Ix FOREIGN TRADE ZONES agents, as the Free Port Co. does not undertake forwarding business, but merely executes orders given by the shippers to their representa- tives or forwarding agents. The free port of Copenhagen has a covered floor area of nearly 200,000 square meters and two silo warehouses. There are also about 100 privately owned warehouses, built on leased land in the free port. The present volume of the transshipment trade of the free port of Copenhagen is approximately 100,000 metric tons per year. The statistics for 1926 show that approximately one-half of the estimated tonnage of the transit trade was made up of articles of non-Danish production, as follows: Grain and flour__.__.__. Forest products and manufactures. Groceries... « «coco cocecocmammae Fruits, vegetables, nuts, etc. - Automobiles_.._. - The above statement disregards the coal and fuel oil credited to free-port exports, as the statistics of these commodities include and probably consist wholly of fuel supplies of vessels which have bunkered in the free port during the year. A substantial part of the products used for home consumption, such as grain, foodstuffs, minerals, fuel, and fertilizers, reach Denmark through transshipment at Hamburg. The transshipment and consignment trade of the free port of Malmo, Sweden, has not yet reached notable proportions, due to the fact that the port is still in an early stage of development. When the economic conditions among the Baltic States and Russia become more stabilized, it may be expected that the free port will be made use of to a much greater extent as a transshipment and consignment center. Coffee is the most important commodity imported in the free port of Stockholm. The majority of Sweden’s importation of this com- modity passes through the port. Among other important commod- ities in the transit trade are American automobiles, fresh fruits from southern Europe and the United States, and grain from North and South America. The free port caters chiefly to the import trade. The foreign transshipment trade is of less importance, being confined to shipments to Finland and the Baltic Republics during the winter. The consignment and transshipment trade at the free port of Gothenburg can not be said as yet to have reached any considerable extent, due to the fact that the free port is still in rather an early state of development. However, the transshipment trade is growing at a rapid pace. At the free port of Danzig it is the custom of the various importers to stock goods in the warehouses pending sale. If such sale is not effected, these goods are sometimes returned to the sender and no customs manipulation is necessary. There are no statistics available to show the extent of this business. Tons v mee -- 29,000 8, 000 5, 500 4, 500 3. 000