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Australia paves way for US beef as Trump tariffs loom
Australia paves way for US beef as Trump tariffs loom

Perth Now

time22 minutes ago

  • Business
  • Perth Now

Australia paves way for US beef as Trump tariffs loom

Australia has opened the door to more US beef imports by lifting biosecurity restrictions, as the government seeks ways to dampen the blow from Donald Trump's tariff regime. The federal government revealed the changes on Thursday while stressing that the decision follows a decade-long science-based review. "The Albanese Labor government will never compromise on biosecurity," Agriculture Minister Julie Collins said. "Australia stands for open and fair trade - our cattle industry has significantly benefited from this. "(The department) is satisfied the strengthened control measures put in place by the US effectively manage biosecurity risks." Although the US has been able to send beef to Australia since 2019, any beef raised in Canada or Mexico before being slaughtered and processed in the US was previously barred due to biosecurity concerns. One concern was that Mexico's livestock tracking system could inadvertently lead producers to import beef from parts of the continent where there were disease outbreaks. But the latest announcement will lift the ban on beef sourced from Canada or Mexico after the US introduced more robust movement controls in late 2024 and early 2025 allowing for improved identification and tracing throughout the supply chain. The change could be used as a bargaining chip as Australia continues to push for tariff exemptions from the US after the US president earlier this year demanded Canberra lift the beef import restrictions. Australia is the biggest exporter of beef to the US. According to Bendigo Bank's recent mid-year agriculture outlook, Aussie beef will continue to be on the menu in the US, where herd numbers are in decline due to drought and increased costs of agricultural inputs. Most Australian goods sent to the US currently face a 10 per cent tariff, while steel and aluminium products have been slapped with a 50 per cent tariff. Mr Trump has also threatened a tariff on pharmaceutical imports to the US, which is one of Australia's biggest exports to its ally. Although Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is yet to secure a face-to-face meeting with Mr Trump - after their first scheduled talks were scuppered by the conflict in the Middle East - Australia has largely avoided the brunt of the tariffs as most of its exports are only exposed to the baseline levy. But other aspects of the US-Australia relationship remain uncertain. The nuclear submarine deal between Australia, the US and the UK - under the AUKUS security alliance - could be in peril after the Pentagon launched a review to examine whether the agreement aligns with Mr Trump's "US first" agenda. However, Mr Albanese has confirmed Australia made another scheduled payment as part of the deal to acquire US nuclear submarines, taking the total paid to $1.6 billion so far. "It's about increasing ... their industrial capacity" to build the submarines, he told ABC television on Wednesday. Under the $368 billion program, Australia will buy at least three Virginia-class submarines from the US sometime in the early 2030s. A new class of nuclear submarines will be built in Adelaide to be delivered in the 2040s.

Penny Wong avoids labelling Trump administration ‘chaotic'
Penny Wong avoids labelling Trump administration ‘chaotic'

Sky News AU

time2 days ago

  • Politics
  • Sky News AU

Penny Wong avoids labelling Trump administration ‘chaotic'

Foreign Minister Penny Wong has carefully declined to confirm whether she views the US Trump administration as 'chaotic', amid shifting dynamics in the diplomatic relationship. It comes after the US announced it would review the AUKUS defence pact, and called on Australia to confirm what it would do in the event of a China-Taiwan conflict. When asked by Sky News if she would describe the Trump administration as chaotic — a characterisation made by government insiders — Ms Wong did not confirm. 'I'm not going to get engaged in that sort of commentary,' she said on Tuesday. Ms Wong has instead pointed pointing to the evolving nature of the US-Australia relationship and her confidence in managing it. ' I understand that this is a time of change, and I was pretty upfront about that … before and after the election. 'President Trump envisages a different role for America and the world, and that does involve a change.' However, Ms Wong said that Australians should have 'confidence' in the Albanese government's capacity to navigate global diplomacy. There have been tensions in the US-Australia alliance, exacerbated by past public criticisms of Donald Trump from Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Ms Wong when in opposition. In 2021, Mr Albanese labelled Trump's conduct 'anti-democratic' and accused him of inciting violence. Ms Wong herself said Trump 'undermined American democracy' and was willing to 'trash alliances and partnerships for personal political interest'. Such rhetoric has been flagged by experts as potentially damaging to bilateral ties at a time when regional security challenges require close cooperation. Relations have also been complicated by the cancellation of a planned meeting between Mr Albanese and Mr Trump at the G7 summit. Mr Albanese recently downplayed concerns over the strength of the US-Australia alliance, saying he was 'not worried' about relations with President Donald Trump. Speaking at Sky News' Australia's Economic Outlook forum recently, he insisted that a meeting with President Trump would take place before the end of the year. 'Well of course we will have meetings, there will be a range of meetings between now and the end of the year with President Trump,' he said.

