Both countries remain locked in a formal World Trade Organisation dispute process over Chinese anti-dumping tariffs on barley. A report is due by March. Nevertheless, Long Dingbin, China's top diplomat in Western Australia, a huge exporter of grains, iron ore and natural gas, met with state Premier Mark McGowan on Wednesday. McGowan hopes to go to China very soon, in what would be his fifth visit in office, the Chinese consulate in Perth said. Long has attended at least eight events in February, meeting politicians and business groups, including a Chinese New Year party attended by more than 350 politicians and business leaders. "People are starting to get on the front foot," Grain Trade Australia Chief Executive Pat O'Shannassy told Reuters. "Trade is ultimately about relationship and people are getting those relationships in place."
Capital is tentatively moving, too. Chinese buyers are looking at Australian assets, although Tianqi Lithium's $136 million bid for Australian lithium developer Essential Metals will test regulator appetite for investment in areas considered important for national security. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese on Wednesday said Australia would consider the merits of any deal but he was "conscious about Australia's sovereign capabilities".
Traders are cautious about possible bureaucratic delays. A
shipment of Australian coal diverted to Vietnam last week after
waiting at a Chinese port for five days without unloading.
" government's attitude remains ambiguous and the
bureaucratic proccess is opaque, even though the general
consensus is that the rule is relaxing since last Friday," said
a Chinese coal trader who declined to be named.
Even should trade resume, many producers plan to avoid
becoming too reliant on China again.
Albanese travels to India next month with his trade and
resources ministers and a big business delegation in tow.
The chief executive of Cattle Australia, David Foote, said
producers cut off from China had spent more than two years
finding new customers and would be loath to give them up.
"They'll want to add China back in but not at the offset of
losing their new customers."
($1 = 1.4684 Australian dollars)
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Chinese trade barriers hit many Australian exporters hard ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>
(Reporting by Lewis Jackson. Additional reporting by Dominique
Patton in Beijing and Muyu Xu in Singapore; Editing by Sonali
Paul)