The Member for Mallee expresses strong reservations in  regard to the recommendation to take binding action on the Australia-Chile Free  Trade Agreement at this stage.  However,  recognising the majority position of the Committee he is at least grateful for  the cooperation of the Committee in the inclusion of recommendation 3 & 4  of the report and wishes the following supplementary statement to be given due  regard by the Government in the need for such recommendations. 
                             
                            Opposition to this Free Trade Agreement with Chile has a lot  to do with its timing and its potential damage to the horticultural industries  of regional Australia.  This Australia-Chile agreement has been processed hastily and the interests of  an important commodity sector ignored as a result. 
                             
                            The signing of an Australia-Chile FTA has the potential to  force fast tracked negotiation for phytosanitary access for fresh Chilean  horticultural produce into Australia  (particularly table grapes). Australian horticulturists have to spend an  enormous amount of time arguing their case against every instance where another  Nation seeks to have their phytosanitary requirements relaxed. 
                               
                            Indeed, the submission by Horticultural Australia expresses  this concern.   ‘It is the firm  expectation of the Australian Horticulture Industry that signing of the  Australia-Chile FTA will bring considerable pressure for Australia and Chile to  negotiate and subsequently grant phytosanitary access for Chilean fresh  horticultural produce in Australia.  This view is supported by direct advice  provided by the Chilean horticultural industry and traders.’ 
                             
                            The context of this issue is covered in article 6 of the  text of the agreement but there is a distinct difference in the text to other  FTA’s.  In regard to phytosanitary  consultations, all this text requests are the identification of contacts.  In this context under article 6.5 (1) the SPS  contacts shall be - 
                            In the case of Australia,  the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries andForestry, or its successor; and
 
                            - In the case of Chile,  the General Directorate of International Economic
 Affairs, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, or  its successor.
  
                            Whereas, for example in the text of the Australia – US  FTA the parties establish a Committee on Sanitary and Phytosanitary matters.  The writer considers this difference to be a significant weakness in the  capacity for transparency in the Australia Chile FTA because it constrains the  exchange of significant information to the bureaucracy and the writer considers  this a vital omission in the capacity to keep domestic horticultural players in  the information loop and lessens their confidence in the transparency of the  process. This omission is obviously as a result of the hast in which the  agreement was prepared and the lack of consultation identified in evidence. 
                               
                            All our fruit industries, table grapes, apples and pears,  summerfruit, cherries, strawberries, blueberries, avocados, prunes, dried  grapes, citrus, kiwifruit, fresh berries and currants, would be impacted  adversely by accidental introduction of pests and diseases currently not in  Australia. 
                             
                            It is a regional development issue. These industries have  6700 growers and a gross value product of $1.5 billion and a significant  proportion is generated in the Federal Division of Mallee along the Murray Valley.  They have to prosper in our regions if farming communities are to remain  strong. Our horticulturists have all become tremendously efficient in very  competitive world markets, but it is doubtful they could hold out against the  cheap labour available in Nations such as Chile. 
    
                            The Australian table grape industry has about 1200 growers,  a gross value product of $300 million, and employs 12,000 at the peak of harvest. 
                             
                            Last harvest, Australia produced 100,000 tonnes  of table grapes. In contrast, Chile  produces a million tonnes of the same varieties. We are in direct competition  in international markets and that also has an impact. Chile exported  435,000 tonnes to the United    States alone last year, mainly from December  to April during Australia’s  peak production time. It is clear that Chile will try and seek a tentative  placement of this fruit next harvest in the light of global financial  uncertainty and the economic hardship currently being experienced in the US. 
                            This will occur in a period of depleted Australian domestic  supply reduced by severe irrigation water shortages.  Chilean exporters will be flooded with  requests from Australian fresh fruit importers wanting to satisfy Australian  domestic demand because of reduced supply due to the drought. 
                             
                            Summerfruit, comprised of peaches, plums and nectarines, are  mainly grown in the Swan Hill region and in New South Wales. There are about 1500  growers. The industry has a gross value product of $300 million and employment  peak season of about 10,000 workers (6000 in the Swan Hill area alone). 
                             
                            Of great concern to our summerfruit growers is plum pox,  which is said to be spreading through Chile and other countries, but not  found in Australia.  The impact of exotic diseases was epitomized  when citrus canker infected parts of Queensland  recently. Such a disaster must be prevented in Australia’s fast growing stonefruit  industry. 
                             
