Australia trade minister seeks to mend ties on visit to China
Australia's Trade and Tourism Minister Don Farrell appears to be making progress in restoring a nearly decade-long rift in relations with China during a visit to Beijing
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Your support makes all the difference.Australiaās Trade and Tourism Minister Don Farrell appears to be making progress in restoring a nearly decade-long rift in relations with China during a visit to Beijing.
Farrell was holding meetings and visiting businesses on Friday in a sign that relations were getting back on track.
Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese speaking in Sydney on Friday said the sides needed to ādevelop understanding and dialogue and Iāve said weāll co-operate with China where we can, weāll disagree where we must and weāll engage in a national interest.ā
China is Australiaās biggest trading partner, with two-way exchanges totaling $287 billion in 2022. China recently resumed imports of coal, cotton and copper from Australia, and Farrell has said on his visit he would push for a review of tariffs on Australian barley.
China blocked such exports in retaliation for moves targeting Beijingās alleged interference in Australian elections and political life and social organizations in the large Australian-Chinese community.
While trade ties seem to be improving, the sides remain far apart on political and security issues in the Asia-Pacific region.
On his arrival Thursday, Farrell said he hoped his visit would ācontinue that process of stabilizing our relationship and work through a successful pathway for the resolution of all of our outstanding trade differences.ā
āThe issues didnāt occur overnight and theyāre not going to be resolved overnight,ā Farrell said.
In April, Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong said bilateral relations were unlikely to return to the level of the early 2000s, when trade was separated from political and strategic priorities.
Since then, Australia has expanded security cooperation with the United States, Chinaās main rival for influence in the Asia-Pacific.
Beijing has strongly criticized Australiaās participation in the so-called AUKUS partnership, which links it with the United States and Britain to create an Australian fleet of eight submarines powered by U.S. nuclear technology, largely in response to Chinaās growing military assertiveness in the South China Sea, the South Pacific and the East China Sea.
Albanese will host U.S. President Joe Biden and the leaders of India and Japan ā countries with which China has active land and sea border disputes ā for a May 24 summit of leaders of the so-called Quad nations.
Australia has also blocked the sale of assets, including critical infrastructure, to Chinese companies on national security grounds in recent years.
Farrell also said he would meet with Chinese Commerce Minister Wang Wentao following a commitment in February to improve dialogue āat all levels as a pathway towards the full resumption of trade.ā