Affordable Air & Sea Freight Services Pty Ltd

Affordable Air & Sea Freight Services Pty Ltd We provide simple, affordable, and fast customs clearance services across Australia.

Our expertise includes Air Freight, Sea Freight, Parcel Post, and E-commerce clearance for online sellers and importers We provide simple affordable fast customs clearance services Australia wide. Our service including Air Freight, Sea freight, Parcel post customs clearance.

✈️🚢📦 Welcome to Affordable Air & Sea Freight Services Pty Ltd!We are your trusted customs clearance experts for:Air Frei...
17/07/2025

✈️🚢📦 Welcome to Affordable Air & Sea Freight Services Pty Ltd!

We are your trusted customs clearance experts for:
Air Freight
Sea Freight
Parcel Post
E-commerce Clearance for Online Sellers

📞 Call us on 1300 454 580

📧 Email: [email protected]

🌐 Visit: aasfs.com.au


03/07/2025

✈️🚢📦 Welcome to Affordable Air & Sea Freight Services Pty Ltd!

We are your trusted customs clearance experts for:

Air Freight

Sea Freight

Parcel Post

E-commerce Clearance for Online Sellers

📞 Call us on 1300 454 580
📧 Email: [email protected]
🌐 Visit: aasfs.com.au

What You Need to Know
25/07/2022

What You Need to Know

Export Air Freight ProceduresInternational Forwarders and Customs Brokers Association of Australia (IFCBAA) in partnersh...
23/07/2022

Export Air Freight Procedures
International Forwarders and Customs Brokers Association of Australia (IFCBAA) in partnership with My Freight Career (MFC), offer an industry online training and assessment course in international freight forwarding export air freight procedures, designed to give new and existing employees to the freight forwarding industry an overall view of export air procedures
This course will provide knowledge of:

The Supply Chain
Export Air Freight Forwarding Procedures
Legislation & Regulations
Documentation
Airline & Airport Codes
Air Freight Services
Aircraft Equipment & Loading
Incoterms 2020
Charging & Rates
Packaging & Labelling

The course is delivered in an online format via MFCs online learning platform Cloud Assess, which can be accessed by the student at any time that best suits their needs. All of the training and assessment the student will complete in their own time and at their own pace. This is a self-paced, self-study program and means the student will not attend scheduled training sessions. The student can determine when and where they complete the course training requirements.

Who should complete this course?

This course has been designed for any person currently working in or those wishing to enter the freight forwarding industry. This course will provide the student with the valuable tools and understanding of export air freight procedures.

The course also meets Minimum Staff Requirement competency standards of IATA in regard to services and handling functions, prescribed under IATA Resolution 809, Section 2.1

For more information or to make a booking please contact DG Training Administrator Claire Gilmour [email protected] or (02) 9587 1986

NSW CPD Forum 6 August 2022 Register for the IFCBAA NSW CPD Forum being held at Novotel, Sydney Airport, Wolli Creek, NS...
23/07/2022

NSW CPD Forum 6 August 2022

Register for the IFCBAA NSW CPD Forum being held at Novotel, Sydney Airport, Wolli Creek, NSW on
Saturday 6th August 2022.

The 2022 NSW CPD Forum will deliver to members and the wider industry an informative and educational day of presentations from regulators and respected industry professionals on issues that will assist members in their daily business activities and professional careers

Emilia Customer Service
09/06/2022

Emilia Customer Service

23/08/2018

Australia's Illegal Logging Laws and information for the importer, From 1st Jan 2018 Non-compliance get penalties

12/07/2018

GST on low value imported goods
From 1 July 2018, goods with a customs value of AUD1000 or less (low value goods) may attract the Goods and Services Tax (GST) at the point of sale if imported from overseas by consumers in Australia.

There will be no changes to:

the AUD1000 threshold for reporting and collection of duties and taxes at the border
border clearance processes
the flow of goods across borders
current import requirements for to***co, to***co products or alcoholic beverages.
Businesses with sales (subject to Australian GST) of AUD75000 or more to consumers in Australia within a 12 month period, will need to register with the Australian Taxation Office (ATO), collect GST at the point of sale and remit that GST to the ATO.

