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Supply Chain Risk

Meat industry calls for dialogue with China as trade war continues for second year

A peak meat industry body is calling on the federal government to repair its relationship with China following another export ban.

Meat processing giant Teys Australia has had its export license revoked for its Naracoorte facility in South Australia’s South East.

Australian Meat Industry Council chief executive Patrick Hutchinson said the issue needed to be fixed.

“The time for a better relationship with China is now,” he said.

Mr Hutchinson said the breakdown in communication was a detriment to the industry. 

“Because we don’t have a dialogue with China at the moment that we had in 2019, when these issues occur we don’t know about it until it goes onto their general administrations’ customs website,” he said.

A sign on the outside of a grey brick building that reads "Teys Australia Naracoorte Complex".
Teys Australia’s Naracoorte plant is the 10th Australian abattoir to be banned from exporting to China.(ABC News)

Empty seats at the table

Federal Trade Minister Dan Tehan said the government was doing everything it could to re-establish markets.

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