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China’s appetite for Australian barley is back, three years after tariffs halted the near-$1 billion market

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Three years after steep Chinese tariffs halted imports of Australian barley as tensions between the two countries ratcheted higher, the grain is once again flowing freely.

Barley is not only used to brew beer but to feed pigs, and China was Australia’s leading market, taking 50 per cent of its barley exports.

China has imported 314,000 tonnes of Australian barley worth $139 million since it scrapped its 80.5 per cent tariffs in August, the federal government said in early December, citing official Chinese data.

The resumption of trade is a welcome relief for Australian farmers, who saw a nearly $1 billion market evaporate in 2020.

“In the two months following the market’s re-opening, Marketing and Trading shipped two vessels of barley to China,” said the CBH Group, a cooperative of over 3,500 Western Australian grain farmers, in its annual report.

Barley prices dropped when China announced the tariff in 2020. (ABC Rural: Lucinda Jose)

Tensions between the two countries began to mount in 2018 when Australia excluded the Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei from its 5G network.

Then in 2020, Australia called for an international investigation into the origins of COVID-19 — an action China saw as politically motivated since it emanated from a close partner of the United States.

In response, Beijing slapped high tariffs on key Australian exports, including barley, beef and wine, while halting its coal imports.

New markets

A slowdown in China’s economic growth has spurred Beijing to rekindle its relationships with its trading partners.

Meanwhile, Australia sought out and found new markets to offload its harvests — the country is the world’s third-largest producer of the grassy grain.

“It caused us to pivot, so we found new markets, like Mexico. We managed to have tariffs lowered, which were previously in excess of 100 per cent,” Sean Cole, the acting general manager of the GrainGrowers trade association, told the Agence France-Presse news agency.

“With China gone, Australia was really forced to go back to more traditional customers in the feed market, mainly the Middle East and Saudi Arabia, where we’ve been for over 20 years,” he added.

Between June 2022 and June 2023, Saudi Arabia became the leading importer of Australian barley, according to data from the Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics and Sciences (ABARES).

Lyndon Mickel farms a 6,000-hectare plot of land near Beaumont in the south of Western Australia. The latest harvest of his fields of various grains and peas was the 23rd of his career, but it has taken time to bounce back from the Chinese tariffs.

“We’ve had a reduction in price, but we’ve been fortunate we’ve had two very good years in that time crop-wise,” he said, “so what we’ve lost in price, we’ve gained in tonnage anyway.”

But those boom years — producing over 14 million tonnes of barley in the last two harvests — are over.

Additional gains

As El Niño — the cyclical weather phenomenon responsible for higher global temperatures — returns to the Pacific, ABARES predicts barley production will drop by 24 per cent to 10.8 million tonnes for the 2023-24 harvest.

The reopening of the Chinese market could not have come at a better time, said Mr Cole.

“A lot of our barley is classified as feed, but it is still suitable for beer manufacturing in China,” he said, “they use slightly different processes, and essentially it means we can get a premium for more of our feed barley”.

On average, barley destined for China is sold for “around $38 to $40 a tonne between now and since the tariffs were lifted”, and that amounts to “an extra $400 million value for the Australia barley crop next year, even with a smaller crop”, he added.

AFP

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