This includes businesses that are:

merchants who sell goods to consumers
electronic distribution platform operators
re-deliverers
There are rules that determine which businesses will need to register for, and charge GST. Further information on GST registration for non-residents of Australia is available from the ATO website.

The ATO is communicating, educating and assisting affected businesses to comply with the measure and ensuring specific information is available for transporters and customs brokers; consumers; and businesses all of which may be impacted by these changes.

Further information about GST on low value goods is available on the ATO website and also available in Chinese.

04/05/2018

For All Importers and All Freight forwarders

12-2018 - Reminder of Packing Declaration Requirement Changes
2 February 2018

Who does this notice affect?
Clients who assess consignment specific and annual packing declarations under a Class 19.1 Approved Arrangement and clients who lodge packing declarations to the department for assessment.

Reminder information
Industry Advice Notice 101 - 2017 detailed the implementation of the revised Minimum Documentary and Import Declaration Requirements Policy and the Non Commodity Information Requirements Policy.

The notice also provided details about the revised consignment specific and annual packing declarations that were implemented on 20 November 2017.

The department reminds clients that all consignments of containerised goods subject to non-commodity reporting requirements shipped on or after 1 July 2018, must be accompanied by a packing declaration that meets the revised requirements.

Updated templates are available on the Acceptable documentation templates webpage.

Further Information
If you require further information please contact Compliance Assessment and Management.

Insight - India’s growing thirst for wineBy Mark Morley, Trade Commissioner, Austrade India and Pakistan, and Bhavin Kad...
03/04/2018

Insight - India’s growing thirst for wine
By Mark Morley, Trade Commissioner, Austrade India and Pakistan, and Bhavin Kadakia, Business Development Manager Food & Beverage, Austrade India

In a country with a billion-plus population and 485 million people above the legal drinking age, India is a market with many opportunities for Australia’s winemakers.

The wine sector in India is a market to watch in the medium to longer term. Exposure to new cultures, growth in foreign tourists, overseas education, and a rapidly changing demography are driving wine consumption in the country.

With a young population, increasing urbanisation and the position of wine as a ‘status choice’, India has parallels with other Asian markets where there is a growing acceptance and preference for wine among the upper and middle classes. Wine sales are growing faster than spirits and beer in the country, according to the Indian Wine Insider 2017 report.

And it is India’s young people who are showing an interest in wine. With more than 19 million new consumers entering the legal drinking age every year[1], wine has grown in recent years by 16 per cent per annum, with sales of 32 million litres in 2016[2].

Fundamentally, wine is seen as a sophisticated and stylish drink compared to whisky, scotch and rum. With a preference for red wine over white, wines are making their way into functions, events and marriages, and are a particularly popular gift for status-conscious Indian consumers. Another distinguishing feature of the market is that women are the major buyers of wine in the country – primarily as gifts for other women.

Although traditionally and even today, whisky and rum continue to dominate alcohol consumption in India, the increasing availability of locally produced and imported wine over the last decade has spawned significant consumer interest in wine. – Economic Times of India, 15 March 2017

The Indian wine market
There are more than 300 wine importers in India and the number is growing every year[3]. India imported approximately 475,000 cases of wine in the Indian financial year (April 2016–March 2017)[4]. While there is a strong market for bottles priced below A$36, the high duties and taxes on imported wine mean importers are only prepared to pay a low FOB price – around A$2 to A$3.50 FOB per bottle.

India has its own domestic industry too, with Sula Vineyards, Indage and Grover Vineyards among the top Indian vineyards and wineries. Collectively, they have 90 per cent of the market and are perceived as ‘better value for money’.

However, trade data suggests that while France and Italy continue to be the top two overseas suppliers, wines from the ‘New World’ are growing. Australia is the third largest source of wine imports, and Chilean wines are starting to pe*****te the Indian market in the entry-level segment with strong competition likely at the lower end in coming years.

