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AAP
AAP
Politics
Dominic Giannini and Andrew Brown

Breakthrough in drawn-out trade dispute with China

China will review tariffs on Australian barley, indicating a possible pathway out of a trade dispute (Dan Peled/AAP PHOTOS) (AAP)

Australia and China have achieved a major breakthrough in their long-running trade dispute, leading to a possible end to crippling taxes on barley exports.

The Australian government has paused its World Trade Organisation dispute against China for imposing the tariffs.

The more than 80 per cent duty has effectively blocked Australian barley from the Chinese market - worth some $900 million for exporters - since the start of the pandemic.

Beijing will conduct a review of the tariffs over the next three to four months after which the WTO case will resume if no agreement is reached.

The time frame is shorter than if the dispute continued through the international trade body.

"We believe there's no justification for the measures that China introduced in relation to barley," Foreign Minister Penny Wong said.

"We have also made clear we believe it is in both countries' interests for these trade impediments to be removed."

A spokesman for China's foreign ministry said the country was looking to be collaborative in restoring trade.

"China is willing to work with Australia to get relations between the two countries back on the right track," the spokesman said during a regular news briefing.

The announcement has been welcomed by Grain Producers Australia, with farmers hopeful of increased exports to China in the coming months.

"Barley is an important rotation crop for Australian growers and any optimism on the future outlook is good," chairman Barry Large said.

A resolution could also pave the way for the removal of trade barriers imposed against other Australian products.

"We hope this will be a template for them moving on to the other areas of dispute, and in particular, Australian wine," Trade Minister Don Farrell said.

"We are hopeful that at the end of that review process, the impediments that currently exist will be suspended and removed and we can get back to normal trade with China."

Beijing has consistently called for Australia to drop the WTO dispute as a sign of goodwill but Canberra has always insisted on a change to the trade impediments in response.

There has already been some movement in Beijing in relation to Australian coal exports with the end of an unofficial ban that lasted more than two years.

China remains Australia's largest trading partner, with the relationship worth some $300 billion last year.

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