Australia has urged China to abolish all remaining trade restrictions after Beijing lifted tariffs on its barley imports, pointing to signs of normalization in bilateral ties.
Canberra is expecting its largest trading partner to next drop tariffs on Australian wine imports that were introduced in March 2021. At the peak of diplomatic tensions in 2020 and 2021, Beijing slapped import tariffs on several Australian exports from wine and red meat to lobsters and timber.
“We want all of the impediments removed, that currently affect our trading relationship with China,” Trade Minister Don Farrell told CNBC Monday.
“We always saw the barley application and the suspension of the barley application before the [World Trade Organisation] as a template for dealing with the wine issue,” he said. “So I think now’s the opportunity to have some further talks with the Chinese government.”
A decision on wine tariffs is “not very far away,” according to Farrell. “And of course, we’re extremely confident that the 220% tariffs that were applied to Australian wine will be removed.”
In April, Australia agreed to “temporarily suspend” its World Trade Organization complaint against China for its 2020 decision to impose 80.5% duties on Australian barley trade that was once worth about 1.5 billion Australian dollars ($988.1 million).
It paved the way for Beijing to expediate its review of the tariff decision.
Last Friday, the Chinese Commerce Ministry announced it was dropping all anti-dumping and countervailing duties on Australian barley starting Saturday — more than three years after they were imposed. The ministry cited “changes in the Chinese market” but did not further explain.
On Monday, Farrell said a “range of factors” were at play, with Chinese beer consumers and barley importers “very strongly in favor” of reintroducing Australian barley.
The move underscored thawing tensions between Australia and China, following the first meeting between China’s President Xi Jinping and Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese on the sidelines of the Group of 20 leaders’ summit in Bali in November.
Since then, Australia’s foreign minister Penny Wong and trade minister Farrell have made multiple visits to Beijing and have had direct meetings with their direct counterparts.