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Sunday, April 05, 2026 | Daily Newspaper published by GPPC Doha, Qatar.

Tag Results for "critical minerals" (5 articles)

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen walk together after an address to Members and Senators during a joint sitting in the House of Representatives at Parliament House in Canberra on Tuesday. Australia and the European Union signed ‌a free trade agreement on Tuesday after eight years of negotiations, removing tariffs on almost ​all goods and potentially easing EU access ‌to Australian critical minerals.
Business

Australia and EU seal trade deal, seek to cut reliance on China for critical minerals

Australia and the European Union signed ‌a free trade agreement on Tuesday after eight years of negotiations, removing tariffs on almost ​all goods and potentially easing EU access ‌to Australian critical minerals. However, some Australian agricultural exports, including beef and sheep meat, will face ‌quotas.Australian farmers ⁠criticised the pact for offering ‌what they called "subpar" access to the bloc, while French ‌farmers argued the quotas were too generous. The deal follows intensified talks amid sharply higher US tariffs under the ⁠Trump administration and growing Western concerns over China's dominant position in rare earths and other critical minerals. The two sides also signed an agreement to deepen security and defence cooperation."The EU and Australia may be geographically far apart but we couldn't be closer in terms of how we see the world," European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said in a statement. "With these dynamic new partnerships on security and defence, as well as trade, we are moving even closer together."The agreement will remove more than 99% of tariffs on ​EU goods exports to Australia, saving companies €1bn ($1.2bn) a year. EU exports to Australia are expected to grow by up to 33% over the next decade. Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the deal would be worth about A$10bn ($7bn) annually to the Australian economy. He ⁠said scrapping almost all ​import tariffs on Australian critical minerals entering the EU would help stabilise global supply chains."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," von der Leyen told Australia's parliament. "We cannot be over-dependent on any supplier for such crucial ingredients, and that is precisely why we need each other."The agreement also underscores Europe's growing engagement in the Indo-Pacific, following trade accords concluded with Indonesia in September and India in January. EU industry groups including BusinessEurope and the European Services Forum welcomed the deal."Australia's resources potential is still far from being fully tapped by us," said Volker Treier, head of foreign trade at the German Chamber of Industry and Commerce.Australian tariffs will drop to zero from day one ‌for European fruit, vegetables ‌and chocolates, and over three years for cheeses. The ⁠EU will remove tariffs for many agricultural products but will maintain quotas for some key exports.For beef — ⁠a major sticking point that derailed talks in 2023 — ⁠the EU will open two tariff-rate quotas totalling 30,600 metric tons, with about 55% of that volume entering duty-free.French farmers, who have protested against increased beef imports expected under the EU-Mercosur deal, voiced concern. France's National Bovine Federation said von der Leyen was continuing to undermine the beef industry. Hamish McIntyre, president of the National Farmers Federation in Australia, said Australian farmers were "extremely disappointed that negotiations for a free trade deal with the European Union have concluded without commercially meaningful ​agricultural market access gains since Australia last walked away from negotiations." 

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese shakes hands with Canada's Prime Minister Mark Carney at the Australian Parliament House, in Canberra, Australia, Thursday. (Reuters)
International

Australia, Canada sign new deals on critical minerals

Australia and Canada ​said Thursday they had ‌signed new agreements on critical minerals as Canadian Prime Minister ‌Mark Carney made ⁠a landmark ‌address to the Australian parliament, a ‌sign of the developing bond between the "middle powers".Carney is on a multi-leg trip ⁠across the Asia-Pacific region also taking in Japan and India. His stop in Australia included the first address to Australia's parliament by a Canadian leader since 2007."In a world of great power rivalry, middle powers have a choice: compete for favour or combine for strength," he told lawmakers.Introducing Carney in parliament, Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said his ​address represented the closeness of the ties between the two nations."Australia and Canada are middle powers in a world that is changing. We cannot change it back, ‌but we can back ourselves, back ⁠our citizens, and ​back each other," he said.Albanese told a press ​conference that Australia would join Canada's G7 critical minerals production alliance."We have agreed to deepen our relationship across several areas, building on our joint declaration of intent on critical minerals that we signed last year," he told a press conference.The G7 alliance is a Canada-led initiative to diversify and secure global critical minerals production and supply.Canada and Australia together produce about a third of global lithium and uranium, as well as more than 40% of global iron ore.Western ‌nations have been attempting ‌to diversify their supply chains away ⁠from China, which still controls the majority of production and processing of ⁠critical minerals, essential for semiconductors ⁠and defence applications.Canada believes that the best way to address the issue of concentrated supply of critical minerals is through a production alliance or a buyers' club rather than just a price floor, Energy and Mining Minister Tim Hodgson told Reuters on Tuesday.Australia has already allocated A$1.2bn ($850mn) to ​build a critical minerals stockpile, beginning with antimony, gallium and rare earths.That will now be more closely aligned with Canada's defence stockpiling regime that has a similar aim, Albanese said."There's a lot Canada and Australia can do together on critical minerals as producer nations," Australian Resources Minister Madeleine King told Reuters ahead of Carney's visit.Australia and Canada will also deepen cooperation in areas including defence and maritime security, trade and artificial intelligence, the ‌two leaders said. 

