Penny Wong to visit Japan, China and South Korea for energy security talks
The Facts
- Penny Wong said she will visit Japan, China and South Korea this week.
- Wong said the trip is focused on energy security and coordination in response to disruption caused by the Middle East conflict.
- During the China leg of the trip, Wong is scheduled to hold the eighth Australia-China Foreign and Strategic Dialogue with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi.
- China's foreign ministry said Wong will visit China from April 28 to April 30 at Wang Yi's invitation.
- In Japan, Wong said she plans to meet Foreign Minister Toshimitsu Motegi to discuss energy and fuel security and the Middle East conflict.
- In South Korea, Wong said she plans to meet Foreign Minister Cho Hyun, and she described South Korea as an important source of refined fuels for Australia.
- The trip has broader economic stakes for Australia because the country imports most of its fuel and officials have linked the Middle East conflict and Strait of Hormuz disruption to pressure on fuel supplies and energy markets in the Indo-Pacific.
- An unresolved factor surrounding the trip is whether the wider conflict affecting energy supplies will ease: multiple reports say a ceasefire between Washington and Tehran was continuing, but there was no agreement on ending the war.
Context
Why is Wong making this trip now?
Wong said the Middle East conflict and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz were disrupting global energy markets, with Asian refineries and the Indo-Pacific especially affected, and that in-person meetings would help countries coordinate on energy security Mirage News,West Australian.
What is planned for the China visit?
Wong is due in China from April 28 to 30 and is expected to meet Wang Yi for the eighth Australia-China Foreign and Strategic Dialogue, which she said would cover the full range of interests and management of differences 香港經濟日報 hket…,Jakarta Post.
Why does fuel security matter for Australia in this story?
Reuters and other outlets reported that Australia imports most of its fuel, while government statements said the current disruption has affected supplies of products such as diesel, petrol and fertiliser, making regional fuel access a practical concern for Australia ThePrint,Guardian.
View all 29 sources
Wire services (3)
Independent coverage (26)
About these frames
See this differently than someone you know would? Two ways to keep it going.
The dial works on any URL — paste an article you read elsewhere this week.