Senator WATT (Queensland—Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry and Minister for Emergency Management) (14:53): We know that the Liberals and Nationals are laughing on the inside and happy on the inside. They can't express their real happiness about good news for Australian agriculture, so they've got to bottle it up inside and feel a little bit cheerful. They're having a little chuckle to themselves about how good it is to have a Labor government back in charge, running agriculture policy in this country. Across Australia, one in four jobs relies on trade, so access to international markets is essential for the profitability of Australia's export focused— Senator McKenzie interjecting— The PRESIDENT: Senator McKenzie, silence, thank you. Senator WATT: Prior to the imposition of the antidumping and countervailing duties, China was Australia's largest barley export market at nearly $1 billion per year. But since the imposition of tariffs in 2020, which of course occurred under a coalition government, trade in barley with China has effectively ceased. Australian barley is known in China for being high quality and competitively priced, and the removal of duties allows for the re-establishment of these mutually beneficial, long-held relationships between the Australian barley industry and Chinese users. The PRESIDENT: Senator Pratt?