UK appoints new envoys to boost trade

27 May 22 2 min read

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson has appointed Maria Miller, John Whittingdale and John Hutton as new trade envoys to boost British business in Canada, South Korea and Turkey respectively. The new trade envoys will use their skills and experience to help UK businesses find new export and investment opportunities and promote UK trade in their allocated market.

Trade Envoys will build on the UK’s strong relations with key trading countries and work with the Department for International Trade’s global network to break down barriers to doing business, with total trade with Canada, the Republic of Korea and Turkey representing more than £54 billion of UK bilateral trade.

They will also promote the major opportunities green trade presents, including the creation of high-value jobs in the UK’s low-carbon economy and fuelling technological innovations that can be exported worldwide. The new appointments will extend the total number of trade envoys to 40 parliamentarians, covering 80 markets.

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UK international trade secretary Anne-Marie Trevelyan said: “These new trade envoys will play vital role in promoting Global Britain across the world, driving economic growth, and encouraging inward investment across the whole of the UK. From the UK’s accession to CPTPP, to our ambitions for an enhanced trade deal with South Korea and green trade agenda, there is huge potential for our new trade envoys to strengthen and grow our trading relationships between the UK and Canada, South Korea and Turkey.”

Trade envoys are parliamentarians appointed by the Prime Minister, drawn from both Houses and across the political spectrum.

Coming from a range of parliamentary backgrounds, the latest round of trade envoys will bring experience in the creative industries to their new roles, with both Maria Miller MP and John Whittingdale MP serving as previous secretaries of state for culture, media and sport.

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