SYDNEY (Reuters) -Foreign Minister Penny Wong said on Sunday that Australia welcomed U.S. President Donald Trump’s rollback of tariffs on beef as a positive move for Australia’s beef producers.
Trump on Friday removed tariffs on more than 200 food products, including beef, amid consumer concerns about rising U.S. grocery prices. Australia in 2024 became the biggest shipper of red meat to the U.S., offering lower prices and lean cuts that the U.S. lacks.
“We welcome the lifting of these tariffs. That’s a good thing for Australian beef producers,” Wong said on Australian Broadcasting Corp. television.
“We believe in being able to access each other’s markets. We think that’s in the best interests of consumers, as well as of producers.”
Wong refused to be drawn on whether the centre-left government now expected Trump to wind back 50% tariffs on Australian steel and aluminium imports to the U.S.
“We’ll keep advocating our position,” said Wong, a senior minister in the Anthony Albanese-led Labor government that has previously lobbied the U.S. for a reprieve.
Trump in April singled out a beef trade disparity with Australia after the country’s beef exports to the U.S. surged last year, reaching A$4 billion ($2.64 billion) amid a slump in U.S. beef production. Months after Trump’s comments, Australia said it would ease restrictions on beef imports from the U.S.
Australia has shipped between around 150,000 tons and 400,000 tons of the product every year since 1990 to the U.S. where it is popular with fast-food chains.
(Reporting by Sam McKeith in Sydney; editing by Diane Craft)
Disclaimer: This report is auto generated from the Reuters news service. ThePrint holds no responsibility for its content.

