When a delegation from South Africa’s Garden Route District Municipality touched down in Tacoma last April, they weren’t here for tourism. They were here to talk trade — specifically, how two port-anchored communities on opposite sides of the globe can build supply chains, share skills, and move goods between them.
The April 23–28, 2026 exchange — part of a formal partnership between Tacoma Sister Cities International and the Garden Route District — is one of the clearest recent signals of how seriously Tacoma is beginning to use its 15 sister city relationships as genuine economic infrastructure rather than ceremonial diplomacy. And for Pierce County businesses paying attention, the implications are worth understanding.
From Handshakes to Deal Flow: What the Garden Route Visit Actually Covered
The Garden Route District Municipality spans South Africa’s Southern Cape, coordinating seven local municipalities and representing more than 630,000 residents. Its relationship with Tacoma traces back 28 years to a connection with the city of George — but in a move that quietly made international trade news, the Tacoma City Council formally elevated that relationship to a full district-wide partnership, substantially expanding the scope of what’s possible.
The April delegation got specific. According to the Garden Route District Municipality’s official release, discussions centered on three concrete areas:
The global ostrich industry. South Africa’s Garden Route — particularly the Klein Karoo region — is one of the world’s dominant ostrich product hubs, producing leather, feathers, and meat that move through international luxury and food supply chains. The delegation explored how the Port of Tacoma’s freight infrastructure could facilitate new export pathways for these high-value goods into Pacific Rim markets.
Port logistics and trade facilitation. Both communities are defined by their port identities. The delegation examined how improved coordination between their respective port operations could reduce friction in bilateral trade flows — a practical, operator-level conversation, not a ceremonial one.
Skills transfer and educational exchange. South Cape College and Africa Skills Village entered discussions about formal academic and artisanal exchange programs with Tacoma institutions, creating the kind of human-capital connections that tend to precede sustained economic relationships.
Community reporting from South Africa’s The Gremlin described the visit’s tone as focused on “collective approaches to boost economic growth, skills transfer and sustainable tourism” — language that sounds like an investment thesis, not a cultural exchange brochure.
WTC Tacoma: The Infrastructure Behind the Relationships
None of this happens without an institutional engine. The World Trade Center Tacoma has quietly built itself into the largest membership-based trade organization in the Pacific Northwest, and by some measures the fastest-growing World Trade Center in North America over the past several years.
WTC Tacoma’s core function is converting diplomatic relationships into actual commerce. It provides trade research, business matchmaking between local firms and international partners, import/export consulting, and manages both inbound and outbound trade missions. Critically, it also runs Tacoma’s foreign direct investment attraction programs — the effort to bring capital from abroad into Pierce County projects.
The most visible example of that FDI work is the Tacoma-Fuzhou Trade Initiative, which grew out of Tacoma’s sister city relationship with Fuzhou, China — a city Xi Jinping led as Party Secretary when the original bond was formed in 1994. In 2019, Tacoma and Fuzhou simultaneously opened trade offices in each other’s cities, with the City and Port of Tacoma contributing $100,000 to fund the Fuzhou office. China remains the single largest trading partner of the Port of Tacoma.
The 2026 WTC Globe Awards — scheduled for September 24 at Port of Tacoma Headquarters — will mark another year of recognizing the businesses and individuals driving this work. It’s worth attending if you want to understand who’s actually moving the needle on international trade in Pierce County.
The Port Numbers That Explain the Strategy
Tacoma’s sister city diplomacy doesn’t happen in a vacuum. It’s backed by real freight infrastructure that gives international partners a reason to engage seriously.
The Northwest Seaport Alliance — which combines the ports of Tacoma and Seattle — handled nearly $76 billion in waterborne trade with 176 trading partners globally in 2024. Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan all rank among the top five trading partners. The port complex handles approximately 1.8 to 2 million TEUs of container throughput annually.
In 2026, the story is mixed but mostly positive: NWSA breakbulk cargo volumes are up 24 percent year-over-year through April, driven by project cargo and heavy lift freight. Container volumes dipped in April amid broader trans-Pacific trade disruptions, but the port’s long-term Pacific Rim positioning remains intact.
That infrastructure is the reason why a South African delegation talks seriously about using Tacoma as a Pacific access point. The port makes the pitch credible.
