Farms.com Home   News

USDA Accepting Applications for East Africa Trade Mission

The U.S. Department of Agriculture is accepting applications from U.S. exporters for a trade mission to Nairobi, Kenya, and Zanzibar, Tanzania, Oct. 31-Nov. 4. The mission will offer U.S. agribusinesses the opportunity to unlock new opportunities in East and Central Africa, where strong economic growth is driving demand for imported food and farm products. 

Kenya is the economic, financial and transport hub for East and Central Africa. While in Nairobi, trade mission delegates will meet potential customers from across Sub-Saharan Africa. They’ll then head to Zanzibar, in the Indian Ocean off the coast of Tanzania, which is a historic trading hub with a thriving tourism sector.

“The Foreign Agricultural Service team looks forward to introducing U.S. exporters to the many business opportunities that exist in East and Central Africa,” said FAS Administrator Daniel Whitley. “Our staff and other experts from the region will provide in-depth market briefings, and we’ll also arrange targeted business meetings, site visits and other networking opportunities with potential importers, processors, distributors and local officials.

“Increasing trade and investment between the United States and Africa is a key priority for the Biden-Harris Administration, as evidenced by the launch last month of the U.S.-Kenya Strategic Trade and Investment Partnership. Through this trade mission, FAS is proud to support that initiative, as well as the U.S. government's Prosper Africa initiative, which aims to increase bilateral commerce and investment between the United States and the African continent,” Whitley said.

Source : usda.gov

Trending Video

Houston, we have a problem with Canola + Screwworm in U S Cattle!

Video: Houston, we have a problem with Canola + Screwworm in U S Cattle!


A wet weather forecast for the Canadian Prairies this weekend into next week could result in flooded just planted acres plus unseeded canola acres!
New screwworm detected in Texas could devastate the tight U.S. cattle herd.
U.S. $ Index breaking above $100 while the CDN $ breaking below 72 cents.
Bitcoin once a rising star is back to testing support at 60,000 and the 200-DMA at 61.989.
Broadcom revenue disappointment set off a rotation out of tech stocks ruining the AI party.
Looks like tough times for negotiating CUSMA as the deadline for July 1 will come and go.
Short-term weather forecast remains non-threatening with a warm/wet forecast but long-term looks hot/dry for July/August/Sept for U.S. corn belt.
+ CFTC.