According to Wine Australia, for the year ending December 2017, Australian wine exports to India grew in volume and value by 48 per cent and 51 per cent respectively. However, this is coming from a fairly low base – 1.5ML with an FOB value of A$5.3 million. There are over 40 Australian wine companies in India including established brands like Penfolds, Lindemans, Westend Estate, AVL, D’Arenberg, Jacob’s Creek, De Bortoli, McWilliams and Wines by Geoff Hardy.

In a market where makers and sellers have long been challenged, Jacob’s Creek has maintained a steady leading position over the last five years. It is the most imported wine brand in India, followed by Moët & Chandon, Sauvignon, Dom Pérignon and Carlo Rossi.

While Mumbai is India’s largest wine consumption market, Delhi has a higher consumption of international wines over domestic wines, coupled with a higher propensity for wine spending than Mumbai.

Bangalore and Pune are vibrant markets for both domestic and international wines. Consumers in these two cities have high awareness and consumption of various wine styles, and a willingness to pay higher price points, pointing to a rapidly emerging wine culture.

Consumers from Goa, on the other hand, prefer drinking wines largely at home, and have a high prevalence of inexpensive Indian wines in their portfolio.

Market barriers
Alcohol sales have been problematic for state governments in India for some time. Alcohol is banned in Gujarat, Bihar, Nagaland and Lakshadweep, with additional restrictions in many other states.

Each state government controls the taxation, distribution and sale of alcohol. Brand/label registration is mandatory for the brand to be sold in the respective states/regions. Separate licences are required to produce, bottle, store and sell all liquor products.

Alcohol advertisements are also banned, making it hard for companies to promote their brand directly.

Australian winemakers should note the customs duty on wine is 150 per cent on cost, insurance and freight (CIF). Thus, the final cost to the consumer would be around 9 to 11 times of FOB in Mumbai, around 7 to 8.5 times of FOB in Delhi and around 6 to 7 times of FOB in Bangalore.

The hospitality sector (hotels, restaurants, catering, clubs and pubs) has a larger market share than the organised retail sector, as the Indian Government allows hotels to import alcohol duty-free (equivalent to 5 per cent of the average foreign exchange earned). This means much of the imported alcohol consumed in India is in five-star hotels in major cities.

Opportunities for Australian winemakers
The growing Indian wine market offers Australian winemakers a longer-term opportunity to engage at a mid-tier price level. Growth factors including the rising middle class, a trend towards wine rather than spirits, and the status associated with wine, mean the market is on a strong trajectory, regardless of the significant tariff and non-tariff barriers to entry in the market.

In a boon for Australian winemakers, the South Australian Government has launched a two-year wine education program in Mumbai and Delhi to raise the profile of and position South Australia in the premium and ultra-premium wine segment. This will have flow-on effects for Australian wines generally.

Although Australian wineries shouldn’t compare the Indian wine market with China and expect similar growth patterns in the shorter term, India is a stable and longer-term opportunity for Australian wine.

Austrade is hosting a free wine webinar for Australian wine companies on 17 May. Get in touch with Austrade India to sign up.

Austrade India has offices across north, west and south India, and three major offices in Chennai, Mumbai and Delhi. With 11 full-time staff looking after Australian food and beverage in the region, we are well placed to assist you in expanding your export to South Asia and beyond.

If you’re in the Australian wine industry, we can assist in pulling together a market overview for you and your team, match you with relevant importers, distributors and retailers, and prepare you to enter the Indian market.

Contact Mark Morley, Bhavin Kadakia or Yaser Siddiqui at Austrade India for more information.

______________________________
[1] http://www.livemint.com/Leisure/QjzklkTjqYpe7tr74PVSuI/Whisky-business.html
[2] Euromonitor, Wine in India, August 2017
[3] http://www.exportgenius.in/blog/wine-import-in-india-data-analysis-of-indian-wine-market-of-q2-2017-84.php [4] http://www.indianwineacademy.com/item_4_737.aspx

India consumes 48% of the world’s whisky. It is the fastest-growing market and the largest producer of the spirit. But what exactly are we making and drinking?

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Liverpool, NSW
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