British envoy expects trade deal with Australia months after Brexit

Australian Trade Minister Simon Birmingham (left) and British International Trade Secretary Liz Truss hold a press conference in Parliament House in Canberra, Australia on Sept 18, 2019.

CANBERRA (AP) - Britain's top trade envoy said on Wednesday (Sept 18) that she expects to strike a free trade deal with Australia within months of leaving the European Union.

British International Trade Secretary Liz Truss met Australian Trade Minister Simon Birmingham to lay the foundations for a bilateral trade deal to follow Britain's departure from the EU in October.

Asked about the timeframe for such a deal, Truss told reporters: "I would definitely say months rather than years." Australia has taken years to negotiate each of its 15 bilateral and multi-lateral free trade deals, but Birmingham is keen to fast-track a new pact with Australia's former colonial master.

"We stand absolutely ready to work with the UK at the moment they are ready to do so," Birmingham said.

Britain is giving priority to negotiating trade deals with the United States, Japan, Australia and New Zealand. Britain is also considering joining the Trans-Pacific Partnership multi-nation trade bloc.

Britain has been part of Australia's negotiation on a free trade deal with the EU, which began in 2015.

In colonial times, distant Britain was Australia's most important trading partner. It provided 70 per cent of Australia's imports during the 19th century and bought 80 per cent of Australia's exports. Britain remains Australia's biggest export market within the EU.

Commonwealth countries including Australia and New Zealand felt abandoned in the 1970s when Britain joined the European Economic Community, the forerunner of the EU.

Birmingham said the trade relationship before Britain joined the European trade bloc framed the new trade discussions.

"If we held grudges over things that happened 40-plus years ago in relation to our trade or foreign policy or anywhere else, we'd never accomplish anything," Birmingham said.

Truss said Britain had been hampered from making trade deals outside the EU by increased regulation driven by Brussels.

"The UK trades more with the rest of the world than the EU and that is where a lot of the growing markets are," Truss said. "There is a big opportunity for us to do things differently and to use those new freedoms we have."

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