Japanese business leader: āFrom what I heard today, Iām kind of really convinced that maybe Maryland really is the best place for meā
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT.
Baltimore Sun: Gov. Wes Mooreās Sales Pitch in Tokyo is Turning a Few Heads
April 14, 2025
By Sam Janesch
- āThis is a great support,ā Nonaka said after attending a seminar with Moore and then speaking directly with both him and a deputy secretary for the Maryland Department of Commerce. āI was exploring the pathway to collaborate with Maryland ⦠They are taking care of not only the big companies, but a startup.ā
- Urabe Kenjiās corporation, Terumo, brought its medical technology manufacturing to Elkton in 1972 and now has nearly 1,300 employees at the location. Access to shipping at the Port of Baltimore and āgovernment incentivesā have been important to their growth, Kenji told business representatives.
- Christian Park, who asked Moore about the stateās support in advancing AI technology, said in an interview later that Mooreās answer ā that no state āis more eager and bullish on the future of what AI can bringā ā made him think twice about where he wants to take his planned relocation to the U.S.
- Park said heād been planning on moving to the tech scene in Silicon Valley or Houston as soon as this summer. Now, he said, the I-95 corridor of other startups and university-trained engineers between Washington, D.C., and Baltimore sounds like it could be a better option.
- āFrom what I heard today, Iām kind of really convinced that maybe Maryland really is the best place for me because ultimately we want to actually help to implement the solutions to government as well,ā Park said.
- āThe idea that Maryland will be the ācapital of quantum,āā he said, reiterating a favorite phrase, āis not just something thatās going to be really good for Marylandās balance sheet. Itās going to be really good when it comes to Marylandās larger contribution to the world.ā
- Masashi Hirose, CEO of a Japanese quantum company that recently launched in College Park, said it was āmore than a sloganā to say Maryland can be the world capital of quantum.
- āItās backed by coordinated action across government, academia and industry,ā said Hirose, of NanoQT. āThe ecosystem here is strong.ā