The Three Seas Case, Made in Miami

Three Seas Business Council  ·  Miami, March 2026

On 5–6 March 2026, TSBC took part in the 60 Million Congress — a global gathering of Polish and Polish-descended business leaders, investors, and public figures. The message we brought: the Three Seas region is one of Europe’s most compelling investment stories, and the time to act is now.

March 5–6, 2026The Elser Hotel, Miami60 Million Congress

The event

60 million reasons to pay attention

The name says it all. The 60 Million Congress draws its title from the estimated 60 million Poles and people of Polish descent living around the world — a global community with significant economic weight, entrepreneurial energy, and a growing interest in investing back into the region they or their families came from.

The Global Business Network series, of which this Congress is part, brings together leading figures from business, politics, and civil society connected to Poland and the Polish diaspora. Miami 2026 was a particularly well-timed edition: the Three Seas region is moving from political framework to investment reality, and American-based Polish capital is one of the natural partners for that shift.


TSBC on stage

Two panels, two angles on the same argument

TSBC was represented by two speakers — each addressing a different dimension of the region’s opportunity.

The Three Seas Region: Strategic Significance and Economic Potential

Beata Daszyńska-Muzyczka · Founder & President, TSBC

Panel moderated by Arkadiusz Mularczyk, with Marcin Przydacz, Adam Bielan and Gediminas Vambulius. The case for the Three Seas as a destination for American and diaspora investors: geography, growth, and the infrastructure gap that creates opportunity.

VC, Investors & Startups — How to Build Global Success

Paweł Nierada · Senior Advisor & Co-founder, TSBC

Panel moderated by Mark Bain (AIUS Technologies), with Michał Olszacki (Radix Ventures), David DeBenedetti and Paweł Maj (Vestbee Angels). The financing architecture for scaling regional companies — from seed to global.

What was argued

Why the Three Seas, why now, why American capital

The Three Seas region — stretching from the Baltic to the Adriatic and the Black Sea — is growing at twice the pace of Western Europe. It sits on NATO’s eastern flank, anchoring European security. And it faces a well-defined infrastructure gap: energy, transport, digital — sectors where investment is not speculative but structurally necessary.

The argument made in Miami was precise: this is not a frontier market asking for patience. It is a region with proven growth, strong engineering talent, and a pipeline of projects that need capital at scale. The question is not whether to invest — it is how to structure the partnership.

„Rather than looking for competition within the European Union, we should be watching the sleeping dragon at the door.”
Beata Daszyńska-Muzyczka — on the geopolitical stakes of regional cooperation

On the venture and startup side, the panel addressed a structural challenge the region knows well: early-stage financing exists, but the growth stage — where companies need to scale across borders — remains underfunded. The regional potential is exceptional. The financing architecture needs to catch up.

Conversations that are just beginning

Miami was not a one-time appearance. The discussions that took place — with investors, diaspora business leaders, and decision-makers present at the Congress — opened connections that are worth building on. The interest in the Three Seas story from an American and Polish-American audience is real, and growing.

The Three Seas region has the fundamentals. It has the momentum. What it needs now is the right partners — and Miami was a step in finding them. This story is still developing.