Sunday, October 11, 2020

THANKSGIVING: Canada & The Netherlands Import Export Trade Report

I'm specifically meaning Atlantic Canada in this trade report but it's the whole place on the statistics.

People can read this to help plan our local economies and to show you where Canada's economic growth is at for new business opportunities that are now opening up with The Netherlands.

Right out of the gate these reports between Canada and The Netherlands are totally unorganized and I had to compile them myself, so I'll just say this rough so you get the idea.

Nova Scotia is the number one tourist destination in Canada...and eighth globally for international tourism...although the numbers change and the reports are unorganized on the internet.

Like, I tried to look up specific import / export trade items with specific financials and graphs but they didn't have or it wasn't in an easy format on google.

Atlantic Canada for one is the largest lobster exporter in the world, so I know the Netherlands probably gets our lobster's and they are a port city like Halifax.

According to the graph, Canada and The Netherlands have a pretty balanced trade relationship and put slightly more into their Country than we get back...however a lot of that is in services which is places like Brussels who has the World Court...we get those regulations back from the Netherlands to help us run Canada.

So what is the Netherlands?

The Netherlands
 

The answer...it's Amsterdam and Canada has legal cannabis like in Amsterdam so that is a large growth opportunity however I like to just keep our cannabis Canadian but obvously I'm not ruling out trade with Amsterdam.

So people know The Netherlands as Holland....which is also Belgium...that's where people get confused...

The official name of Holland / Belgium they are saying is The Netherlands now which includes Amsterdam. 

There are large opportunites for growth in this area between Canada and the Netherlands.

Their main imports are things like oil and gas which Canada is a large exporter of...and then the list falls off on the internet and you can't get specific details on items easily.

This also important to music....

The Netherlands is the largest populated area in the European Union...people are asking if the area is over crowded...

The answer is that this is probably because of Amsterdam with legal drugs like Canada.

Halifax

 

This is what I like and don't like about some regulations...if Atlantic Canada was The Netherlands Halifax would be the red light district with legal drugs and prostitution in Halifax only.

Like they say "Halifax Regional Municipality" instead of Halifax County now...but what they mean is that Halifax County now is just one City because it got so large the City replaced the County and it's all one place now...so it's still the County but it's in one city now.

Canada has legal cannabis everywhere and not just a zone...that's because there's no prostitution in it, I agree with the prostitution zone like in the Netherlands to keep it away from families and stuff then they would just have it in the zone...here that would be the Halifax Municipality area at the international harbour and airport like in Amsterdam / The Netherlands.

Hopefully, just Halifax in the future will be made one of these "adult areas" like in The Netherlands with extra stuff besides cannabis which is just legal outside.

Halifax being the number eight global tourist destination and number one in Canada with an international port and airport makes it a perfect spot for the "red light zone" for tourists like Amsterdam.

Here's where this connects to music....

The imports to The Netherlands also include high on the list Computers and electonics...that's for their music businesses there where they hold large festivals like Dynamo and Hellfest in the metal scene.

So the Netherlands is a largely populated area with huge well known Heavy Metal Festivals and imports music and computer equipment...so if you're smart in Canada you'll start exporting them music and computer equipment.

Their population is half of Canada in small area and is next to London, England.

So why isn't The Netherlands in the Commonwealth?

Well they have to keep that separate for many reasons and they can't have everything in one place so The Netherlands is separate and hosts the World Court for extraditions from the Commonwealth for more fair and unbiased trials in a separate region.

I'm trying to export them Thanksgiving from Nova Scotia so maybe they can start buying our turkeys with our lobsters since we have way more land for farms here to grow food for the Netherlands...who in return are also large vegetable exporters with Canada probably also buys.

Atlantic Canada the port of Halifax is obviously and exporter of lobsters to the Netherlands which is a large growth area of opportunity for business here since The Netherlands is so largely populated and is right next to London, England...which is also Halifax...Atlantic Canada exports around 100,000 tonnes of lobster per year at about $30 to $50 a lobster...which amounts to a pretty tidy sum of money...which should be expanded into the Netherlands for expanding lobster markets from Nova Scotia and we should sell them music equipment and computers for their expanding Heavy Metal Festivals from Canada...which are are already the top heavy metal festivals in the world.

So that is just a snapshot for Atlantic Canada and the rest of Canada for expanding our economy into the growing Netherlands, where Canadians can start new businesses in areas that The Netherlands is looking to import....oil, gas, computers etc. and lobsters.

Then in return Halifax gets designated a red light district by the airport and seaport like in The Netherlands and then we can get prostitutes from Amsterdam for the Halifax Regional Municipality area in one zone only like in The Netherlands and also expand into music which is what I am doing.

Plus Halifax is the Cannabis Capital of Canada with the number one usage rate like Amsterdam in The Netherlands which is their Capital like Halifax is in Atlantic Canada.

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