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LOUISIANA INTERNATIONAL
TRADE BULLETIN |
A monthly partnership
publication of the Louisiana Department of Economic Development, the New Orleans
U.S. Export Assistance Center, and the World Trade Center of New Orleans.
May 2000
TABLE OF CONTENTS
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The Rice, Fowler law firm, the World Trade Center and the Louisiana
Department of Economic Development are sponsoring a luncheon seminar at
the WTC in New Orleans on Tuesday, May 23 on the topic "Developing
and Managing an International Distributor Network."
The seminar will be conducted by Glenn Stoudt, President of the
International Division of Rochester Midland Corporation, a 112-year-old
manufacturing company specializing in chemical products for industrial
maintenance applications. The company is operating through distributors in
35 overseas markets
The seminar is designed for small-to-medium-size businesses and will
cover the identification of suitable international markets, conducting
market research, selecting overseas agents and distributors, and
successfully managing a distributor network.
For additional information and to register, call the WTC at (504)
529-1601, ext. 222 or 254.
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The Southern Regional Agricultural Trade Research Committee is
sponsoring a two-day conference on "Global Agricultural Trade in the
New Millennium." The conference will be held on May 25-26 at Le
Meridien Hotel in New Orleans. The focus of the conference is to evaluate
expected changes in agricultural trade and to reassess the competitiveness
of U.S. agricultural commodities and products. Specific themes include:
(1) accomplishments and progress of the Uruguay Round Agreement and
critical issues for the upcoming WTO negotiations, (2) impacts of
regionalism, such as the Free Trade Area of the Americas and the European
Union, on agricultural trade, and (3) analysis of major trade issues
specific to individual commodities.
A conference program, registration material, and other important
information can be found at the following website: www.agecon.msstate.edu/s-287/.
Those interested in attending the conference should complete the
registration form and return it to Parr Rosson, Department of Agricultural
Economics, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843-2124. The
conference registration fee is $225. If you have any questions, please
contact P. Lynn Kennedy, Department of Agricultural Economics and
Agribusiness, Louisiana State University, by phone at (225) 388-2726 or
via e-mail at lkennedy@agctr.lsu.edu.
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The annual meeting of the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), which
was held in New Orleans March 23-29, was considered a major success from
every standpoint. The meeting attracted a record 5,300 IDB delegates to
New Orleans, including official delegations, representatives of the
private sector, journalists, and guests. A good summary of the substantive
results of the meeting is contained on the IDB’s website at www.iadb.org/exr/
PRENSA/2000/cp7000e.htm.
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The U.S. Commercial Attachés in Guatemala and Panama will conduct a
luncheon briefing at the World Trade Center in New Orleans on Friday, June
16 on the subject "Business Outlook for Central America: Issues and
Opportunities." Dan Thompson from Guatemala City and Richard Benson
from Panama City will discuss a wide range of new trade and investment
opportunities for Louisiana companies in Central America arising out of
the reconstruction efforts following Hurricane Mitch, the transfer of the
Panama Canal, the recent Inter-American Development Bank meeting held in
New Orleans, the Caribbean Basin trade bill currently before Congress, and
other developments.
The June 16 luncheon program is sponsored by the New Orleans U.S.
Export Assistance Center, the Louisiana Export Council, the Louisiana
Department of Economic Development, the WTC, and other organizations. For
details, call the WTC at (504) 529-1601, ext. 222 or 254.
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U.S. Secretary of Transportation Rodney Slater was the guest of honor
at an April 20 dinner at the World Trade Center which was hosted by new
Orleans Mayor Marc Morial and the WTC. Secretary Slater addressed the
gathering on the topic "Renewed Leadership in Western Hemisphere
Trade." In his address (the text of which is contained on the Trade Programs Section of the WTC’s
website), Secretary Slater discusses a range of initiatives which New
Orleans and Louisiana have taken on Latin America and the Caribbean in
recent years and the opportunities for future leadership as a Gateway for
the Western Hemisphere.
