Friday, September 23, 2011

Dispatch from China: A mighty wind


We visited the Chinese manufacturing site for TPI Composites, a wind company headquartered in Scottsdale, Arizona.

The 40 meter blades are part of turbines that are rated at 1.5 MW.

A picture of me next to the stem provides some sense of the size.



The process to manufacture seems far more labor intensive than producing solar.

As with solar, the wind industry is heavily dependent on policies enacted all over the world to encourage production.

There is a general sense of nervousness in both sectors on that governmental commitment.

Dispatch from China: Chicks

People always figure out how to get around rules. The authorities in Shanghai put severe restrictions on the purchase of cats and dogs. But the demand for pets does not abate.

The solution?

An unregulated, thriving industry in pet chicks.


Dispatch from China: Slow-selling trinkets


I found it jarring when I visited the famous Buddhist temple in Shanghai (pictures of dignitaries such as Bill Clinton and Nancy Reagan adorn the wall) that there are jade religious symbols in the form of reverse swastikas.

Let's just say these formations are not hot selling trinkets for tourists.

Dispatch from China: Hairy Crabs


In the autumn in Shanghai the delicacy "hairy crabs" is readily consumed by the locals. Some have said that there is a need for American-trained managers and marketing experts. I do not know about the need for expat managers, but a more appealing description of some of the culinary delights would be appreciated.

Another popular offering is stinky tofu, which I believe is an affectionate way to refer to Shanghai, otherwise known as the city above the water.

Dispatch from China: $10 tea

Offended by the $5 cost for a tall Starbucks coffee I decided to go local and visit a famous tea house in Old Town Shanghai.

On my limited budget I passed on the $25 tea and ordered the cheapest item on the menu: a $10 glass pot of jasmine tea. Far more of an experience than a tea bag and boiling water I enjoyed the taste of the jasmine and other herbs in the tea. The tea also came with two bitty boiled eggs (which I did not eat) and three small squares of tofu and some sort of jelly nut (both of which I did consume).

The tea house is an elegant Chinese structure located in the densest part of Shanghai.

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

In support of free trade agreements

Yesterday, CEO Glenn Hamer sent the letter below to Arizona's Congressional Delegation, urging them to support the pending free trade agreements for Colombia, Panama and South Korea:


I am writing to urge you to make trade expansion a part of America's economic recovery by approving the pending trade agreements with South Korea, Colombia, and Panama. Your support for these job-creating, budget-neutral trade agreements is critical to America's workers, farmers, and companies.

The pending agreements will create tens of thousands of good American jobs and billions of dollars in new exports within a few short years. They will bolster important allies and confirm that America is not ready to cede its global leadership role in trade.

Fundamentally, these agreements are about making trade fair. The U.S. market is largely open to imports from around the world, but other countries continue to slap steep tariffs on our exports. These agreements will create a level playing field for American workers and farmers by eliminating the barriers U.S. exporters face in these three markets.

The agreements are particularly important for America's small and mid-sized companies. More than 280,000 U.S. companies are exporters, and 97% of them are small and medium-sized businesses. Together, they generate nearly one-third of all U.S. merchandise exports. These agreements are especially important for these smaller businesses, which are often shut out of foreign markets by high tariffs and other barriers. In Arizona alone, passage of the South Korean Free Trade Agreement would immediately open the doors to Korea’s $1 trillion economy to industries as diverse as agriculture and aircraft manufacturing.

Other nations are racing to complete their own trade deals with South Korea, Colombia, and Panama and create jobs on their own shores. In the first two weeks after the European Union-Korea Free Trade Agreement entered into force on July 1, European exports to Korea rose 16% while U.S. market share in Korea fell. Ninety percent of Korean tariffs on European imports have already been eliminated. The Canada-Colombia FTA will enter into force on August 15, leaving American businesses further behind in Colombia. A U.S. Chamber study has warned that the United States will lose more than 380,000 jobs and $40 billion in export sales if we delay further.

Now it the time to sharpen America's competitive advantages in the global marketplace by opening growing markets abroad. We urge you to lend your support for approval of the pending trade agreements with South Korea, Colombia, and Panama.

Sincerely,
Glenn Hamer
President & CEO




Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Arizona must set up health care exchange before Washington does

There’s a feeling among some in the state Legislature that putting the wheels in motion to establish a health care exchange, as called for by the Affordable Care Act, is somehow tantamount to endorsing the federal health care plan.
But as this Wall Street Journal editorial makes clear, “A posture of indifference is tempting, but it also means an all but certain death warrant for businesses and jobs when HHS eventually takes over.”

That’s because if the states don’t design a health care exchange on their own, then the federal government will do it for them.

Arizona can’t afford to have the Obama administration design a health care exchange from Washington, D.C. If we leave it to the feds, we risk be saddled with an exchange that is bad news for insurers, employers and the insured.

Arizona lawmakers and the health care community should work closely to design a health care exchange. An Arizona-designed health care exchange isn’t an endorsement a federal health care system; it’s recognition that we know better how to design a system for our state than Washington bureaucrats.