Published: 11:22, April 4, 2025
Australian PM: Nowhere 'safe' after remote islands hit by US tariffs
By Xinhua
Australia’s Prime Minister Anthony Albanese speaks during a press conference at Parliament House in Canberra on March 28, 2025. (PHOTO / AFP)

CANBERRA - Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said that "nowhere on Earth is safe" after remote island territories belonging to Australia were singled out for new US tariffs.

Among countries and territories listed in US President Donald Trump's announcement of sweeping new tariffs in Washington on Wednesday local time were the Australian territories of the Heard and McDonald Islands, and Norfolk Island.

The Heard and McDonald Islands -- an uninhabited territory in the Indian Ocean, around 6,000 km southwest of Australian capital Canberra and some 1,500 km to the Antarctica -- was specified as being subject to Trump's baseline 10 percent tariffs.

ALSO READ: Australian PM labels US tariffs as 'not the act of a friend'

Norfolk Island -- about 1,900 km northeast of Canberra in the South Pacific Ocean with a population of about 2,000 -- was hit with a 29 percent tariff, which the US administration said was in response to a 58 percent tariff it faced from the island.

Responding to the tariffs on Thursday, Albanese said he was "not sure" why Norfolk Island had been singled out.

"I'm not quite sure that Norfolk Island, with respect to it, is a trade competitor with the giant economy of the United States," he said.

"But that just shows and exemplifies the fact that nowhere on earth is safe from this."

Authorities on Thursday night confirmed that Norfolk Island had no known exports to the US, with tourism its main industry.

"I've got no idea why Trump has given us a tariff," Leah Honeywood, Norfolk Island's Chief Magistrate, told the Australian Financial Review.

READ MORE: Australian PM says US trade targets are ‘not up for negotiation’

"If any export is done, it's been on a personal level. Our industry is tourism -- there's no industry that exports to the US," he added.

Norfolk Island has been an Australian territory since 1914 and the Heard and McDonald Islands since 1947.

Christmas Island, another Australian territory in the Indian Ocean near Indonesia with a population of about 1,600, was also singled out for a baseline 10 percent tariff, as was the nearby small archipelago of the Cocos, or Keeling, Islands, which has been an Australian territory since 1955.