China, Beijing and Australia
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By Peter Hobson and Ella Cao CANBERRA/BEIJING (Reuters) -Canberra is close to an agreement with Beijing that would allow Australian suppliers to ship five trial canola cargoes to China, sources familiar with the matter said,
China's Ministry of Commerce and Australia's Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade has signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) regarding the implementation and review of China-Australia free trade agreement (FTA),
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese meets with China's Premier Li Qiang, who takes a thinly veiled swipe at Donald Trump's tariff policies while calling for greater economic ties between Australia and China.
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Major miner BHP has said it is too costly for Australia to build a "green iron" industry after the country and China agreed this week to jointly work to decarbonise the steel supply chain, responsible for nearly a tenth of global emissions.
Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has kicked off a visit to China meant to shore up relations between the two countries
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Livewire Markets on MSNChina – the tariff threat, structural challenges and implications for AustraliaAustralia is now less sensitive to China, but Chinese growth is likely to be enough to keep the iron ore price elevated.
China has been one of the hardest hit with import taxes in Trump's attempts to favour American production, while Australia has escaped relatively unscathed, with the exception of some sector-specific imposts.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said Australia values its relationship with China and will approach it in a “calm and consistent” manner, during opening remarks at a meeting with President Xi Jinping.
A live-fire exercise involving the Mid-Range Capability missile system took place in Australia as part of Exercise Talisman Sabre 2025.
Australia’s potential to export green metals – made here using abundant, cheap renewable energy – could deliver immeasurable economic benefits and accelerate the global race to net zero. It’s now a step closer.