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Australia ‘expects’ removal of China’s wine tariffs ‘shortly’
来源:The Drinks Business  2024-03-01 14:21 作者:

A trade minister has said that the Australian government “expects” the removal of tariffs on wine to occur once China concludes its review, which is due shortly.

The news from assistant trade and tourism minister Tim Ayres was made to Sky News at the 13th World Trade Organisation (WTO) ministerial conference in Abu Dhabi.

A delegation from Australia has attended the event, that also includes minister Don Farrell, which aims to review the functioning of the multilateral trading system, and also to “take action on the future work of the WTO”.

Ayres told the news outlet that the government hopes the relaxation will occur once the review concludes “shortly”, he said.


Absolutely focused

He said the government was “absolutely focused on a government on normalising the relationship” with China and it was keen on “removing the last remaining trade impediments for Australian exports in China.”

It comes as a number of previous tariffs and restrictions to trade have been removed, with, according to Ayres, AU$18bn-worth of “impediments” being removed out of a total AU$20billion originally imposed.

Ayres added: “There is an agreed approach that China is following where they are conducting a review very similar to the barley review.

“We expect that to conclude shortly and expect that China will follow through in the same way they did on barley.”


Review

It follows a review being announced by the Chinese government in December, after a number of meetings between the two countries in recent months as it seeks to resolve the long-running issue.

Its commerce ministry said in an official statement at the time that it would conduct a review into the anti-dumping and anti-subsidy tariffs that were put in place on Australian wine imports.

That announcement came after the news in November 2023 that China and Australia had reached an agreement to settle the World Trade Organisation dispute ahead of the tariffs expiration, which was due to occur in 2026.

The WTO dispute was raised by Australia in June 2021, and an arbitration panel assembled in March 2022.

As referenced by Ayres in the latest comments on the issue, China has already announced in a notice earlier this year that it would be scrapping 80.5% tariffs on Australian barley, which were originally imposed during the height of the two countries dispute in 2020.

China also lifted an unofficial ban on Australian coal in January 2o23.


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