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May 11 -Membership Meeting of the U.N. Association of Greater New
Orleans at the WTC, 5:30 p.m. Call(504) 488-0856.
May 11 -Foreign Relations Association dinner program on
"Cyber-Terrorism and the FBI Response" featuring Sidney J. Reed,
Special Agent of the New Orleans Field Division of the FBI, 6:30 p.m. cash
bar, dinner at 7:00 p.m. Call (504) 523-2201.
May 16 -Import/Export Strategies and Market Research seminar from 8:45
a.m. to 1:15 p.m. at the WTC in New Orleans. Call the Louisiana
International Trade Center (LITC) at (504) 568-8222.
May 18 -Pricing, Terms, Quotations and Customs Entry Procedures seminar
from 8:45 a.m. to 1:15 p.m. at the WTC in New Orleans. Call the LITC at
(504) 568-8222.
May 19 -Luncheon address at the Old State Capitol in Baton Rouge by Mr.
Pierre Lepetit, Senior Advisor with the French Embassy. Call the
French-American Chamber at (504) 561-0070.
May 23 -Luncheon seminar at the WTC in New Orleans on "Developing
and Managing an International Distributor Network," conducted by
Glenn Stoudt, President, International Division, Rochester Midland Corp.
Call 529-1601, ext. 222.
May 23 -International Banking, Financing, Transportation, and
Documentation seminar from 8:45 a.m. to 1:15 p.m. at the WTC in New
Orleans. Call the LITC at (504) 568-8222.
June 9 -Annual Membership Meeting of the Foreign Relations Association
at the Intercontinental Hotel in New Orleans with Professor Anthony
Pereira at Tulane University speaking on "New Democracies: Emerging
or Submerging?" 6:30 p.m. cash bar, dinner at 7:00 p.m. Call (504)
523-2201.
June 9-23 -Muscadet Festival in New Orleans. Call the French-American
Chamber at (504) 561-0070.
June 16 -Luncheon Seminar on Central America featuring the U.S.
Commercial Attaches in Guatemala and Panama. Call the World Trade Center
in New Orleans at (504) 529-1601, ext. 254.
June 19 -Import/Export Strategies and Market Research seminar from 3:45
p.m. to 8:15 p.m. at the WTC in New Orleans. Call the LITC at (504)
568-8222.
June 21 -Pricing, Terms, Quotations, and Customs Entry Procedures
seminar from 3:45 p.m. to 8:15 p.m. at the WTC in New Orleans. Call
568-8222.
June 28 -International Banking, Financing, Transportation, and
Documentation seminar from 3:45 p.m. to 8:15 p.m. at the WTC in New
Orleans. Call the LITC at (504) 568-8222.
June 29 -Global Trade on the Internet seminar from 4:00 p.m. to 8:30
p.m. at the WTC in New Orleans. Call the LITC at (504) 568-8222.
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Sandra Gerley, International Trade Administration (ITA) Mid-Western
Regional Director, has announced the selection of Donald C. van de Werken
as the Director of the New Orleans U.S. Export Assistance Center (USEAC)
in New Orleans. Mr. van de Werken previously worked as an Outreach
Specialist for the Office of the Administrator of the Foreign Agricultural
Service (FAS), based in Atlanta. His main responsibility was to help
increase awareness of export opportunities for U.S. agriculture, food,
fiber, and forestry industries, particularly small-and-medium-sized
enterprises.
From 1993 to 1998, he served in the Dairy, Livestock and Poultry
Division (DLP) of FAS as an agricultural marketing specialist, with
oversight responsibility for four commodity groups that receive USDA
funding under the Foreign Market Development and Market Access Programs.
His duties at DLP included overseeing and assisting with the international
promotional activities of the U.S. Meat Export Federation, the U.S.
Livestock Genetics Export Inc., the U.S. Beef Breeds Council, and the U.S.
Dairy Export Council. He has an extensive background in international
market research for livestock products through his previous work with FAS
as an international livestock analyst.