Sky News host Peta Credlin accuses Anthony Albanese of being 'scared of a face-off' with US President Donald Trump
Sky News host Peta Credlin accuses Anthony Albanese of being 'scared of a face-off' with US President Donald Trump

Sky News AU

time2 days ago

  • Politics
  • Sky News AU

Sky News host Peta Credlin accuses Anthony Albanese of being 'scared of a face-off' with US President Donald Trump

Sky News host Peta Credlin has accused Anthony Albanese of being "scared of a face-off" with President Donald Trump, as the Prime Minister flags he will seek to secure talks with the United States leader on the sidelines of an upcoming leaders' summit. Mr Albanese has returned to Canberra ahead of the official opening of the 48th parliament this week following his six-day visit to China where met with President Xi Jinping. The Prime Minister has told The Australian he now has his sights set on nailing down a long-awaited face-to-face talk with President Trump, amid claims the US-Australia relationship is on rocky ground. Mr Albanese hinted a meeting with President Trump would likely take place an at upcoming leaders' forum - such as the Quad meeting in India later this year. "There'll be multiple meetings between now and the end of the year. Australia and the US are both members of a range of international gatherings," Mr Albanese told the publication. During her editorial on Monday night, Credlin savaged the idea of a meeting with the US President taking place on the periphery of an international event rather than in Washington DC. "The PM is still insisting that he'll meet Donald Trump on the sidelines of some other meeting rather than meet him at the White House," the Sky News host said. "So after, what, a six-day visit to China he's hoping for ... six minutes in a corridor or in the bathroom at some international talk fest? "Honestly, that shows a weak PM who's scared of a face-off with a US President accustomed to speaking his mind. "A PM who hopes if he does it this way, he perhaps can avoid media scrutiny of what's said in the room." Mr Albanese is set to travel to various high-level summits in 2025 including the UN General Assembly in New York in September, which has been perceived as another opportunity for the Prime Minister to meet with President Trump. The two leaders had planned to hold talks at the G7 Summit in Canada in June, but the President abruptly left the forum to return to Washington amid escalating tensions in the Middle East. Mr Albanese copped heat for his move to prioritise a second official visit to China before he books in a face-to-face meeting with President Trump in the United States. Former home affairs boss Mike Pezzullo recently suggested Mr Albanese should have even cut his China visit short to fly past the US to see the President on his journey back to Australia. Mr Albanese was also accused of indulging in the optics of his China trip, which included visiting a panda breeding centre and hiking The Great Wall, rather than pressing President Xi on more serious foreign policy issues. However, the Prime Minister told The Australian his decision to walk The Great Wall of China and tour a panda centre came down to him wanting to show "respect". Regarding his US counterpart, Mr Albanese said he would demonstrate his respect in other ways such as by "engaging in a clear, forward manner, saying what we can do, what we can't do". "It's the way that I engage and build relationships," he said. The Prime Minister stressed the United States is Australia's "most important alliance", but noted the Trump administration's "America First" policy has led to a different position on tariffs. "So part of engaging is recognising that and dealing with it in our national interest, in the best way we can," Mr Albanese said. However, Credlin claimed the issues around the Australia-US alliance have been triggered by the Albanese government's "obvious discomfort with the Trump administration". "Plainly, Anthony Albanese, full of his Beijing bravado, thinks he can remake the US alliance despite what the ANZUS Treaty might say on the matter," she said. The Sky News host continued: "If that includes that we can't increase defence spending much beyond two per cent of GDP, well then our alliance with the US is on life-support at best." Earlier this year, the United States called on Australia to boost defence spending to 3.5 per cent of GDP, with the level currently sitting at two per cent. In 1951, Australia also signed the ANZUS Treaty, a security pact with New Zealand and the United States, which focuses on the Pacific region. In terms of the AUKUS submarine deal, there are concerns the pact could be under threat as it undergoes a under review by the Pentagon. Credlin called on Liberal Party to step up and press the government on national security, as well as other domestic issues including the childcare crisis and debate on net zero. "The best way for the Libs to regain their standing with voters is for them to give the Australian people that they're not getting from the current government," she said.

Rudd sure US issues with sub contract will be resolved
Rudd sure US issues with sub contract will be resolved

Perth Now

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • Perth Now

Rudd sure US issues with sub contract will be resolved

Australia's ambassador to Washington, former prime minister Kevin Rudd, says his country is working with the Pentagon on the US Defense Department's review of the AUKUS submarine project and is confident that all issues raised will be resolved. Kevin Rudd made the comment at the Aspen Security Forum and stressed his close relationship with Elbridge Colby, the US undersecretary of defence for policy, who initiated the review, and the longstanding US-Australia defence alliance. "We're working with Bridge and the team on the AUKUS review ... and we are confident that we'll work our way through each and every one of the issues which he has raised in the context of this internal Defense Department review," Rudd said, referring to Colby. "Bridge has been around my place a lot of times, and so we have known each other for a long period of time, and that's why I'm confident, quite apart from the mature relationship within our two defence establishments ... that we'll work our way through this stuff." Rudd said the US-Australia alliance had endured through 15 presidents and 15 prime ministers from different parties. In 2023, the United States, Australia, and Britain unveiled details of the AUKUS plan to provide Australia with nuclear-powered attack submarines from the early 2030s, part of efforts to counter China's ambitions in the Indo-Pacific. It is Australia's biggest ever defence project. The Pentagon said in June it was reviewing AUKUS to ensure it was "aligned with the President's America First agenda," amid concerns about the ability of the US to meet its own submarine needs and whether Australia's vessels would be used in support of US policy in the future. On Sunday, Australia's Defence Industry Minister Pat Conroy responded to a report that the Pentagon has pressed Australia to clarify what role it would play if the US and China went to war over Taiwan by saying Australia would not commit troops in advance to any conflict. Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has also rebuffed US requests to commit to lifting defence spending from two per cent to 3.5 per cent of gross domestic product, saying instead Australia would spend what was needed for its defence.

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