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EU trade negotiations with Australia enter the "last mile"

An EU Commission spokesperson said that the European Union was in the "last miles" of negotiations for a trade deal with Australia. The EU is attempting to diversify its trade, reduce its dependence on China, and mitigate the impact of U.S. Tariffs.

Since President Donald Trump launched his global tariff offensive in 2017 and China cut back on exports of vital minerals, the European Commission has been accelerating talks to achieve free trade agreements.

In the last six months, it has already signed trade agreements with Indonesia and India.

The European Commission's President Ursula von der Leyen will be visiting Australia along with European Trade Commissioner Maros Sefcovic to discuss the possibility of a possible agreement?with Australian Premier Anthony Albanese.

"She will be meeting Prime Minister Albanese late on Monday night, early on Tuesday morning Canberra time. The goal is to 'tie down the final details,'" a spokesperson for the Commission in Brussels stated. "But... as Commissioner Sefcovic says, the last mile is the most difficult,"

A DEAL TO BOOST AUSTRALIA EXPORTS BY A THIRD IN 10 YEARS

The EU executive has said that EU exports to Australia should increase by a third ten years after the proposed agreement. Australia is its 20th biggest trading partner. In 2025, the EU will export goods to Australia worth 42.86 billion euros and services worth 28 billion euros.

The EU expects that the agreement will result in tariff reductions. It has stated that it could save 1 billion Euros in duty paid on its exports.

The European Union wants to offer benefits for European wine, spirits, and machinery. This includes vehicles. Australia currently charges 33% duty on imported cars.

The talks between the two sides ended in 2023 when the issue of market entry for Australian farm products into the European Union was raised. The EU is likely to impose quotas on sensitive products such as beef, lamb, mutton, rice, and sugar.

EU officials estimate that the annual quota for beef, which has been a source of farmer protests in relation to?the EU’s deal with South American group?Mercosur?, will be around 30,000 tons.

This agreement will also improve EU access to key raw materials such as lithium, manganese and aluminium mined in Australia.

(source: Reuters)