EU chief says UK trade pact closer but success not certain
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[December 16, 2020]
By Francesco Guarascio and Gabriela Baczynska
BRUSSELS (Reuters) -Britain and the
European Union moved closer to sealing a new trade deal but it was still
not clear if they would succeed, the bloc's chief executive said on
Wednesday.
Britain and the EU are in the final stretch of talks to keep an
estimated one trillion dollars of annual trade free of tariffs and
quotas beyond Dec. 31, when the United Kingdom finally transitions out
of the world's largest trading bloc.
"I cannot tell you whether there will be a deal or not. But I can tell
you that there is a path to an agreement now. The path may be very
narrow but it is there," European Commission President Ursula von der
Leyen told the European Parliament.
Her relatively upbeat comments on the long-running Brexit crisis helped
nudge sterling upwards, though she said two issues were still not
solved.
"We have found a way forward on most issues but two issues still remain
outstanding: the level playing field and fisheries," she said. "Issues
linked to governance now have largely been resolved. The next days are
going to be decisive."
The level playing field refers to EU insistence that Britain does not
undercut it on environmental, labour and social standards, as well as
state aid, while governance covers the resolution of disputes.
Von der Leyen said discussions about access to UK fishing waters for EU
vessels were "still very difficult".
'AN OCEAN APART'
An EU official told Reuters the bloc had rejected Britain's offer of
phased access to its waters over three years by EU fishing vessels and
the sides were "an ocean apart" on the issue.
Von der Leyen said a "big step forward" had been agreed which would
"ensure that our common high labour, social and environmental standards
will not be undercut".
"Difficulties still remain on the question of how to really future-proof
fair competition," she said, in a reference to what EU sources described
as disagreements over defining and agreeing on ways to remedy
competitive distortions.
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European Commission President Ursula Von Der Leyen speaks during a
debate on next EU council and last Brexit development during a
plenary session at the European Parliament in Brussels, Belgium
November 25, 2020. Olivier Hoslet/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
Asked to comment on von der Leyen's remarks, a British official
said: "We've made some progress, but we are still very far apart in
key areas. Still not there."
Britain formally left the EU on Jan. 31 but has been in a transition
period since then under which rules on trade, travel and business
remain unchanged. It finally exits the bloc's single market and
customs union on Dec. 31.
The EU has said a deal could be finalised in as little as 48 hours
if Prime Minister Boris Johnson agrees to what the bloc says are
inevitable trade-offs for Britain to retain its current open access
to the EU market of 450 million consumers.
But Johnson's election manifesto focused on delivering Brexit by
"taking back control", or regaining sovereignty through a clean
break from EU rules. London has repeatedly said it will not seal a
deal that fails to deliver on that promise.
Failure to agree a deal would erect trade barriers between the EU
and Britain, snarl borders, send shockwaves through financial
markets and cause chaos in supply chains across Europe as it
struggles with COVID-19.
(Reporting by Francesco Guarascio, Marine Strauss, Gabriela
Baczynska, Writing by Robin Emmott and Gabriela Baczynska; Editing
by Giles Elgood)
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