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Australia and the European Union have agreed a sweeping free trade deal after eight years of negotiations.
The deal, worth about A$10bn ($7bn; £5.2bn), was signed on Tuesday with Australia’s prime minister and the head of the European Commission describing it as a mutual “win-win”.
As well as removing almost all tariffs on trade, the two have also agreed to increase co-operation on defence and critical minerals.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen described the deals as having a focus on “collective resilience” in a world that is “deeply changing”.
“A world where great powers are using tariffs as leverage and supply chains as vulnerabilities to be exploited in our story,” she said – a nod to US President Donald Trump’s use of tariffs, as well as China’s control of the critical minerals market.
She added that “trust matters more than transactions”, noting Australia and the EU had a “unique relationship” that was “built for the long term.
Under the deal, almost all EU tariffs will be lifted on Australian agricultural products such as wine, fruit and vegetables, olive oil, seafood, most dairy products and wheat and barley.
This will mean a saving of about A$37m for local wine producers and exporters, the government said.
For Australian consumers, the deal will mean cheaper European wine, spirits, biscuits, chocolates and pasta.
The deal means Italian-style sparkling wine made in Australia can still be sold as prosecco domestically, though the name will be phased out over 10 years for exports.
Australian producers can also continue to use names including parmesan though feta will be subject to “grandfathering and lengthy phase-out periods.
BBC
Written by: Blessing Nyor
And australia EU Finalize Major
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