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TRADE WARS
Australia threatens WTO action
by Staff Writers
Canberra, Australia (UPI) Jan 19, 2012


Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard has warned foreign mining firms in Australia that they would be reported to the World Trade Organization if it was found that Australian suppliers were locked out of local resource projects.

Gillard's warning comes in response to concerns raised by the Australia Industry Group that Chinese companies are being given preference in the supply of equipment and services for Australia's massive resource projects.

AIG had told the government the practice was occurring but had only anecdotal evidence.

"Any clear evidence of this will be taken by us to the World Trade Organization, because it's in breach of the rules and it's not giving Aussie manufacturers a fair go," Gillard told the Australian Broadcasting Corp.

"So my message would be to people who have got this anecdotal evidence that we need to take it to the next stage, to get the clear evidence and if clear evidence is available then we will certainly do everything we can to press the case internationally because it is not fair to Aussie manufacturing," Gillard said.

The Australian newspaper, for example, reported that confidential tender documents it had obtained indicate that Gindalbie Metals offered Chinese companies the chance to work on its $2.7 billion Karara iron ore project in Western Australia using Chinese standards for steel.

Gindalbie issued a statement denying that it favored Chinese companies.

The newspaper said the contract of 4,000 tons of steel was eventually awarded to Chinese steel company Ansteel, which is Gindalbie's biggest shareholder.

In response, an Ansteel spokesman told The Australian that domestic firms were offered the chance to bid for the same work on the Karara project using Australian standards but Ansteel was the most competitive "by a wide margin" and that more than 90 percent of spending on the Karara project had been on local content.

The Minerals Council of Australia maintains there is little evidence to support AIG's claims of preference.

Based on government data, "the facts and the figures show the mining industry source 88 percent of the goods and services locally," said Chris Fraser, the council's acting chief executive.

Fraser acknowledged that it's in the mining sector's interest to encourage strong, local competitive supplier groups. But because of the magnitude of some of the projects, "the capacity just isn't in there in the local firms to do some of that work."

China is Australia's biggest trading partner mainly due to China's strong demand for iron ore, coal and liquefied natural gas.

Australia had addressed the issue of local content last year, when Gillard announced that unless resources companies provide an equal opportunity for Australian manufacturers to supply a project, they could lose access to a 5 percent tariff reduction on imported materials for projects worth $2.08 billion or more.

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After election, US presses Taiwan on beef
Washington (AFP) Jan 19, 2012 - The United States on Thursday urged Taiwan to ease restrictions on US beef, saying it wanted to focus more on economic relations with the island after President Ma Ying-jeou won re-election.

Senior US diplomat Kurt Campbell acknowledged that the United States "closely watched" Saturday's election in which Ma -- who has worked to reconcile with mainland China -- comfortably won a second term.

"We would like to see a continuing of ties, contacts, reductions of tension across the Taiwan Strait," Campbell, the assistant secretary of state for East Asia, said at the Stimson Center think-tank.

But he added: "Speaking from a US perspective, I think we would like to see more progress on the economic side, just to be clear."

"We would like to see Taiwan take some of the necessary steps on beef and other issues now that the election is over that will allow us to have the kind of flourishing economic relationship that we have with many other countries in the Asia-Pacific region," he said, in a rare US reference to Taiwan as a country.

Taiwan, like many other governments, banned US beef imports in December 2003 after mad cow disease was detected in an American herd but relaxed the rules in 2006 to allow imports of boneless beef.

Taiwan moved in October 2009 to allow US beef on the bone, cow organs and minced beef, but the decision was overturned after a public outcry.

Last year, Taiwan pulled from the market US meat with the growth drug Paylean, which is banned in the European Union due to health concerns but is considered safe by the United States, Canada and Australia.

US lawmakers from farm states have been adamant in pressing Taiwan and other lucrative Asian markets to buy more beef, despite criticism by some academics that the issue has overshadowed broader strategic interests.

The United States is obliged under domestic law to ensure the defense of Taiwan, which Beijing claims as its territory.

Washington in recent months has sent three senior officials to Taiwan and started the process of letting Taiwanese visit the United States visa-free.

While praising the moves, some supporters of Taiwan's opposition -- which is more critical of mainland China -- accused the United States of trying to boost Ma's re-election chances.



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Orlando, Florida (AFP) Jan 19, 2012
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