As
Brexit completes on Dec. 31, Britain will leave the EU's single
market and customs union, meaning its current free trade
arrangements expire.
The two sides have for months been struggling to seal a new
agreement on everything from trade to transport to energy, with
the final stages of the talks coming as EU and other countries
have also suspended most travel to and from Britain to try to
curb a new strain of the coronavirus.
The EU's Brexit negotiator, Michel Barnier, was due to update
the bloc's 27 national envoys on Brexit at 1500 GMT on Tuesday,
and then speak to the European Parliament.
"It seems we are crossing the line," an EU diplomat said, adding
that an agreement was getting closer.
While EU officials and diplomats said cutting the value of the
bloc's catch in British waters by around 30% from 2021 would be
too high, the EU was willing to go as far as 25%.
The sources said the number was just one piece of the puzzle,
with the length of the transition period beyond Dec. 31, as well
as how the EU could retaliate if Britain cut its vessels out of
British waters, equally important.
The sources said a deal could come together this week, next
week, or not at all.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and British
Prime Minister Boris Johnson spoke on Brexit, as well as the
coronavirus, in a call on Monday, according to EU sources. More
calls would come as needed, the sources said.
Britain, the world's sixth-biggest economy, left the EU, a
trading bloc of 450 million consumers, last January. An
estimated trillion dollars worth of annual trade is at stake if
they fail to put in place a new accord by the end of the year.
A senior British minister on Tuesday ruled out prolonging
Britain's transition out of the EU beyond Dec. 31.
(Reporting by Gabriela Baczynska; Editing by Alison Williams,
Alex Richardson and Giles Elgood)
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