CANBERRA, Dec. 13 (Xinhua) -- Australian Prime
Minister John Howard announced that Australia and Japan will start negotiations
on a free trade agreement (FTA) early next year, according to local media
reports Wednesday.
Howard made the announcement after finalizing details
with his Japanese counterpart Shinzoouth Abe during a phone call Tuesday night.
"Next year negotiations for a free trade agreement
between Australia and Japan will commence," Howard told reporters in Sydney,
Australia's largest city.
He said no deadline had been set to conclude the
deal, which must consider Japan's long standing sensitivity to agricultural
imports.
"We have agreed that everything will be on the table,
including agriculture," he said, adding "we recognize that (agriculture) is very
sensitive to the Japanese."
Japan is highly sensitive to Australian calls to open
up its protected farm sector which features tariffs of 360 percent on butter,
218 percent on slim milk, 777 percent on rice and 251 percent on wheat, the
reports said.
Australia has predicted the FTA could add as much as
40 billion Australian dollars (3.1 billion U.S. dollars) to the gross domestic
product.
Meanwhile, the deal will bring the possibility of
Japan's easier access to Australia's vast energy supplies, most notably uranium.
Japan is Australia's largest trading partner, with
two-way goods and services trade worth 53.9 billion Australian dollars (42
billion U.S. dollars) in 2005-2006 financial year.