Title: Remembering Captain Mowat: MaineCanada Trade
1Remembering Captain Mowat Maine-Canada Trade
- Wade Merritt
- Maine International Trade Center
- November, 2000
2A long history of commerce
- Maine one of the Boston States
- Jurrien Aernouts
- Captain Mowats torch
- Supplies to Britain
- Shopping, shopping, shopping
3What does it look like now?
- Increasing volumes of trade since 1987, with
jumps in 1989 and 1995 (CFTA and NAFTA) - Increasing volumes of traffic through land border
crossings - Increased investment in Maine by Canadian
companies
4Trade
- Maine exports to Canada have increased 76.7
since 1993 (year before NAFTA) - Maine imports from Canada have increased 86.4
since 1993 - Canadian dollar has lost value since 1993
- Objections to NAFTA on both sides of the border
Source US Bureau of the Census (exports),
Statistics Canada (imports)
5Maine imports/exports from/to Canada
6Trade
- Export trade
- increases in commodities
- logs and primary wood products up 60
- blueberries, potatoes and primary ag products up
156.1 (7.5M to 19.1M) - fish, lobster, and primary fisheries products up
236.8 (37.9M to 127.4M) - increases in value-added and high-tech
- Motor vehicle suspension/steering parts up 267.6
(2.8M to 10.2M) - Telecommunications equipment up 58.9 (4.5M to
7.1M)
7Maine exports to Canada (selected SIC groups)
8Trade
- Imports from Canada
- reimports of processed commodities
- lumber from Québec
- processed blueberries from Nova Scotia
- processed lobster from New Brunswick
- other major import sectors
- gas and oil from New Brunswick
- electric power from Québec and New Brunswick
9Maine imports from Canada, selected SIC groups
10Maine exports to Canada as a percentage of GSP,
selected SIC groups
11Trucks and traffic
- Traffic through Maines primary commercial land
borders increasing - Calais-St. Stephen/Milltown ranks as the
eighth-busiest northern border crossing point - Houlton, Jackman, Madawaska also increasing
12Trucks and traffic
- Increased flow of US tourists to Canada because
of low Canadian dollar - Truck traffic to Canadian parent companies of
Maine subsidiaries - Flow of US-origin goods to Port of Halifax
Calais is primary land border crossing for it
13Increasing traffic through border crossings
14Investment in Maine
- Substantial, increasing over past 12 months
- Prexar (Aliant, New Brunswick)
- Bangor Hydro-Electric Co. (Emera, Nova Scotia)
- Stinson Seafood (Connors Bros., New Brunswick)
15Investment in Maine
- Irving Corporation
- J.D. Irving (pulplands), largest private
landholder in Maine - Irving Oil Corporation (convenience stores, home
heating oil) - Cavendish Farms (agriculture, potatoes)
- McCains Ltd.
- Major plants in Aroostook
16Investment in Maine
- Cherryfield Foods (Oxford Foods, NS)
- blueberries and cranberries
- Great Northern Paper (INEXCON, QC)
- Quadic Systems, Inc. (Tundra, ON)
- network software developer
- Sabean Cymbals
- Fraser Paper (Noranda, QC)
17Investment in Maine
- Substantial and increasing
- Concentrated in northern and eastern Maine
- 14,000 people in Maine working for Canadian
companies - Investments of 1.3 billion in property and
equipment
Employment and investment figures 1997, USDOC, BEA
18Other projects
- Wild Blueberry Association of North America
(WBANA) - joint marketing authority
- MDOT/NBDOT joint project on Calais-St. Stephen
border crossing - Governors and Premiers Joint Task Force on
Trade and Globalization
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