Australia welcomes Trump’s removal of beef tariffs, seeks more relief
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Australia in 2024 became the biggest shipper of red meat to the US, offering lower prices and lean cuts that the US lacks.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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SYDNEY – Australia on Nov 16 cautiously welcomed US President Donald Trump’s rollback of his tariffs on beef, while pressing the US to eliminate all tariffs on Australian goods.
Mr Trump on Nov 14 removed tariffs on more than 200 food products
Australia in 2024 became the biggest shipper of red meat to the US, offering lower prices and lean cuts that the US lacks.
“We welcome the lifting of these tariffs. That’s a good thing for Australian beef producers,” Foreign Minister Penny Wong said on Australian Broadcasting Corp television.
But Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said his Labor government would continue “to advocate for genuine reciprocal tariffs, which would be zero”.
Among the various tariffs Mr Trump has imposed on goods shipped into the US, he calls some of them “reciprocal” based on the size of the US goods-trade deficit with a given country.
“We believe very firmly, and will continue to advocate for us to have zero tariffs,” Mr Albanese said in televised remarks from Melbourne.
Ms Wong refused to be drawn on whether the centre-left government now expected Mr Trump to wind back 50 per cent tariffs on Australian steel and aluminium
“We’ll keep advocating our position,” Ms Wong said.
Mr Trump in April singled out a beef trade disparity with Australia after the country’s beef exports to the US surged in 2024, reaching A$4 billion (S$3.4 billion) amid a slump in US beef production.
Months after Mr Trump’s comments, Australia said it would ease restrictions on beef imports from the US, in place since 2003 due to concerns about bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or mad cow disease.
Australia has shipped between around 150,000 tonnes and 400,000 tonnes of beef every year since 1990 to the US, where it is popular with fast-food chains. REUTERS

