China imposes anti-dumping duties on Australian wine
The Chinese government has declared that it will be imposing brief enemy of dumping obligations on Australian wine imports from 28 November.
The new obligations exacted on Australian wine items could run somewhere in the range of 107.1% and 212.1%, according to China's Ministry of Commerce.
In light of the new requires by the Chinese government, Australia's exchange minister Simon Birmingham said: "This is an exceptionally distressing time for a huge number of Australian wine makers, who have worked, sincerely, a sound market in China."
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According to Wine Australia, China is one of the greatest markets for Australian wine.
Moreover, the Australian government depicted the obligations as a break of the two nations' international alliance.
Albeit the Chinese government said that the obligations would be transitory, it indicated no particular date when the obligations would end.
China's unfamiliar ministry representative Zhao Lijian on Friday guarded the actions as a genuine move to safeguard Chinese wine market and buyers.
Australia horticulture minister David Littleproud said: "The Australian government will vivaciously protect the industry. We have 10 days in which to allure, and we'll work intimately with the industry around that.
"We're profoundly worried by this. Considering the new remarks by China, it gives the discernment this choice is predicated on something other than any wrongdoing by the wine industry. Clearly, we'll debilitate all roads accessible to us through the World Trade Organization."
Since the beginning of this current month, China informally halted the imports of different Australian items including coal, sugar, grain, lobsters, wine, copper and log wood.
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