Australia criticized China’s reported ban on its coal exports as an obvious breach of World Trade Organisation rules, as tensions between the two countries flared again. Prime Minister Scott Morrison said the Chinese government had yet to confirm state media reports that Australia’s multi-billion-dollar coal exports are now subject to an informal ban.
Nationalist state-run tabloid the Global Times reported on Sunday that Chinese power plants are being steered toward buying their coal domestically, as well as from countries other than Australia.
PM Scott Morrison, said, “If that were the case, then that would obviously be in breach of WTO rules. It would be obviously in breach of our own free trade agreement and so we would hope that is certainly not the case. We are seeking clarification on this.”
Ties between the two countries are at the lowest ebb since the Chinese government’s 1989 killing of pro-democracy protesters at Tiananmen Square, with Beijing rolling out a string of economic sanctions against Australian products. At least 13 Australian sectors have been subjected to tariffs or some form of disruption, including barley, beef, copper, cotton, lobsters, sugar, timber, tourism, universities, wine, wheat and wool.
Suggestions of a coal embargo had been the subject of rumours for some time, with many Australia shipments reportedly already blocked at Chinese ports. But even an informal ban would be a dramatic escalation, targeting one of Australia’s most valuable exports worth up to US$3 billion a year and a sector that Morrison’s conservative government has been keen to champion, despite objections from environmentalists.
Australia has long hinted that it may seek WTO intervention in the disputes, but a resolution could take years, open Australia up to retaliatory claims and worsen relations with Beijing further. There has so far been little indication that Australia’s political allies in the US or Europe have been willing to step in and offer support.
The dispute with China has called into question Australia’s decades-old model for stellar economic growth namely supplying the raw materials for China’s breakneck emergence as a modern economy. Morrison said both nations had benefited from close trade relations over previous decades and called for “mature discussions” about the disputes.