NewsBite

Wine exports

Advertisement
Wine is our premium product in China.

Aussie wine’s back in China, but there’s a catch

China has become a catastrophe for global winemakers, but Aussie vintners think they can buck the trend.

  • Colin Kruger

Latest

A South Australian rock lobster cooking demonstration at the China International Import Expo in Shanghai on November 5.

Trump’s touted tariffs threaten to sweep up Aussie lobsters

Many economists are concerned a new trade war between the world’s two biggest economies will have flow-on consequences for Australia.

  • Lisa Visentin
Demand for Victorian food and fibre has surged in Singapore.

These countries have made Victoria Australia’s biggest exporter of food and fibre

Rising demand from Asian countries has propelled exports in this category to almost $20 billion, making Victoria number one in the nation.

  • Kieran Rooney
Anthony Albanese has revealed he will head to Beijing on November 4, after confirming a deal that will end Chinese tariffs on Australian wine has been struck.

Australia reaches wine deal with China, PM sets dates for Beijing trip

Australia’s long-running dispute with China on wine tariffs is close to ending ahead of a trip to Beijing by Prime Minister Anthony Albanese.

  • Shane Wright, Carolyn Webb and Amelia McGuire
Rotting chardonnay grapes in 2005: Australia is once again grappling with a wine glut.

Wineries call for more government support as Chinese tariffs roll on

The Australian wine industry is seeking more assistance in finding new markets for wine as the nation grapples with a two-year oversupply.

  • Jessica Yun
Winegrape grower and Riverina Winegrape chairman Bruno Brombal on his property in Hanwood, NSW.

Even if China lifts its wine tariffs, Aussie grape growers have already been squeezed dry

China’s hefty import duties have inflicted deep scars on the local wine industry and triggered an oversupply that could fill 859 Olympic pools.

  • Jessica Yun
Advertisement
Hunter Valley winemaker Mark Davidson, from Tamburlaine Organic Wines, said the market would be slow to recover.

A slow recovery: Growers set sights on removal of China’s wine tariff

Wine producers are optimistic China’s wine tariff will be the next to be removed following the backdown on barley, but warn sellers will be cautious about an overreliance on the Chinese market.

  • Amber Schultz and Paul Sakkal
Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong’s meeting with her Chinese counterpart Wang Yi has given business leaders hope of visiting China in 2023.

Australian CEOs eye return to China in 2023

Business leaders have been given reason to hope that relationships with China can be reset and tariffs can be lifted.

  • Jessica Yun, Simone Fox Koob and Nick Toscano
Ed Carr’s winemaking creed: deep roots, dogged patience and time – long spans of it – have paid off.

‘What the ...?’: The Tassie sparkling coming at champagne

A warming planet is spurring Tasmania’s reputation for producing stellar sparkling wine, led by an unlikely rock-star winemaker.

  • Luke Slattery
Inland red grape growers in Australia are still dealing with the fall-out of China’s hefty tariffs on Australia’s wine industry.

Exit strategy: Meet the grape growers still battling China’s wine tariffs

In the heart of Australia’s wine-growing regions, China’s hefty trade strike has been a fatal blow for many vineyard owners and winegrape growers.

  • Jessica Yun

Original URL: https://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/topic/wine-exports-1mr6