The APCC Expansion and the Cultural Backbone of Trade
Sustained trade relationships require cultural infrastructure, not just port capacity. In Tacoma, that infrastructure runs through the Asia Pacific Cultural Center, which has been working toward a significant expansion that would add a demonstration kitchen, cultural classrooms, an Asian Pacific Islander library, office and conference space, and a large exhibition hall.
Federal funding has advanced through the House to support that expansion — Congressman Derek Kilmer’s office confirmed the appropriations movement — giving the APCC the resources to serve as a genuine anchor for Tacoma’s AAPI business community and its international connections.
Tacoma is one of the most racially diverse cities in Washington State, with nearly 40 percent of residents identifying as Latino, African American, Asian and Pacific Islander, Multiracial, or Native American. That demographic reality is also an economic one: the region’s API-owned small businesses, workforce bilingualism, and cultural networks form a substrate that makes international business development more viable here than in many comparable mid-sized cities.
What This Means for Pierce County Operators
Here’s the practical read for local business owners and operators: Tacoma’s international infrastructure is more developed than most people realize, and it’s increasingly organized around generating actual deal flow rather than ribbon-cutting ceremonies.
The sister city program — through Tacoma Sister Cities International — can connect businesses to counterpart organizations in 15 cities across multiple continents. WTC Tacoma’s membership provides access to trade consulting and matchmaking that most small businesses couldn’t afford to replicate independently. The Economic Development Board at choosetacomapierce.org maintains a dedicated international business support function.
The April 2026 Garden Route visit is a useful model to study. It wasn’t an abstract diplomatic exchange — it was a structured conversation about specific products (ostrich goods), specific logistics (port connections), and specific human capital pathways (skills exchange programs). That’s what mature sister city relationships look like when they’re working. Pierce County’s international trade apparatus, at its best, operates the same way.
The WTC Globe Awards in September will be the next public moment to see who’s driving this ecosystem. Between now and then, the Garden Route partnership will either produce tangible agreements or fade into the archives of well-intentioned visits. Based on how deliberately both sides have framed this one, the early signals favor the former.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many sister cities does Tacoma have?
Tacoma currently maintains 15 official sister city relationships spanning Asia, Europe, Africa, Latin America, and the Pacific. Key partners include Fuzhou (China), Kitakyushu (Japan), Cheboksary (Russia), Cienfuegos (Cuba), and — most recently elevated — the Garden Route District Municipality in South Africa.
What does the World Trade Center Tacoma do?
The World Trade Center Tacoma (WTC Tacoma) is the largest membership-based trade organization in the Pacific Northwest. It provides trade research, business matchmaking, export/import consulting, and manages inbound and outbound trade missions. It also coordinates Tacoma’s foreign direct investment attraction programs, including the Tacoma-Fuzhou Trade Initiative with a sister office in Fuzhou, China.
What was the purpose of the April 2026 Garden Route delegation to Tacoma?
The Garden Route District Municipality delegation visited Tacoma April 23–28, 2026 to explore trade opportunities in the ostrich products industry, establish port logistics connections, and build skills exchange programs with local educational institutions. The visit built on the Tacoma City Council’s formal elevation of the city’s 28-year relationship with George, South Africa to a full district-wide partnership with the Garden Route municipality.
Why is the Port of Tacoma important for Pacific Rim trade?
The Port of Tacoma is one of the leading deep-water ports on the U.S. West Coast, handling over $25 billion in commerce annually as part of the Northwest Seaport Alliance. China, Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan rank among its top five trading partners. In 2026, NWSA breakbulk volumes are up 24 percent year-over-year, underscoring Tacoma’s growing role as a Pacific gateway for project cargo and specialized freight.
How can Pierce County businesses get involved in international trade through Tacoma?
Local businesses can engage through WTC Tacoma (wtcta.org), which offers trade consulting, matchmaking, and mission programming. The Economic Development Board for Tacoma-Pierce County (choosetacomapierce.org) also connects businesses to export resources and international investor networks. The annual WTC Globe Awards — scheduled for September 24, 2026 at Port of Tacoma HQ — is a key networking event for anyone engaged in the region’s international trade ecosystem.

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