![Trade Minister Don Farrell will travel to Beijing in coming weeks in a bid to ease tensions. (Mick Tsikas/AAP PHOTOS) Trade Minister Don Farrell will travel to Beijing in coming weeks in a bid to ease tensions. (Mick Tsikas/AAP PHOTOS)](/images/transform/v1/crop/frm/silverstone-feed-data/92ff21df-4ab6-4116-a560-723ec4b60cb0.jpg/r0_0_800_600_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg)
High-level Australian officials have met their Chinese counterparts in Beijing to discuss ongoing trade sanctions worth billions of dollars in the latest sign of a diplomatic thaw.
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Beijing has imposed unofficial sanctions on Australian products, including wine, barley and meat.
Trade Minister Don Farrell says things are going well but it will take time for the situation to improve.
"It will take some time to turn this ship around and we're working very hard on it," he told Sky News on Tuesday.
But there are complications around the trade impediments because of the unofficial nature of the sanctions.
"Each product is different. Some relate to tariffs, some relate to regulatory rules that apply," Senator Farrell said.
The talks pave the way for Senator Farrell to travel to Beijing in coming weeks as Australia awaits a major breakthrough in the trade dispute.
The trade minister accepted an invitation to travel to China from his Chinese counterpart when they met virtually last month but no date has been set.
"We're not far away. The discussions are going well," Senator Farrell said.
"I don't want to pre-empt how they might finish but all the messages that are coming back to me from China are very, very positive."
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese could travel to China in October or November to mark the 50th anniversary of Gough Whitlam's visit, the South China Morning Post has reported.
Mr Whitlam was the first Australian prime minister to visit China, having previously led a Labor delegation to the country in 1971 as opposition leader when the McMahon government was refusing to open diplomatic ties.
The trade officials' meeting comes days after Assistant Trade Minister Tim Ayres returned from China, where he met his counterpart, commerce vice-minister Wang Shouwen.
Senator Ayres advocated at the meeting for a "timely and full resumption of trade" with China which he said was in the interests of both countries.
Australian coal shipments to China have started to pick up in recent months.
Senator Ayres said Australia was on the path to a more stable relationship but wanted to see more progress.
"I always count success in these things in terms of the number of container loads that are delivered into Chinese ports, not the actual outcomes of discussions," he said.
Beijing and Canberra have also received the World Trade Organisation's report on Australia's complaint about Chinese barley tariffs.
Both parties have three weeks to settle the dispute before the report is issued to all WTO members.
China has continuously said Australia needed to express goodwill and drop the WTO complaint to bolster the relationship.
Australia has expressed a willingness to drop the case but wants tangible movement on trade impediments before doing so.
Australian Associated Press