Prior to FAS, Mr. van de Werken worked for the USDA-Farmers Home
Administration in Texas as an Assistant County Supervisor. He has a
Bachelor’s degree in Business Management and a Master’s in
Agricultural Economics, both from Texas A & M University. Mr. van de
Werkin is a first-generation American with Dutch-Indonesian heritage. Born
in Elgin, Illinois, he spent most of his childhood in Texas. Mr. van de
Werken can be reached at the USEAC in New Orleans at (504) 589-6546.
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Jean M. Collins, Trade Reference Assistant and Computer Systems
Administrator of the New Orleans U.S. Export Assistance Center in New
Orleans, received the U.S. Department of Commerce 1999 Bronze Honor Award
Medal for Outstanding ITA Technical, Secretarial or Clerical Employee last
month in Washington, D.C. Ms. Collins was recognized for her superb
organizational, training, and technical skills in support of the Center,
as well as her back-up support for the Export Assistance Centers in
Shreveport, Louisiana, and Raymond, Mississippi. The award is the highest
honorary award given by Commerce’s Under Secretary for outstanding
performance and achievement of major significance to the International
Trade Administration.
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Now even a small or medium-sized business can establish a global
website presence and become part of an active and respected on-line
international trading community through the World Trade Centers
Association’s (WTCA) network of more than 300 WTCs and 500,000
affiliated businesses with WTCA On-Line Catalog.
The WTCA On-Line Catalog at www.wtca.org
is an Internet-based collection of catalogs showcasing the products and
services of WTC member companies. By simply completing an easy on-line
form, WTC members can create a professional website catalog in minutes.
And if your company already has its own website, hyperlinking it to WTCA
On-Line Catalog provides an additional Internet venue to drive even more
traffic. What's more, with the WTCA On-Line Catalog, you can find out
complete contact information on any prospect that views your site and also
access vital marketing statistics.
Best of all, website creation and maintenance are available to WTC
members for no fee, making participating in the WTCA On-Line Catalog more
cost-effective than developing or maintaining your own website, or
launching an advertising or direct mail campaign. For details on WTC New
Orleans membership and the WTCA On-Line Catalog, call WTC Membership
Director Natalie Rideau at (504) 529-1601, ext. 226.
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The World Trade Center will commence its summer session of foreign
language classes the week of June 5. The classes are conducted by the
faculty of Alpha Tech Communications. The session will last seven weeks;
classes will meet once a week for 1-1/2 hours. The following languages
will be offered: Spanish, French, Italian, German, Russian, Japanese,
Chinese, Arabic, and English as a Second Language. Tuition is $95 for WTC
members and $190 for non-members. (Registration and materials cost $45.)
Classes are held at the WTC building, with free parking at the WTC garage.
Call Alpha Tech at (504) 454-6554.
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The Louisiana Tax Free Shopping Program has announced the appointment
of Lisa Ponce de Leon as the new Director of the program, effective May 1.
Ms. Ponce de Leon succeeds Ana Cherenek, who held the position since 1998.
Ms. Ponce de Leon, a native of New Orleans who grew up in Mexico City,
is a graduate of the University of New Orleans. She comes to Tax Free
Shopping from the MetroVision Partnership in New Orleans, where she served
as Director of International Business since 1995. Prior to MetroVision,
Ms. Ponce de Leon was Executive Director of Encuentro, an Inter-American
Business matchmaker and trade show held annually in New Orleans. Earlier
in her career, she served as Director of Special Events for the Louisiana
Chapter of the National Multiple Sclerosis Society, was a real estate
sales associate, and owned a boutique in the French Quarter in New
Orleans.
Louisiana Tax Free Shopping was established in 1989 and continues to be
the only program of its kind in the United States which refunds the sales
tax to international visitors who shop at any of the more than 1,000
participating stores throughout the state. In 1999, visitors from 125
countries around the world spent $32 million on retail purchases
statewide. The top five countries in spending under the Tax-Free Shopping
Program last year were Honduras, Mexico, Great Britain, Germany, and
France.
