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Australia's trade minister said that the US has approved of Australia's increased aluminium exports.

Don Farrell, Australia's Trade Minister, said that the U.S. had approved the increase in aluminium supplies to Australia. This was a response to Canberra's application for exemption from U.S. steel and aluminium tariffs.

Donald Trump, the U.S. president, said this week that he was considering an exemption for Australia to a 25% flat tariff on imports of steel and aluminum. However one of his closest advisors claimed Australia "killed our aluminum market".

The executive order imposing the tariffs stated that the volume of aluminum from Australia had risen after Trump granted it a tariff exemption in 2018. This was despite the fact that the country ignored a verbal agreement to limit aluminium supply.

Farrell claimed that Australia increased its aluminum exports after the supply interruptions caused by Russia's ongoing conflict with Ukraine, with the blessings of the former administration of President Joe Biden.

"All that was done in full knowledge of the American Government." "We haven't ever done anything the American government was not comfortable with," he told ABC in an interview.

The center-left Labor Government of Anthony Albanese, Prime Minister, is facing national elections due in May. They recently announced a A$2 Billion ($1.26 Billion) plan to assist aluminium smelters to transition to renewable electricity. The initiative is designed to protect up to 75,000 direct jobs and indirect ones.

Australia is the sixth largest producer of aluminium in the world. Its aluminium exports to the U.S. accounted for only 2% of the total. (1 Australian dollar = 1.5918 dollars) (Reporting and editing by Sonali Paul in Sydney, Alasdair Needham and Kirsty Neetham)

(source: Reuters)