Australia and EU Eyeing Next Trade Deal, Maybe This Month

Australian Trade Minister Don Farrell will meet European Trade Minister Maros Sefcovic in Brussels next week in a bid to finalize a free trade agreement between the two blocs.

Australia is expected to allow more foreign investment and lower prices for European-made cars in a comprehensive deal that could also reduce tariffs for agricultural exporters.

Australia’s trade talks with the EU are among a series of deals hammered out by leaders from Europe, Canada, India and other countries as the Trump administration raised tariffs with trading partners last April.

See also: Xi Jinping urges Trump to be ‘cautious’ in dealings with Taiwan

The EU is Australia’s third largest trading partner; total bilateral transactions in 2024 were just under US$77 billion (A$110 billion).

Recent negotiations are said to have resolved differences over naming rights for European products such as prosecco and feta cheese, and will allow Australian producers to use the names.

Australia has also reportedly agreed to eliminate a 5% tariff on European cars, similar tariffs on Japanese, Korean, Chinese, Thai, American and British cars have also been cut, while luxury car taxes on premium European models may also be relaxed.

But the final outcome will depend on whether EU negotiators accept Australia’s calls for greater market access for beef and lamb – an issue on which some of the 27-member bloc’s 27 member states have so far refused to budge.

If the issue can be resolved quickly, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen may fly to Australia later this month to “unveil an agreement that strengthens the strategic alliance between the two sides”. sydney morning herald reported on Friday.

Farrell told Sky News last week: “We’re not that far off. Some of the big issues, particularly the amount of Australian meat going into the EU and the conditions under which beef is going into Europe, remain unresolved. They are big issues.”

The EU has signed trade agreements with many countries

India on Tuesday finalized a massive trade deal with the European Union, its largest trading partner.

The agreement will significantly increase trade between the two countries’ two billion people, whose economies account for about a quarter of global business.

EU-India Agreement After nearly 20 years of on-and-off negotiations since 2007, total trade between India and the EU reached $136.5 billion in the fiscal year ending March 2025.

It is the fifth agreement signed by the EU in the past year, following similar agreements with Mercosur, Switzerland, Indonesia and Mexico.

India also signed trade deals with the UK, New Zealand and Oman last year, driven by US President Donald Trump Trump decides to impose 50% tariff Goods and products from India.

Tariffs have since been reduced to 18% Trump announces deal with Delhi Three days ago. Officials on both sides are believed to be still picking up the pieces before full details are revealed to the public.

See also:

Indian stocks, rupee soar on US trade deal, despite few details

Modi says huge EU-India trade deal is finalized

India’s 20-year data center tax break faces resource crunch

Canada Carney leads trade shift away from U.S. to China, India and Australia

Modi says huge EU-India trade deal is finalized

India to ‘cut’ EU car tariffs in ‘mother of all trade deals’

India could face higher tariffs if Russia continues to buy oil

How India-US trade deal talks collapsed

Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd newspapers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before traveling to South East Asia in the late 1990s. He served as a senior editor at The Nation for more than 17 years.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Previous Story

The Scoop with Rachna Shah: Back to representing Alexander McQueen

Next Story

Beauty-lovers Made a Late Night Run to the Milk-Mart

Don't Miss