                            Chile  is a powerhouse of production and the cost of labour in Chile is  extremely cheap (as low as 40% cheaper than Australia) compared to Australia where  70% of our cost of production is labour. Our seasons are the same and Chile could  flood our domestic fresh fruit markets with significant impacts on Australian  horticulturalists already devastated by water shortages. Horticultural free  trade with Chile  will be very much in Chile’s  favour, and Chilean fruit could take up to 40 per cent of Australian domestic  market share, and eventually render local production unsustainable because Chile can sell  at prices well below the Australian cost of production. 
                             
                            If more consultation had occurred in the development stage  of the Australia-Chile FTA, the horticultural industry sectors would have  suggested a number of more lucrative markets for Australia to target in the National  interest. 
                            The writer supports FTA’s with counter seasonal countries  like China,  Japan,  Korea,  Indonesia,  India,  South East Asian nations, and the Gulf nations of Bahrain, Kuwait Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia  and the United Arab Emirates. 
                            Australia  needs to spend more, not less, on accessing these worthwhile markets for  horticultural exports. 
                            Chile  is not a major trading partner for Australia, and industry is cynical  about all this effort being made to secure a FTA which has minimal benefits for  Australian horticulture.  Finance, mining  and the services sector are beneficiaries but this is occurring anyway.  This agreement is very much a one way affair  in the interests of Chile  in regard to horticulture. 
                             
                            The haste at which this agreement has been prepared has  shades of the late 1980’s and early 1990s, when Australia drastically reduced  tariffs on horticulture and the tariff on imported frozen orange juice  concentrate. In particular the world’s biggest producer of frozen concentrate  of orange juice, Brazil,  retained its own 30 per cent tariff but flooded the virtually unprotected  Australian domestic market – our fresh and concentrated juice market, and our  growers of Valencia  oranges have never recovered and have virtually disappeared as a result. 
                             
                            That is not fair trade. The knock-on effect was that our  citrus industry was forced into enormous restructure with few resources and  insignificant Government support. In many cases, growers just walked away. It  was ironic that Brazil  was using FCOJ technology developed by Australia to help maximise returns  to Australian citrus growers.   
                               
                              There are times when we have to examine reality and make  decisions on how our Nation moves forward, especially in primary production. 
                               
                              In the light of this, it is essential that our Government  agencies, as a priority, negotiate and finalise free trade agreements with our  principal trading partners, China,  Japan,  Korea,  Malaysia  and increasingly, India.  Horticulture is owed this much at least. 
                               
                              This must be done as a matter of urgency in the National  interest before expending valuable resources on one-sided trade agreements with  Nations where there will be a detrimental impact on so many good Australian  farming families. 
                               
                              It appears to the writer that the government has cynically  agreed to sign and make itself look better in the face of its DOHA failure and not given due regard to  domestic horticulture. The timing is completely cynical when all these  industries are already on their knees due to drought and poor commodity  prices.  This FTA with Chile could  deliver a devastating blow to their already very low morale.  The timing of this FTA is all wrong and it  would be of little benefit to regional Australia. 
                               
                              Department witnesses acknowledged that there was no social  impact statement, and the Government has certainly given no indication that any  assistance will be given for these horticulturists if their domestic market is  suddenly flooded with fresh fruit from such a large producer as Chile. 
                               
                              The lack of a public cost benefit assessment and the lack of  industry consultation leads to the inclusion of recommendation 3 which has the  writer’s strong support for the consideration of any future FTA’s. 
                              In a regional development context, if the Government keeps  making decisions on trade and other matters so adverse to our Australian  horticulturists, there will soon be no-one in the regions capable of producing  food.  The preparation of social impact  statements are therefore vital and recommendation 3 is strongly supported. 
                               
                              In addition, any attempts by Chile to fast track phytosanitary  changes should be staunchly resisted. Chile has already indicated to  Biosecurity Australia  they would like the current protocol conditions requiring fumigation of table  grapes, to be relaxed (the fumigation is for the various exotic pests and  diseases in Chile  that Australia  does not have). Verbal advice amongst Chilean table grape growers indicates  that, at the commencement of this agreement, priority consideration will be requested  by them as they will argue strongly that the special status of an FTA warrants  such a consideration. 
                               
                              A review as recommended in recommendation 4, particularly in  regard to phytosanitary issues, is vital to ensure Australia’s National interests are  protected. 
                              Whilst the writer prefers that this agreement not be  ratified at this stage, he does argue strongly that the advice contained in  recommendations 3 and 4 be strongly supported by the Government.
                               
                            
                            John Forrest 
                              Member for Mallee 
                          15   October, 2008  |