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The United Nations Association of Greater New Orleans (UNA) is
organizing "Spring Cleaning," on June 10 at the Louise Day Care
Center in New Orleans. The center provides day care for 85 children, ages
2-5. UNA volunteers will be sprucing up the center with paint, plants,
pictures, and other decorations. You are invited to donate either time or
supplies. Call Tiffany Roberts at (504) 269-5836 or Graciela Seng at (504)
523-3755, ext. 2621.
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The U.S. Chamber of Commerce is selling its new Spring 2000 Directory
of American Chamber’s of Commerce Abroad, which lists the full contact
information for all of the 85 AmChams located overseas. The price is $15
per copy. For details, call (202) 463-5460.
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The U.S. Department of Commerce has a free website that matches
exporters with financial institutions. After filling out a site form, the
computer searches the Commerce database for a financial company that
matches the exporter’s needs. Log on to www.ita.doc.gov/td/efm and visit
the Export Finance Matchmaker's web site.
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The United Nations Association of Greater New Orleans (UNA) will meet
next on Thursday, May 11 at 5:30 p.m. at the World Trade Center. In
addition to the election of officers for the year ahead and reports from
the standing committees, Ms. Mayra Grimaldi, who serves on the UNA Board
of Directors, will be recognized for her outstanding service to the
international community in Louisiana. Ms. Grimaldi will be ending her term
as Consul General of Nicaragua and Dean of the Consular Corps on May 15. A
reception in her honor will follow the meeting. For information on UNA
memberships, call Dr. Dwight Ramsey, President at (504) 488-0856.
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Log on the Internet at www.seccionamarilla.com.mx to view the Mexican
Yellow Pages. Searches can be done in Spanish or English.
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President Clinton submitted legislation to Congress on March 8 to
extend Permanent Normal Trade Relations (PNTR) to China. This would amend
the 1974 Trade Act (PL93-618) by excluding China from Title IV, which
requires the U.S. to conduct an annual review of its trade status. The
U.S. and China completed bilateral negotiations on China’s accession to
the World Trade Organization (WTO) in November of 1999, but China must
still complete agreements with its other key trading partners and finish
negotiating the terms of its accession that will face multilateral
approval within the WTO.
In its agreement with the U.S., China pledges to make significant
market openings in almost every sector of its economy while the U.S. is
required only to make permanent the status (formerly known as Most Favored
Nation, or MFN) it has accorded China every year since 1980. The agreement
would increase access into China for U.S. goods by reducing tariffs,
eliminating trade-distorting export subsidies on agricultural products,
doing away with barriers on distribution, and eliminating quotas on
imports from the U.S.
In 1999, Louisiana shipped $704 million in exports to China, almost
half of which was in agricultural products. As a part of its agreement
with the U.S., China will lower tariffs on many important Louisiana and
other U.S. exports. Its elimination of agricultural export subsidies will
make many Louisiana products (and others exported from Louisiana ports)
more competitive in markets outside of China. Louisiana’s maritime
industry stands to benefit greatly from the projected expansion in trade
between the U.S. and China.
Failure by the U.S. to extend PNTR to China would not block its entry
into the WTO. It would, however, allow China to exclude the U.S. from the
benefits it will provide to other members and deprive the U.S. of the
right to utilize WTO dispute settlement procedures to enforce China’s
concessions. The Clinton administration hopes to bring PNTR to a vote in
Congress shortly, before the national political season shifts into high
gear. The vote looks close, and various domestic groups are organizing
strong opposition.
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The International Monetary Fund (IMF) released an economic outlook
report on April 12 stating that the world economy regained its footing in
1999 and forecasting growth this year at the fastest pace in more than a
decade. The IMF revised its earlier estimate for the increase in economic
output in 1999 to 3.3%, up sharply from 2.5% in 1998 during the global
financial crisis. The IMF also predicted that global output will expand by
4.2% this year and continue growing at 3.9% in 2001.
