Normalizing China-Australia trade will take more than a political fix
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[May 02, 2023] By
Lewis Jackson and Muyu Xu
SYDNEY (Reuters) - More than three years since China first blocked a
range of Australian imports in a political dispute, restrictions are
easing, but reviving trade is proving more challenging than stopping it
in the first place.
A leaders meeting late last year set off a thaw in relations that saw
China relax restrictions on coal in January. But three months on, in
March, coal imports were still a third the 2016-2019 average.
Bureaucratic inertia meant word took weeks to filter to Chinese customs
officials, say traders, who had to visit eight government departments to
sort permits. In February, Australia was still not in the import license
computer system, say buyers.
The economics have also worsened. Australian miners have found new
customers in the interim and no longer offer concessional prices on
coking coal. Meanwhile, cheaper imports from Russia and Mongolia have
taken market share in China.
"These things take time, there is no magic wand to bring everything back
to normal, it will be a slow process over several months," said David
Olsson, chair of the Australia China Business Council.
Relations between China and Australia first soured in 2017 when Canberra
voiced concern over China's militarization of disputed islands in the
South China Sea and introduced laws criminalizing foreign interference
that were seen as aimed at Beijing.
After Australia called for an inquiry into the origins of COVID-19,
China responded with trade curbs in 2020 that throttled roughly A$17
billion of Australian imports from coal to timber.
The sluggish resumption of the coal trade suggests that reviving the
markets, logistics and expectations that greased trade in restricted
products could take months if not years.
Overall, however, Australian exports to China have surged despite the
curbs, rising to A$175 billion last year from A$149 billion in 2019 in
large part thanks to a booming iron ore trade too vital for China's
steel mills to risk disrupting.
The centre-left Labor government has made the restoration of
unrestricted trade a priority and the end of coal restrictions were an
early win. Foreign Minister Penny Wong travelled to Beijing in December
and the trade minister is expected within weeks to make the same trip.
Last month, the countries agreed to resolve within three months a World
Trade Organization dispute over Chinese barley tariffs. Australia's
trade minister is confident wine tariffs will follow.
One issue is a potential shortage of the Australian customs workers who
certify cargoes for export. Many left when the now restricted timber log
trade vanished overnight, said Frank Rudkiewicz, who is an "authorized
officer" (AO) certified by the Agriculture Department to inspect export
cargoes.
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Printed Chinese and Australian flags are
seen in this illustration, July 21, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration
"There was so much work guaranteed and then overnight it all fell
through," he said.
He was recently flown to Townsville from South Australia, roughly
1,800 kilometers north, to certify a consignment of grains because
no one else was available.
Reuters spoke with three customs workers in three states. All
mentioned shortages. One in Tasmania blamed "across-the-board"
problems on government approvals that took up to 15 months, from six
months previously.
The Department of Agriculture said in a statement it was not aware
of any significant changes to the number of AOs. The average time
from application to appointment is a minimum of 3-6 months and
unchanged since 2011, the department added.
A NEW POLITICAL CLIMATE
Officials and exporters say competition, a desire to maintain new
markets and wariness about the longevity of the diplomatic thaw will
make a quick return to pre-restriction trade levels unlikely.
"Chinese coal traders see little incentive now to sign long-term
contracts," said a Chinese-based coal trader, citing high inventory
and "the potential risk of the relationship turning sour again."
In Australia, several producers of wine, timber and meat told
Reuters they would not prioritize China at the expense of newer
clients.
"It would be short sighted to lose the hard fought new businesses
we've built," said David Foote, chair of Cattle Australia.
Producers who beat a path back to China will also face competitors
who have had more than two years to make inroads.
Australian wine exports are unlikely to recover to pre-dispute
levels soon because of entrenched French and Chilean competitors,
said Lee Mclean head of Australian Grape & Wine.
Moreover, even as it works towards economic rapprochement, Australia
has made clear unrestricted trade is not a signal to return to China
at the expense of other markets.
And tensions between the two countries remain. Australia in February
blocked a Chinese rare earth investment on national security
grounds.
Foreign Minister Wong urged exporters to diversify even as she
announced the deal over barley tariffs.
"We never want to find ourselves in a situation where we're so
totally reliant on one market," Trade Minister Don Farrell said on
Monday.
(Reporting by Lewis Jackson and Muyu Xu; editing by Praveen Menon
and Shri Navaratnam)
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