Stabroek News

Britain inks trade deal with Oklahoma, hails architects' licensing pact

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WASHINGTON, (Reuters) - British trade minister Nigel Huddleston signed a trade deal with the U.S. state of Oklahoma in Washington yesterday, while hailing another accord aimed at easing rules for UK architects working in the United States, the British embassy said.

The trade and economic memorandum of understand­ing with Oklahoma, signed by Huddleston at the embassy on Tuesday, is the fourth deal Britain has inked with a U.S. state as part of its push to expand trans-Atlantic trade despite the Biden administra­tion's refusal to negotiate a broader U.S.-UK pact.

Huddleston told Reuters he would meet with Deputy U.S. Trade Representa­tive Jayme White in Washington on Wednesday following discussion­s in London several weeks ago, and both sides continued to work on sectoral advances on the federal level.

"The free trade agreement is something that we're very keen to do as soon as the U.S. is ready," he said, underscori­ng Britain's interest in securing a larger-scale trade agreement with its largest trading partner.

Huddleston said he was also excited about a meeting on Wednesday with industry bodies to welcome a mutual

recognitio­n agreement brokered by Britain's Architects Registrati­on Board (ARB) that will simplify licensing for U.K. architects in over 40 U.S. states and at the federal level, and vice versa.

The deal could increase British services exports to the U.S. by $55 million per year, the ministry said.

The U.K.-Oklahoma pact will focus on boosting green trade, particular­ly in carbon capture, utilizatio­n and storage (CCUS), the ministry said. The deal is aimed at boosting the $215.6 million worth of goods British companies exported to Oklahoma in 2022 and generating more jobs for U.K. exporters.

 ?? ?? Nigel Huddleston
Nigel Huddleston

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