Business

EU, Australia trade talks postponed amid subs spat

Multibillion-dollar contract for 12 French submarines abruptly scrapped in favour of nuke-powered US-designed vessels

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 01 Oct 2021 5:30PM

EU, Australia trade talks postponed amid subs spat
France publicly says it can no longer trust Australia’s government, accusing officials of lying and questioning whether the trade agreement can go ahead. – DFAT Twitter pic, October 1, 2021

SYDNEY – A long-planned round of Australia-EU free trade talks have been postponed, a European official confirmed today, after fury over Canberra’s decision to cancel a major French submarine contract.

“The FTA trade round has been postponed for a month until November,” a European Union (EU) official in Canberra told AFP, throwing the future of the far-reaching pact into doubt.

Australia last month abruptly cancelled a multibillion-dollar contract for 12 French submarines, opting to buy nuclear-powered US-designed vessels instead.

The decision prompted a major diplomatic spat with one of the EU’s largest members and now appears to have hit ties with the entire bloc.

France has publicly said it can no longer trust Australia’s government, accusing officials of lying and questioning whether the trade agreement can go ahead.

Australian Trade Minister Dan Tehan, who was scheduled to travel to Europe for the talks, played down the decision in a statement to AFP.

“We understand the French reaction to our submarine decision but ultimately any nation must act in its national interest – which is what Australia has done,” he said.

Tehan indicated he plans to meet EU Trade Commissioner Valdis Dombrovskis next week to discuss what will be the 12th round of negotiations.

“We will continue preparing for the 12th round of negotiations and working towards concluding a free trade agreement that is in the interests of both Australia and the EU.”

The EU is Australia’s third-biggest trading partner.

In 2020, the trade in goods between the two economies was valued at €36 billion (RM177.4 billion) and at €26 billion in services.

The next round of talks was due to cover areas including trade, services, investment and intellectual property rights. – AFP, October 1, 2021

Related News

Malaysia / 2mth

Malaysia, Australia back Pope Leo's call for peace, urge dialogue to end global conflicts

Business / 3mth

US investigates manufacturing overcapacity in 15 economies, including Malaysia, EU

Malaysia / 4mth

Singapore PM Lawrence Wong arrives in Malaysia for a special visit

Opinion / 4mth

Bridging civilisations: Why India matters to Malaysia’s economic future

Malaysia / 4mth

India, Malaysia will discuss trade pact review during Modi's visit

Business / 4mth

Malaysia achieves export sales of RM45.4b through numerous international markets

Spotlight

Malaysia

Abang Jo: Bintulu Port strengthens Sarawak’s position as strategic maritime, industrial hub

Malaysia

‘It was Muhyiddin’s idea to set up Perikatan Nasional’ - Tun Faisal reminds PAS

Malaysia

MOF unifies diesel subsidy system with nationwide MyKad verification, cuts price to RM2.10 per litre

Malaysia

Police probe suspected staged kidnapping after woman found safe in less than 24 hours

Malaysia

Rafizi says former top civil servants vying to contest under Bersama in Johor polls

Malaysia

Annuar Musa reveals failed mediation effort to prevent PAS-Bersatu split in PN

You may be interested

Business

Robo.ai in US$60 million deal to acquire QC Capital, accelerating global AI push

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir