Panama City, PANAMA, September 7 2010 - Georgia Tech
celebrates the inauguration ceremonies for the Georgia Tech-Panama
Logistics Innovation & Research Center today in Panama City,
PANAMA. The Center is the latest addition to the Georgia Tech
Supply Chain & Logistics Institute's logistics innovation
network of centers that focus on improving country level logistics
performance and increasing trade competitiveness.
Under an agreement negotiated with the Panama's National
Secretariat of Science, Technology and Innovation, the Georgia Tech
Supply Chain & Logistics Institute (SCL) has established and
will operate the Georgia Tech - Panama Logistics Innovation and
Research Center located in Panama City, Panama. The center has
three core thrusts -- applied research, education, and
competitiveness -- the center has two primary objectives 1) to
improve the logistics performance of Panama and 2) to establish
Panama as the trade hub of the Americas.
The center will establish education programs to increase human
capital in logistics with both formal degree programs and through
executive education, develop repositories and models to support
trade analytics, develop performance, integration and visibility
systems, facilitate stronger industry and infrastructure linkages
to improve Panama's competitiveness, provide leadership for the
development of a National Logistics Plan and National Logistics
Council, and provide innovation for logistics leading to new
logistics services and jobs.
Holding a vision of Panama as a logistics, communications,
education, research, and scientific tourism hub, Dr. Dario Solis,
former director of research and professor of mechanical and
electrical engineering at Universidad Tecnológica de
Panamá (UTP)/Technological University of Panama, has been
tapped as the center's managing director. Solis' many projects have
been strategically and synergistically oriented around efforts to
improve national infrastructure in transportation, to exploit
Panama's competitive advantage in telecommunications, and to
exercise its potential as an academic and research destination.
Dario Solis sees this as "a historical opportunity for the country
of Panama to develop its huge potential and to become a dominate
player in global trade." He believes this opportunity can generate
the resources necessary to improve the quality of life for all
Panamanians.
Paying close attention to the center's development is
Panamanian President Ricardo Martinelli and Georgia Tech President
G. P. "Bud" Peterson, both of whom will speak at the center's
opening program.
"Panama is a natural place for a trade hub," said Don Ratliff,
SCL executive director. It is well suited for free enterprise
growth with convenient air and sea transportation to the rest of
Latin America, has an outstanding financial district, and good
commercial development infrastructure.
And there's the canal, presently undergoing a
multi-billion-dollar expansion. When completed in 2014, the
waterway's capacity will be doubled and allow much bigger cargo
ships.
"Panama possessive an entrepreneurial spirit and a vision for
becoming the trade hub of the Americas," explains Jaymie Forrest,
SCL managing director. "Panama is poised for growth and development
in the required supporting logistics services."
A bilingual workforce is another plus, she added, along with
Panama's Colon Free Zone, a manufacturing, warehousing, and
re-export center that is the second-largest free-trade zone in the
world after Hong Kong.
But for all of Panama's hard assets, it lacks the high level
of integration necessary for trade-hub status. There is lack of
logistics services and supporting infrastructure such as public
warehousing, temperature controlled faculties, logistics technology
and the human capital experienced in supply chain operations. This
is a good opportunity for Georgia Tech to transfer knowledge and
apply value.
A value assessment to determine priorities in terms of
infrastructure improvement will be one of the center's top orders
of business. Ongoing improvements in logistics and the application
of relevant new technologies will ensure Panama's competitiveness
and build its stature as a trade hub.
Besides the immense economic advantages for Panama, a
world-class trade hub, there is also expected to provide new
opportunities for U.S. companies serving the logistics industry
and, perhaps most importantly, boost American exports.
"We manufacture more products by value than any other country
in the world," said Ratliff. "Many of these products are
exportable, but they're made by small- and medium-size enterprises
that simply don't have the capabilities to export to small
countries." Nor is it economically worthwhile for these companies
to develop and maintain individual trade relationships with
separate Latin American countries representing markets of just four
or five million people each, he added.
Typically, government-sponsored trade assistance is limited to
marketing and does not address logistics needs, transportation,
value- added product-support services and a host of key elements
that constitute the practical demands of international trade. The
Panama Center will be designed to meet these needs while providing,
in effect, a single point of access for these smaller
markets.
"If we're going to increase exports, which everyone believes
is a good idea, then we have to make it so that exporting to a
number of small countries is the same as exporting to one large
country," Ratliff explained.
As the largest research group in the world focused on supply
chain and logistics, SCL is the ideal partner for Panama's
trade-hub development. In recent years, SCL has leveraged its
traditional expertise to embrace issues surrounding international
trade. SCL founded The Logistics Institute (TLI) Asia-Pacific in
1998 at the request of the government to improve logistics
education. Based in Singapore, the center supports Singapore's
Asian trade hub with research, education, and consulting expertise
in global logistics and supply chain management. The learning's
from TLI-Asia Pacific offers a template for Panama in many
ways.
In Central America, SCL established a regional presence in
2009 with its Trade-Chain Innovation and Productivity Center, which
opened in Costa Rica to support increasing trade exports and
improving logistics performance while supporting some of the
countries strategic initiatives and planning investments. In
particular this center is focused on food exports and preparing for
the challenges of traceability and meeting the forthcoming US food
safety regulations.
The Panama center is expected to serve as a springboard for
logistics innovation, education and research throughout the
Americas, according to Forrest.
SCL's emerging leadership role in international trade also
dovetails with Georgia Tech's 25-year strategic plan, which calls
for leveraging Tech's global engagement as a means of securing a
larger international footprint. Logistics was identified as one of
four high- potential industry sectors warranting particular
emphasis in research and industry partnerships. The other sectors
are energy, healthcare, and transportation.
"What Panama wants to do and what we want to do are very
compatible,"
Ratliff said. "They have all the right pieces -- we'll help
bring them all together."
For more information, contact:
Barbara Christopher
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
404.385.3102