Yasir al-Rumayyan, Governor of Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund.
Business

Saudi wealth fund plans to more than double investments in Japan

Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund is looking to increase its investments in Japan to about $27bn by the end of 2030 as the kingdom looks to deepen ties in Asia and expand in areas from critical minerals to financial markets.The Public Investment Fund aims to deploy more capital after investing $11.5bn in Japan from 2019-2024, Governor Yasir al-Rumayyan said at the FII Priority Asia Summit in Tokyo Monday. He highlighted spending in public and private markets and predicted recently-launched exchange traded funds between Saudi Arabia and Japan will “go further”.“Asia is big for us. We want to have better ties, better relationships, better procurement process, access to the supply chain,” al-Rumayyan said. “Japan at some stage was one of the largest partners for Saudi Arabia and we want to get that back.”Japan is Saudi Arabia’s third-largest trading partner at present. The sovereign wealth fund expects its investments in the country to contribute as much as $16.6bn to Saudi Arabia’s gross domestic product, al-Rumayyan said. He also hopes to see more return investment to the kingdom in areas including travel and tourism.Those sectors are among six areas of priority for the $1tn PIF under its 2026-2030 investment strategy, which is set to be unveiled early next year. The board has approved that plan and will be hammering out details over the next few days at a summit on the Red Sea in Saudi Arabia, al-Rumayyan said.The comments suggest Japan will remain a priority for PIF global investment as the fund seeks to increase its annual deployment of capital to $70bn after this year. It allocated nearly $57bn across priority sectors in 2024.Saudi Arabia has been leaning more heavily into its relationships with Asian nations in recent years as it seeks to draw more foreign partners to help advance the country’s multi-trillion dollar Vision 2030 economic transformation programme.There’s been a strong emphasis on the financial sector, with multiple ETFs launched in markets including mainland China, Hong Kong and Japan to track Saudi assets over the last two years. Asian banks have emerged as major financiers for Saudi entities. In energy, Saudi Arabia is working with Japan on developing the market for blue ammonia.Additionally, the kingdom is developing Dragon Ball and anime theme parks at its Qiddiya mega entertainment city on the outskirts of Riyadh in partnership with Japan. The FII Tokyo conference held on November 30-December 1 was the second FII event ever held in Asia. 

Gulf Times
International

Japan-US talks aim to strengthen cooperation in defense and economic fields

Japan's new Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi and US President Donald Trump affirmed at their summit in Tokyo to bolster cooperation on defense and the economy.On the security front, Takaichi and Trump are likely to have confirmed the importance of reinforcing the alliance's deterrence and response capabilities amid growing challenges posed by China and North Korea, while Washington is calling for allies to spend more on defense, Japan news agency (Kyodo) reported.Takaichi and Trump signed documents, including one on cooperation to secure and supply critical minerals, including rare earths, in an effort to enhance economic security, according to Kyodo.Takaichi described the Japan-US alliance as "the greatest alliance in the world."She is expected to stress her plan, pledged in her parliamentary speech last week, to increase Japan's defense spending to 2 percent of gross domestic product by March, two years ahead of the previously set goal of fiscal 2027, Kyodo added.Japan has been raising its defense budget significantly since the fiscal 2027 target was set when the government in late 2022 revised its long-term National Security Strategy, which Takaichi has vowed to update next year.The two sides are also expected to have affirmed the steady implementation of a trade agreement struck in July, which includes a Japanese commitment to invest $550 billion in key US industries such as semiconductors, critical minerals and shipbuilding as well as increased purchases by Japan of US agricultural and other products.Based on the bilateral deal, Trump lowered US tariffs on goods from Japan, reducing the levy on automobiles to 15 percent from the previous rate of 27.5 percent.Trump is scheduled to meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Seoul next Thursday, the next stop on his Asian tour.

Gulf Times
International

US President and Japanese Prime Minister sign deal to secure rare earth supplies

US President Donald Trump, currently visiting Tokyo, and Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi signed an agreement on Tuesday to secure supplies of rare earth minerals.A White House statement indicated that Trump and Takaichi signed a joint agreement during their meeting aimed at securing supplies of rare earth minerals and critical minerals.Kyodo News Agency reported that Takaichi and Trump agreed to continue working to develop bilateral relations between the two countries in various fields.Takaichi, who became Japan's first female prime minister last week, pledged to build a new "golden age" for the Japan-US alliance, while praising Trump's role in promoting peace in the Middle East.