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A compromise bill that would ease access to the U.S. market for
Caribbean and African goods (HR 434) passed the U.S. House on May 5 by a
vote of 309-110 after emerging from a House-Senate ConferenceCommittee.
The measure is now awaiting a vote in the Senate, where it is also
expected to pass. It was originally comprised of two separate bills, the
African Growth and Opportunity Act and the Caribbean and Central American
Relief and Stabilization Act. The bill is intended to stimulate economic
growth in Africa and nurture the increasing number of fledgling
democracies there, while allowing countries in Central America and the
Caribbean to compete more strongly in a region that has been hurt by NAFTA.
The basics of a compromise House-Senate bill were agreed to on April
13. It would allow apparel from both regions (Africa and the Caribbean
Basin) made with U.S. fabrics or yarns into the U.S. free of duties and
quotas. The amount of apparel made from African components that could be
imported duty-free would be capped for eight years, initially at 1.5% of
total U.S. apparel and rising to about 3.5%. Apparel from the poorest
African nations made from fabrics manufactured outside the U.S. or
sub-Saharan Africa would be free of duties for four years. For Caribbean
nations, there would be no duties on the first 25 million square meters of
imported clothing made from regional fabrics, with the exception of
T-shirts, which could be imported free of duties until the volume of
imports reaches current levels.
Foreign Sales Corporation (FSCs)
The U.S. has offered to repeal a $4.1 billion-a-year tax break for
exporters as part of its efforts to comply with a World Trade Organization
(WTO) ruling that the provision violates global trading rules. Deputy
Treasury Secretary Stuart Eizenstat made the offer during meetings with
European Union officials in Brussels in early May. He said Congress could
vote by October to repeal the sections of the U.S. Internal Revenue Code
establishing special tax treatment for Foreign Sales Corporations (FSCs),
substituting them with one that complies with WTO regulations. A WTO panel
earlier this year ruled that the tax break, which provides an exemption on
export profits on U.S.-produced goods sold abroad through offshore units
of U.S. companies (FSCs), breached WTO rules barring such subsidies.
Of the proposals under consideration, one would eliminate the FSC and
replace it with an indirect tax on gross receipts coming from the sale of
goods and services, while the other would reform the FSC to allow for the
extension of tax breaks to income other than that generated by the sale of
exports.
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President Clinton signed legislation on November 29, 1999 that will
enable payment of U.S. arrears to the United Nations and other
international organizations. The full value of the package is $926
million, comprised of $819 million in cash payments and a $107 million
credit against amounts owed by the UN to the U.S. The payments will be
made in three stages, contingent upon completion of a separate set of
reforms by the UN to be enacted by the end of 2001.
For additional information on these or other international trade
issues, contact Lawrence Marino, WTC Manager of Government and
Transportation Affairs by phone at (504) 529-1601, ext. 262 or by e-mail
at wtc-info.wtc-no.org
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Louisiana’s worldwide exports declined by 6.5% to $17.2 billion in
1999, according to a report released by the World Trade Center of New
Orleans (WTC). While the state’s total exports reflected a downturn last
year compared to 1998, Louisiana shipments to the United States’ two
neighboring NAFTA partners, Mexico and Canada, each grew by more than 10%
in 1999, ranking those countries second and third, respectively, behind
Japan as the state’s largest export markets. The reduced level of total
exports from Louisiana in 1999 -- $1.2 billion less than in 1998 -- was
due mainly to lower export shipments of processed foods, agricultural
commodities, and paper products, especially to China, Japan, Spain,
Colombia, Brazil, and the U.K.
The WTC report for 1999, which covers the export of both Louisiana-made
products and goods produced in other states shipped abroad through
Louisiana’s ports, is generated by the Massachusetts Institute for
Social and Economic Research (MISER) and the U.S. Department of Commerce.
