Talk and cheese: Feta on the chopping block as minister heads to Europe for mega trade deal
The fight for feta and prosecco will be taken to Europe when Trade Minister Don Farrell takes off for a two-week trip with hopes to seal Australia’s most significant free trade deal.
Australia and the European Union are in the final months of a process started in 2018 to negotiate a free-trade agreement that will reduce taxes on imports and exports and improve business access to the $23 trillion European market.
The fight for feta and prosecco will be taken to Europe when Trade Minister Don Farrell takes off for a two-week trip to seal a free trade deal with the EU. Credit:istock/Rhett Wyman
Australia hopes the deal will reduce taxes and import limitations on goods including beef, rice and sugar, while the bloc is angling for better protections for European specialities, including feta, parmesan and prosecco, and for the luxury car tax to be scrapped.
Farrell is travelling to Europe for meetings with key counterparts including European Commission executive vice-president Valdis Dombrovskis, Agriculture commissioner Janusz Wojciechowski, French trade minister Olivier Becht and members of the European Parliament to work on completing the deal soon.
Farrell said while China is a larger market by population, the European deal is more significant due to the enormous value of that market.
“This is potentially you know, the biggest free trade agreement that Australia’s ever negotiated,” he said ahead of his trip.
“We want to signal to the Europeans that we’re fair dinkum about this. We are in a hurry.”
The minister believes all the ingredients are in place for a “successful negotiation” and expects a deal by midway through 2023, or at least to have the final details by that stage, while the European Union are hopeful of a deal by early next year.
But even though this will be the 13th round of negotiations, finalising a deal will not be easy. Some countries in the union, including France and Ireland, have issues with relaxing restrictions around agricultural exports, and other countries want to ensure the names of regional foods and drinks are protected.
Farrell acknowledged the geographic indicator debate would be tricky, but Australia will push to use those names.
Trade Minister Don Farrell is travelling to Europe to negotiate the free trade agreement.Credit:Rhett Wyman
“We want to keep using feta, parmesan and prosecco, that’s the position we’ve adopted. We’re not changing our negotiating position,” he said.
“But Europeans just like us are entitled to put issues on the table, and this is a serious genuine negotiation. So we’ll listen to their arguments, and hopefully they’ll listen to ours.
“All of those are difficult issues, but I think there’s a way through.”
Credit:Illustration: Matt Golding
In Canada’s free trade deal with the European Union, the North American country agreed to use qualifiers for some geographic indicators, so locally made feta may be called “feta-style” cheese, and the use of parmesan instead of Parmigiano was OK.
Farrell noted prosecco was protected under that agreement, but winemakers who had already been making it were allowed to continue using the name.
The Canadians also got a “good deal” to export 50,000 tonnes of beef, Farrell said, but Australia would prefer “total free trade” for agricultural products.
“Good market access is no trade barriers whatsoever,” he said.
The minister also expects the luxury car tax to be a topic raised by the European negotiators. Germany, which is home to major car manufacturers including BMW and Volkswagen, is keen to see the tariff removed.
The tax was brought in to protect Australia’s now non-existent local car manufacturing industry, but it brought in $1.1 billion in the last financial year.
“It’s a lot of revenue, so at the moment, we have made it clear that we’re not willing to give up that tax,” Farrell said.
Farrell’s trip comes on the heels of confirmation the new Australia-India free trade agreement, expected to save Australian exporters about $2 billion a year, will come into effect on December 29.
The agreement with the UK has also been signed off by parliament and now awaits British confirmation. Farrell will travel to the UK to meet counterparts including Trade Secretary Kemi Badenoch to encourage quick sign-off on the deal.
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