U.S APPOINTS GE AFRICA CEO INTO
PRESIDENT OBAMA’S ADVISORY COUNCIL
Ugo Amadi
Correspondent, Energy,oil and gas
Jay Ireland, President and CEO of
General Electric Africa (GE Africa) has been named as one of the 15 private
sector leaders to President Obama’s Advisory Council on Doing Business in
Africa.
The new appointees represent small,
medium, and large companies from a variety of industry sectors. They will
provide expert counsel on strengthening U.S partnerships with African countries
and leverage opportunities for U.S. companies operating in Africa for the long
term.
The appointment is contained in a
letter addressed to the GE Africa Helmsman by the U.S Secretary of Commerce
Penny Pritzker.
She said the appointment became
necessary because Africa is home to six of the
10 fastest-growing economies in the world and that economic growth on the Continent will continue to drive demand for U.S.
exports, which will ultimately help create jobs at home and provide valuable
investment opportunities for U.S. businesses.
Responding
to the appointment, Jay Ireland said the appointment reaffirms not only GE’s
commitment to Africa but also the US government’s focus on strengthening its
relationship with the continent.
Earlier this
year, GE announced it would invest US$2 billion in facility development, skills
training and sustainability initiatives across Africa by 2018.
The announcement cements a century-long
involvement with African economies. “GE is uniquely positioned to increase
access, reliability and affordability of core infrastructure throughout the
continent”, says Jay Ireland.
GE first started operating in
Sub-Saharan Africa over 100 years ago. GE’s footprint in sub-Saharan Africa now
consists of over 1800 employees, revenues of over $2.5 billion dollars (2013)
and operations in 25 countries. GE’s main operations in Africa are in Nigeria,
South Africa, Angola, Mozambique, Ghana and Kenya where the Africa Headquarters
is located.
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