That comes after nearly two weeks of intensified talks to
salvage free trade between the 27-nation European Union and
Britain from 2021. The negotiations are in a final stretch aimed
at sealing a new trade agreement by Nov. 15.
"We have not yet found a solution on fisheries," a spokesman for
the European Commission told a regular news briefing in
Brussels. "We are not there yet, a lot more work remains to be
done."
One source, an EU diplomat following Brexit, said disagreements
persisted over the divvying up of fish stocks, including
Britain's demand for annual quota negotiations.
"That's where we are stuck. They haven't moved beyond these
items on fisheries," said the person, speaking on condition of
anonymity.
A British source also said there had not been much movement on
fisheries.
Britain left the EU in January and the estranged allies have
since been locked in complex negotiations to try to agree a free
trade deal for when a status-quo transition period ends on Dec.
31.
Ireland's Foreign Minister said separately on Tuesday he still
believed the EU would get a deal with Britain, but added it
might be too difficult to do in time to put it in place from the
start of 2021.
Three EU diplomats also said the bloc's Brexit negotiator,
Michel Barnier, was due to debrief the 27 national envoys to
Brussels on the latest in the talks at a meeting starting at
1330 GMT on Wednesday.
The EU diplomats also expected Barnier to announce good progress
on agreeing a joint legal text of a future agreement with
Britain on other elements, including social security.
The Brussels-based Commission also told the daily briefing it
could escalate its legal dispute with Britain over its new draft
law that would violate London's earlier divorce settlement with
the bloc.
(Reporting by Gabriela Baczynska, Jan Strupczewski, John
Chalmers in Brussels and Elizabeth Piper in London, Writing by
Gabriela Baczynska; Editing by Alex Richardson)
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