Japan continued to be Louisiana’s number one export destination in
1999, taking $2.2 billion of the state’s $17.2 billion of international
shipments, representing a 13% decrease in value of exports to Japan from
the prior year. Louisiana’s second-largest export market, Mexico, showed
an increase of 10.5% to $1.3 billion compared to 1998, and Louisiana’s
shipments to third-ranking Canada grew 11% in 1999 to $1.1 billion. Taiwan
was Louisiana’s fourth-largest market, posting a 15% increase to $791
million in 1999, while South Korea slipped one place to fifth with $754
million, a decline of 18% from 1998. China, which ranked third among
Louisiana’s export markets in 1998, dropped to seventh place in 1999
($703 million vs. $1,070 million in 1998, a year in which Louisiana’s
shipments to China reached record-high levels, especially those of
processed foods).
Of Louisiana’s top ten export destinations during 1999, four were
located in Asia (Japan, Taiwan, South Korea, and China), three were in the
Western Hemisphere (Canada, Mexico, and Venezuela), two were in Europe
(the Netherlands and Belgium), and one was in the Middle East (Egypt).
"With Louisiana’s top five export markets located in Asia and the
Americas, the economic growth expected in both those regions this year is
a promising sign for statewide exports," stated Lawrence Collins,
International Trade Director for the Louisiana Department of Economic
Development.
Louisiana’s number one worldwide export sector, agricultural
commodities, fell in total value in 1999 by 2.0% to $7.9 billion.
Chemicals and allied products were the state’s second largest export
category at $3.3 billion, an increase of 3.5% over 1998. Processed food
exports were third at $3 billion, a decline of 25% from 1998.
Traditionally ranking among the top ten exporting states, Louisiana
placed eleventh overall in 1999. For the U.S. as a whole, export shipments
increased over 1998 by almost 2% to $693 billion.
Trade reports that provide information on 33 product categories of
Louisiana exports to more than 200 countries worldwide are available by
calling the WTC at (504) 529-1601, ext. 262.
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The French-American Chamber of Commerce (FACC) and the Baton Rouge
Center for World Affairs are holding a luncheon at the Old State Capitol
in Baton Rouge on Friday, May 19. Mr. Pierre Lepetit, Senior Advisor for
Energy and Environment with the French Embassy, will make a presentation
on U.S.-Europe relations. Louisiana Lt. Gov. Kathleen Blanco will deliver
introductory remarks. Baton Rouge Mayor-President Tom Ed McHugh is the
guest of honor. The luncheon will be followed by a tour of the Pennington
Biomedical Research Center at Louisiana State University. Tickets are $35
for FACC/LA members and $40 for non-members. For details, call Valerie
Guillet at the French-American Chamber of Commerce at (504) 561-0070.
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The French-American Chamber of Commerce (FACC) and the Conseil
Interprofessionnel des Vins de Nantes (CIVN) will celebrate the 2nd Annual
Muscadet Wine Festival in New Orleans June 9-23. This year’s theme is
"Le Mariage du Muscadet." For two weeks 20 area restaurants will
promote the wine, offering a meal and Muscadet special to their clientele.
The public may sample these specials at a food and wine tasting on June
23, 7:00 p.m. - 10:00 p.m. at the Maison St. Charles Hotel. Guests will
vote for their favorite Muscadet and meal combination, celebrating their
"marriage" in traditional French fashion. Tickets are $35 per
person, and may be purchased through the FACC. For tickets and additional
information, call ValŽrie Guillet at the FACC at (504) 561-0070.
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The Louisiana International Trade
Bulletin is a monthly partnership publication of the:
Louisiana Department of Economic Development,
New Orleans U.S. Export Assistance Center, and
World Trade Center of New Orleans.
If you are not currently on our mailing list,
have a Louisiana mailing address, and would like to receive the monthly
Louisiana International Trade Bulletin, please send your request to:
Bulletin, World Trade Center, Suite 2900
2 Canal Street, New Orleans, LA 70130
Tel: (504) 529-1601; Fax: (504) 529-1691
Or, click here to fill out an on-line subscription
form for postal delivery.
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