Bottles of Australian wine are seen at a store selling imported wine in Beijing, China November 27, 2020.
REUTERS/Florence Lo/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsSYDNEY, Aug 18 (Reuters) - Australia's wine industry faces severe oversupply problems that will need years to resolve, experts say, pointing to Chinese tariffs, high production and export bottlenecks during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The recent removal of tariffs on Australian barley has fed hopes for an early easing of the five-year tariffs China imposed on Australian wine in 2021.
Australian wine exports declined a tenth in value to A$1.87 billion and 1% in volume to 621 million litres in the year ended June, Wine Australia’s Export Report said in July.
"All we can say is next time you go to buy a bottle of wine, make sure it's Australian," McLean said.
Persons:
Florence, Pia Piggott, Lee McLean, McLean, Piggott, Praveen Menon, Clarence Fernandez
Organizations:
REUTERS, Rights, Rabobank, China, Labor, Wine Estates, Thomson
Locations:
Beijing, China, Australia, Britain, Europe, United States, Asia