China tries to break its Australian iron reliance

Posted By : Rina Latuperissa
8 Min Read

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PERTH – As the China-Australia trade war moves from product to product, ranging from barley to lobsters to wine, Beijing has so far refrained from imposing any ban or barrier on Australian iron ore.

As global prices soar for the ore, China’s insatiable appetite and inability to find suitable substitutes are net-net insulating Australia from Beijing’s punitive intent.  

Australia supplies 53% of global demand for iron ore, of which China consumes 57%. According to the March edition of Resources and Energy Quarterly, Australia currently supplies 68% of China’s iron ore imports.

Prices for the steelmaking commodity hit a record high of US$233 per tonne earlier this month, an uptrend that began last year but is now increasingly a reflection of growing global inflation fears and market concerns of Covid-caused supply disruptions in Brazil and elsewhere, the REQ report said.

Those prices fell by as much as 20% this week when China’s National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) announced a “zero tolerance” crackdown on “excessive speculation” of the ore amid reports of commodity trader hoarding.

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