the formation of thousands of new jobs.

For more information on the World Trade Center Miami, call 305-871-7910 or visit www.worldtrade.org.

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