What products are the sides really wanting to trade? Are they after our dirt?
Seems so. I found this article from DFAT much more informative: dfat.gov.au/…/australia-european-union-fta-fact-s…
Comment on Australian producers to keep prosecco, feta and parmesan as European Union trade deal doomed
Nath@aussie.zone 1 year ago
I frankly don’t care whether they rename drinks and cheeses because Europeans hate that their stuff is inferior to local products. Well, except Feta - the Greek stuff is amazing.
In general, we’ll happily keep buying the same brands we already buy and it’ll mean diddly squat for sales of imports.
I’m not sure what the real sticking point of a trade deal is, it probably has something to do with politics. I’m not even sure why we want a trade deal - the EU is very far away, and if we’re talking food, that’s a lot of transport carbon to offset in with direction
What products are the sides really wanting to trade? Are they after our dirt?
What products are the sides really wanting to trade? Are they after our dirt?
Seems so. I found this article from DFAT much more informative: dfat.gov.au/…/australia-european-union-fta-fact-s…
Well, except Feta - the Greek stuff is amazing.
You can buy Australian made “Greek style” Feta. Try this one: …com.au/…/organic-fetta-in-brine/
Oh I know. We don’t have that particular brand, but we have similar fetta of great calibre. My point was more that the locally produced fetta isn’t superior than the Greek stuff. The same goes for Parmesan: some of the imported parmesan holds its own against Australian-made cheeses.
But I’ve never had a European prosecco that was as good as locally-produced product.
The brand I linked is sold nationwide - have you tried it? They have incredibly high quality milk, some of the best in the world, and they do a good job at the factory as well.
It sometimes feels like we are another country, but I promise that WA is still a part of Australia, and their own website says “no results found” when searching for a place to buy the Feta here.
CalamityJoe@aussie.zone 1 year ago
I also noticed the article seemed a little vague regarding ideal goals of an FTA between Australia and EU.
Seems like the EU mostly wanted Australia to agree to their geographical indicator rules (e.g. not allowed to use feta, Prosecco etc names) and for Australia to agree to much more ambitious climate action and sustainability targets.
So that kind of explains why they aren’t too fussed about reaching an agreement with Australia (plus Australia upset France by withdrawing from its submarine deal the way it did), whereas Australia had a lot more to gain.
But the EU being almost half a billion people vs our 26 million, we were never going to have very effective leverage I think.
sqgl@beehaw.org 1 year ago
Money talks. Maybe Albo will get serious about the climate now. Pissing in the pool is generally frowned upon.