The Borneo Post

China lifts punitive tariffs on Australian wine

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China said yesterday it would lift punitive tariffs on Australian wine, as trade ties improve between the two countries after years of tension, with Canberra soon afterwards announcing it would drop its case against Beijing at the World Trade Organisati­on.

Duties were imposed on key Australian exports such as wine, barley and beef in 2020 after Canberra legislated against overseas influence, barred Huawei from 5G contracts and called for a probe into the origins of the Covid-19 pandemic.

But trade restrictio­ns have tapered since Australia’s centreleft government won election in 2022 and adopted a less confrontat­ional approach.

“In view of changes in the market situation of the relevant wines in China, it is no longer necessary to impose antidumpin­g duties and anti-subsidy duties on imports of the relevant wines originatin­g in Australia,” the Chinese commerce ministry said in a statement.

It added that the tariffs would be lifted today.

Tariffs and barriers have already been removed for commoditie­s including Australian coal, timber and barley.

The foreign ministers of both countries met this month in a sign tensions between the countries were improving.

“The re-entry of Australian bottled wine into the Chinese market will benefit both Australian producers and Chinese consumers,” Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, Foreign Minister Penny Wong and Trade minister Don Farrell said in a statement Thursday.

“The removal of duties means that Australia will discontinu­e its legal proceeding­s at the World Trade Organisati­on,” the politician­s said.

The statement added that Canberra would continue to lobby for the removal of remaining trade restrictio­ns, including on rock lobster and beef from some abattoirs.

Before the trade restrictio­ns were imposed, China was the largest destinatio­n for Australian bottled wine, accounting for 33 percent of export revenue in 2020, data from the Australian government shows.

The tariffs added up to 200 percent to the cost of Australian wine shipped to China, and effectivel­y halted trade worth US$1 billion a year.

While bilateral trade has made some recovery, the two countries remain at odds in strategic areas.

Last month, Australia said it had expressed its “outrage” after Beijing handed a suspended death sentence to Chinese-Australian dissident writer Yang Jun.

Australia and its allies are also seeking to parry China’s expanding reach in the South Pacific.

Canberra and Washington were jolted into action after Beijing signed a secretive security deal with Solomon Islands in 2022.

Australia also supports the United States and Asian countries in opposing Beijing’s sovereignt­y claims over the South China Sea.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? File photo shows the vines at a vineyard in Orange, Australia. China said it will lift punitive tariffs on Australian wine, as trade ties improve between the two countries after years of tension.
— AFP photo File photo shows the vines at a vineyard in Orange, Australia. China said it will lift punitive tariffs on Australian wine, as trade ties improve between the two countries after years of tension.

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