
Weihuan Zhou
Articles
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Nov 29, 2024 |
homelandsecuritynewswire.com | Weihuan Zhou
CRITICAL MINERALSChina’s Critical Mineral Strategy Goes Beyond GeopoliticsPublished 29 November 2024China dominates critical mineral refining but faces its own supply vulnerabilities, highlighting the complexity of global dependencies. A national strategy seeks to balance a focus of robust industrial policy on critical minerals while fostering international cooperation.
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Apr 14, 2024 |
dailybulletin.com.au | Weihuan Zhou |UNSW Sydney
China’s Ministry of Commerce has finally ended its tariffs on Australian wine, which had been imposed for more than three years at rates as high as 218.4%. The measures have had a catastrophic impact on Australia’s wine exports. In 2019, Australia sold A$1.24 billion worth of wine to China, surpassing France to capture a market share close to 40%. But by last year, this had collapsed to less than A$1 million. Dreams to diversify to new markets in the interim mostly fizzled.
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Apr 11, 2024 |
smartcompany.com.au | James Laurenceson |Weihuan Zhou
China’s Ministry of Commerce has finally ended its tariffs on Australian wine, which had been imposed for more than three years at rates as high as 218.4%. The measures have had a catastrophic impact on Australia’s wine exports. In 2019, Australia sold $1.24 billion worth of wine to China, surpassing France to capture a market share close to 40%. But by last year, this had collapsed to less than $1 million. Dreams to diversify to new markets in the interim mostly fizzled.
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Apr 10, 2024 |
australiachinarelations.org | James Laurenceson |Weihuan Zhou
Note: This article appeared in The Conversation on April 11 2024. China’s Ministry of Commerce has finally ended its tariffs on Australian wine, which had been imposed for more than three years at rates as high as 218.4 percent. The measures have had a catastrophic impact on Australia’s wine exports. In 2019, Australia sold A$1.24 billion worth of wine to China, surpassing France to capture a market share close to 40 percent. But by last year, this had collapsed to less than A$1 million.
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Apr 10, 2024 |
theconversation.com | Weihuan Zhou |James Laurenceson
China’s Ministry of Commerce has finally ended its tariffs on Australian wine, which had been imposed for more than three years at rates as high as 218.4%. The measures have had a catastrophic impact on Australia’s wine exports. In 2019, Australia sold A$1.24 billion worth of wine to China, surpassing France to capture a market share close to 40%. But by last year, this had collapsed to less than A$1 million. Dreams to diversify to new markets in the interim mostly fizzled.
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