Foreign Consulates in Dusseldorf
Germany - Cologne - Dusseldorf - Frankfurt - Munich - Stuttgart - Hamburg - Berlin
In today’s world there is an immense importance of maintaining a good and healthy relationship with other nations. A nation has to have good and diplomatic relationship with other nations especially in terms of political and economic factors. Nowadays certain representatives from a country are sent to a foreign country where he stays and maintains healthy relations with the head of that nation. He is called a consulate general and his residence or official premise is called a consulate. There are foreign consulates in Dusseldorf as well.
Dusseldorf the fair and elegant city of Germany lies in the Rhineland province. Dusseldorf is also the richest city in Germany and is both the financial and fashion capital of the land. As has been told earlier, there are Foreign Consulates in Dusseldorf to maintain economic and peaceful relationship with the nations that have their consulates in this swanky, modern and sophisticated German city.
The countries that have their consulates in Dusseldorf include names like Japan, Sweden, Poland, Netherlands and United States of America. These nations seek to have peaceful and diplomatic relationships with Germany. They also have their consulates in other cities of Germany.
Japan or ‘the land of the rising sun’ has its consulate in Dusseldorf. Addressed as Immermannstr 45, 40210 Dusseldorf, c/o Deutsch-Japanisches Center Bundesrepublik Deutschland, is also known as ‘small Tokyo’ due to the large number of Japanese people living there. The local Japanese municipality is the third largest in Europe. Dusseldorf stands after the economic criteria between Japan and Germany. Sweden also has its foreign consulates in Dusseldorf along with Poland and Netherlands.
The United States of America has its foreign consulate in Dusseldorf as well. For American companies, the German market is an attractive trade and commerce sector and is the largest in all of Europe. The U.S. Commercial Service, The U.S. Office of Defense and the U.S. Agricultural Office work to promote business with Germany along with maintaining a healthy political relationship.