TLDR:
- The Australia-EU deal eliminates import tariffs on critical minerals, strengthening supply chain security beyond China.
- Over 99% of EU goods exported to Australia will be tariff-free, saving European firms €1 billion annually in duties.
- Australian farmers criticised the deal, citing beef export quotas and lack of meaningful agricultural market access.
- Australia raised the luxury car tax threshold for EU EVs to A$120,000, exempting roughly 75% of European electric vehicles.
Australia and the European Union signed a landmark trade agreement on Tuesday, eight years after negotiations began.
The deal removes tariffs on nearly all EU goods entering Australia and eliminates import duties on Australian critical minerals entering Europe.
Both sides framed the agreement as a direct response to rising U.S. tariffs and growing concerns over China’s grip on global rare earth supply chains.
Critical Minerals Partnership Takes Center Stage
The trade deal places Australian critical minerals at the heart of a broader strategic realignment. Zero import tariffs will now apply to Australian critical minerals entering the EU.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the agreement would add roughly A$10 billion annually to the Australian economy.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen addressed the China question directly during her address to Australia’s parliament.
“For both Europe and Australia, getting China right is a strategic imperative, and this is why bringing to life our critical minerals partnership will be crucial to our success,” she said.
She added that over-dependence on any single supplier for such crucial ingredients is a risk neither side can afford.
Von der Leyen also spoke to the broader relationship between the two sides. “The EU and Australia may be geographically far apart but we couldn’t be closer in terms of how we see the world,” she stated. The two blocs are now positioning each other as reliable alternatives within global supply chains.
Beyond trade, Australia and the EU also signed a separate agreement to strengthen security and defence cooperation.
Von der Leyen noted that “with these dynamic new partnerships on security and defence, as well as trade, we are moving even closer together.”
The EU has been expanding its regional presence, having already struck trade deals with Indonesia and India in recent months.
Agricultural Access Falls Short for Australian Farmers
Australian agricultural exporters have come away from the deal with far less than they hoped for. Hamish McIntyre, president of the National Farmers Federation, did not hold back in his response.
“Australian farmers are extremely disappointed that negotiations for a free trade deal with the European Union have concluded without commercially meaningful agricultural market access gains,” he said.
Beef was one of the most contested issues in the negotiations, having contributed to the collapse of talks in 2023. Under the final agreement, the EU opened two tariff rate quotas totalling 30,600 metric tons of beef. Around 55% of that volume will enter the EU duty-free, while the rest remains subject to tariffs.
Other agricultural products such as sheep meat will also face export quotas rather than open access. In contrast, European products including wine, cheese, fruit, vegetables, and chocolate will enter Australia at zero tariff from day one.
Cheese tariffs phase out over three years, and geographical indication protections cover products like Pecorino Romano and Ouzo.
Australia also agreed to raise the luxury car tax threshold for EU electric vehicles to A$120,000. This change means approximately 75% of EU EVs will be exempt from the tax. Two-way trade between the EU and Australia reached €37 billion in goods in 2025 alone.



