World Politics

Australia to launch appeal to WTO over China's barley tariffs

Key Points
  • Australia will launch a formal appeal to the World Trade Organization (WTO) later on Wednesday seeking a review of China's decision to impose hefty tariffs on imports of Australian barley, Minister for Trade Simon Birmingham said.
  • Acknowledging the appeal take years to be resolved, Birmingham told reporters Australia would also request formal consultations with China regarding dumping and other duties on Australian barley amid an increasingly bitter trade and diplomatic row between the two countries.
  • Australia denies the allegations it subsidizes local barley production and Birmingham said it will seek formal intervention from the WTO.
A photo taken on Dec.14, 2020 shows a paddock of barley being harvested on a farm near Inverleigh, some 100 kilometers west of Melbourne.
WILLIAM WEST | AFP | Getty Images

Australia will launch a formal appeal to the World Trade Organization (WTO) later on Wednesday
seeking a review of China's decision to impose hefty tariffs on imports of Australian barley, Minister for Trade Simon Birmingham said.

Acknowledging the appeal take years to be resolved, Birmingham told reporters Australia would also request formal consultations with China regarding dumping and other duties on Australian barley amid an increasingly bitter trade and diplomatic row between the two countries.

As relations soured this year after Canberra proposed an independent investigation into the origins of the coronavirus pandemic, first reported in central China last year, Beijing in May imposed five years of anti-dumping and anti-subsidy duties totaling 80.5% on Australian barley — effectively stopping a billion-dollar trade in its tracks.

Australia denies the allegations it subsidizes local barley production and Birmingham said it will seek formal intervention from the WTO.

"Australia has an incredibly strong case to mount in relation to defending the integrity and proprietary of our grain growers and barley producers," Birmingham said.

The Chinese government embassy in Australia didn't immediately respond to an email requesting comment.

The WTO appeal threatens to further stoke bilateral tensions that have already seen China impose tariffs on a range of Australian commodities, with diplomatic communication limited.

But Australia's conservative government is under growing pressure from grain growers now forced to seek alternative markets — which often don't pay as much as China — for their products for the next five years while Beijing's tariffs are enforced.

About 70% of Australian exports of the grain typically go to China, Australian data show.

The effective block on sales to China also comes as Australian barley production is expected to hit nearly 12 million tonnes this crop year, after rain revived some of the biggest growing regions following years of drought.

Australia-China relations have hit 'rock bottom': Orient Capital Research
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Australia-China relations have hit 'rock bottom': Orient Capital Research