用户名/邮箱
登录密码
验证码
看不清?换一张
您好,欢迎访问! [ 登录 | 注册 ]
您的位置:首页 - 最新资讯
As Relations Thaw, China Lifts Tariffs on Australian Wine
2024-03-28 00:00:00.0     纽约时报-亚洲新闻     原网页

       

       Advertisement

       SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

       Supported by

       SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

       As Relations Thaw, China Lifts Tariffs on Australian Wine

       Despite its thirst for Australian wine, China had taxed the imports in 2020 over a dispute about Covid-19.

       Share full article

       Read in app

       A vineyard in Australia last year. The tariffs have devastated the country’s export market for wine.Credit...Adam Ferguson for The New York Times

       By Natasha Frost

       Reporting from Melbourne, Australia

       March 28, 2024Updated 3:51 a.m. ET

       Get it sent to your inbox.

       In a sign of easing tensions between Australia and China, China said Thursday it will lift the tariffs it placed on Australian wine more than three years ago.

       The tariffs, which were first imposed in 2020 amid a nasty diplomatic spat between Australia and China, had all but vaporized the country’s biggest overseas market, worth 1.2 billion Australian dollars or around $800 million at its peak. Australian winemakers faced desperate hardship and were stuck with a surfeit of big-bodied red wines.

       The decision to lift the tariffs was announced by China’s Ministry of Commerce.

       In a statement, Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said he welcomed the decision, and that the outcome came “at a critical time for the Australian wine industry.” He added: “We will continue to press for all remaining trade impediments affecting Australian exports to be removed.”

       As of last August, Australia had the equivalent of 859 Olympic swimming pools of wine in storage, according to a report from Rabo Bank. “That’s going to take some time to be depleted,” said Lee McLean, the chief executive of Australian Grape & Wine Inc. “And China is not going to solve that on its own.”

       Advertisement

       SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

       The price of red grapes has barely covered their production costs, prompting some growers to simply let them wither on the vine, while others accepted contracts well below the cost of production, Mr. McLean said.

       More on Australia Gender Discrimination?: An artwork at the Museum of New and Old Art in Hobart, Tasmania, is accessible to “any and all ladies,” according to the institution’s website — and precisely zero men. Does it break discrimination laws? Looking for Chinese Spies: Australia passed foreign interference laws in 2018 amid rising concerns over covert Chinese government meddling in Western democracies. The first case tried under the laws has raised questions about the breadth of the regulations. Snakes Everywhere: Business is good for snake catchers in Australia, as the period of brumation, a sort of hibernation for reptiles, shrinks as a result of the warming earth. Embracing an Indigenous Worldview: Jefa Greenaway, an Indigenous architect in Melbourne, is a leading proponent of a movement in design that calls for collaboration with Indigenous communities.

       The development comes after months of moves toward rapprochement between the two nations, starting with a change in the Australian government. That has led to meetings between foreign ministers, the release in October of a detained Australian journalist and, in November, the first visit by an Australian premier to Beijing since 2016.

       Subscribe to The Times to read as many articles as you like.

       Natasha Frost writes The Times’s weekday newsletter The Europe Morning Briefing and reports on Australia, New Zealand and the Pacific. She is based in Melbourne, Australia. More about Natasha Frost

       Share full article

       Read in app

       Advertisement

       SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

       


标签:综合
关键词: Natasha     Australian wine     China     Australia last year     AdvertisementSKIP ADVERTISEMENT     Melbourne     tariffs    
滚动新闻