Townsville exporters brace for tariff surge in 2025Updated
Global trade tensions threaten local businesses with higher costs and supply chain disruptions as negotiations stall.
Global trade tensions threaten local businesses with higher costs and supply chain disruptions as negotiations stall.

Townsville's trading floors and port precincts are bracing for a bruising 2026. The city's export-dependent businesses—from mining logistics operators along Ross Creek to agribusiness hubs in Garbutt—are confronting a perfect storm of trade barriers, geopolitical friction, and eroding market predictability that threatens to reshape the local economy.
The blockade on long-term renewal of major North American trade arrangements has sent shockwaves through businesses reliant on that market. For Townsville firms exporting minerals, agricultural products, and manufactured goods to the US and Canada, the uncertainty is paralyzing. "We're looking at potentially 15 to 20 percent tariff increases on key commodity lines," says a spokesperson from the Townsville Chamber of Commerce, reflecting widespread anxiety across the Flinders Street business district.
Port of Townsville authorities report that container throughput forecasts for 2026 have been revised downward by roughly 8 percent compared to early projections—a figure that ripples through the entire supply chain. Companies operating from the industrial precincts near Black Soil Creek are already trimming inventory purchases and delaying capital investments.
Beyond tariffs, deeper geopolitical fractures are fragmenting markets. Escalating tensions between major powers, including unresolved conflicts in Eastern Europe and the Middle East, have made shipping routes costlier and less predictable. Insurance premiums for cargo transiting sensitive regions have jumped by 12 to 18 percent since January, according to maritime logistics operators interviewed by The Daily Townsville.
The erosion of multilateral trade frameworks compounds the challenge. Without functioning global dispute mechanisms, businesses face a patchwork of bilateral arrangements—each requiring separate compliance protocols, documentation, and risk assessments. For mid-sized Townsville exporters, the administrative burden is straining already-stretched compliance teams.
Currency volatility has further narrowed margins. The Australian dollar's fluctuations against major trading partners have made price forecasting nearly impossible. Businesses that locked in contracts three months ago are now absorbing losses on hedging exposure.
Local stakeholders aren't entirely pessimistic, however. Some see opportunity in "friendshoring"—diversifying away from geopolitically contested regions toward more stable trading partners. Townsville's proximity to Indo-Pacific markets positions the city advantageously, if businesses can navigate the transition.
For now, though, warehouses around Bohle are quieter than usual, and the optimism that typically accompanies mid-year planning cycles has given way to cautious retrenchment. 2026, it appears, will test whether Townsville's trading economy can adapt faster than its competitors elsewhere.
This article was compiled by AI and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.
About this article
Published by The Daily Townsville
Spread the word
Newsletter