Australia’s PM says easing of curbs on US beef not prompted by Trump

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Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said that Mr Donald Trump had not raised the issue with him in  a phone call.

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said that Mr Donald Trump had not raised the issue with him in a phone call.

PHOTO: EPA

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- Australia’s Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said on July 27 that a decision to ease rules on beef imports from the US was not prompted by US President Donald Trump.

Mr Trump on July 24 said the US would sell “so much” beef to Australia after Canberra announced the relaxation of restrictions, potentially smoothing trade talks with Washington.

In place since 2003, the curbs were due to concerns about bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or mad cow disease, which can kill cattle as well as people who eat infected beef.

When asked on July 27 if the easing had anything to do with Mr Trump, Mr Albanese said: “No, this has been a process that has been there for 10 years, the review process.”

“This wasn’t a political decision,” Mr Albanese said in remarks on Australian Broadcasting Corp television, adding that Mr Trump had not raised the issue with him in a phone call.

The comments come after US Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins called the easing a win for Mr Trump.

By contrast, Australia’s agriculture minister said the rules were relaxed after a “rigorous science and risk-based assessment” concluded that US measures to monitor and control cattle movement were effectively managing biosecurity risks.

News of Australia changing its policy was first reported by the Australian Financial Review. The report said Australia will use the easing of rules to argue its case for the US to wind back 50 per cent tariffs on steel and aluminium and Mr Trump’s threat to impose a 200 per cent tariff on pharmaceuticals. Ms Rollins said the decision was a purely scientific one.

The National Party, part of Australia’s conservative opposition coalition, has said that “biosecurity should not be political” and called for an independent scientific panel to review the decision.

A loosening of beef import rules is not expected to boost significantly US shipments because Australia is a major beef producer and exporter whose prices are much lower, according to analysts.

In 2024, Australia shipped almost 400,000 tonnes of beef worth US$2.9 billion (S$3.7 billion) to the US, with just 244 tonnes of US product moving the other way. REUTERS

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