Gov. Ted Kulongoski will lead a small delegation late this month
      on 
a trade mission to Israel, where he will meet
      with clean tech companies, venture capitalists and visit an Intel
      facility slated for expansion.
       
       By the time the governor leaves for the eight-day trip on Oct.
      25, he'll have about three months remaining in office. So the trip
      will be one of his last opportunities for pushing economic
      initiatives his administration has championed.
       
      "I've always recognized that there was a connection between Israel
      and Oregon, an economic tie," Kulongoski said in an interview
      Tuesday.
       
      "They are as far ahead as any country in the world on renewable
      energy," he said. "It's a country we can partner with very easily
      on these things that we are trying to make part of our economic
      structure."
       
      Details of the itinerary are still being set, but the trip will
      include a visit to Intel's state-of-the-art semiconductor factory
      in the southern city of Kiryat Gat. Intel brings employees to
      Oregon from that facility to train them on new manufacturing
      technology.
       
      
The Kiryat Gat factory is slated for a $2.75 billion
        expansion, Israel announced this week, financed in part
      by a $200 million government grant. Intel is in the process of
      expanding its manufacturing capacity, and 
Oregon chip
        industry insiders say an even larger project is on the drawing
        board here.
       
      The governor's office said he will fly coach, as he usually does
      on trade missions. The office said it's budgeting $5,000 per
      person on the trip, which will also include two representatives
      from the Oregon Business Development Department and one or two
      members of the governor's staff.
       
      The Port of Portland will also send a delegation, led by Director
      Bill Wyatt and Diana Daggett, a Port commissioner and Intel
      corporate affairs director.
       
      Oregon's exports to Israel totaled $107 million last year, 21st
      among the state's biggest trading partners. By comparison, the
      state's top export destination -- 
China -- purchased $3
        billion in Oregon goods last year.
       
      And yet this is the governor's second trade mission to Israel in a
      little more than two years.
       
      "Most people wouldn't think of Israel as a major trading partner,
      but in fact there is a very strong commercial connection," Wyatt
      said. "It just doesn't show up in the statistics."
       
      Israel is one of the top five destinations for commercial
      travelers on Northwest Airlines' nonstop flight from Portland to
      Amsterdam, according to Wyatt. That's driven in part by people
      traveling between Intel's facilities in Oregon and Israel.
       
      On this trip, Wyatt said he will ask how to improve travel
      connections between Oregon and Israel and inquire about hang-ups
      current travelers experience.
       
      "When you travel with the governor on a trip like this you just
      gain so much more access to people who have these kinds of
      questions or answers to those questions," he said.
       
      Israel has been in the headlines this year over its raid of a
      Turkish relief ship headed for Gaza and more recently for troubled
      Palestinian peace talks brokered by the U.S.
       
      Mideast politics crossed his mind as he planned this trip,
      Kulongoski said, but he said he believes in Israeli democracy and
      sees an economic opportunity for Oregon.
       
      This will actually be Kulongoski's fourth trip to Israel. While he
      was attorney general, he spent three weeks there to observe a war
      crimes trial of suspected Nazi concentration camp guard John
      Demjanjuk. Kulongoski also visited Israel on a two-week vacation.
       
      "I've always been taken by it," he said. "I'm a student of
      history."