Back at the Brexit table, UK and EU try to land deal on fish
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[October 23, 2020]
By Alistair Smout and Andy Bruce
LONDON (Reuters) - Britain and the European
Union have made good progress in talks on a last-minute trade deal that
would stave off a tumultuous finale to the five-year-old Brexit crisis,
but fish is the biggest sticking point.
The United Kingdom left the EU in January but the two sides are trying
to clinch a deal that would govern nearly a trillion dollars in annual
trade before informal membership - known as the transition period - ends
on Dec. 31.
"We're in intense negotiations with the EU - we've made real progress,"
Trade Secretary Liz Truss said. "We're making good progress on the
negotiations."
"But if the EU aren't prepared to do a deal that allows the UK to retain
its sovereignty, then we will go to Australia style terms, and I think
that's perfectly reasonable."
After threats from Britain that it would undercut the 2020 divorce
treaty, and Johnson briefly broke off trade talks on Friday, the EU said
it was ready to talk about draft legal texts of a deal.
The chief negotiators of Britain and the European Union, Michel Barnier
and David Frost, meet on Friday for intensive negotiations.
After some progress on competition guarantees including state aid rules,
the hardest issue remains fish: Johnson has insisted on taking back
control over its waters while the EU wants access to the fishing waters.
Ireland's foreign minister said he believed Britain and the EU could
reach a trade deal now the talks were back on track, but added the
issues of fair competition and fisheries hampering an accord were "still
very much there".
"I think a deal can be done... What we have now, after all sorts of
politics being played, is a process that is back on track," Simon
Coveney said, adding, however, that both sides remained "miles apart" on
fishing.
SYMBOL OF SOVEREIGNTY
Asked if there would be a deal, Britain's junior finance minister
Stephen Barclay said he hoped there would be but fishing was a key
sticking point.
"(The) deal needs to reflect that fact that we're leaving the EU, we
will regain control of our fisheries," he told Sky.
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European Union's Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier wears a protective
face mask as he arrives at 1VS conference centre ahead of Brexit
negotiations in London, Britain October 23, 2020. REUTERS/Simon
Dawson
At a briefing with diplomats in Brussels on Wednesday, Barnier said
he was only worried about fish, one person who participated in the
closed-door meeting said.
"Fish is now the thing to tackle. The other elements seem doable,
more or less," the diplomat said.
While fishing alone contributed just 0.03% of British economic
output in 2019, it is an emotive subject as many Brexit supporters
see it as a symbol of the regained sovereignty that leaving the EU
should bring. Combined with fish and shellfish processing, then the
sector makes up 0.1% of UK GDP.
For French fishermen, British waters are crucial and being locked
out would cause trouble for French President Emmanuel Macron.
The United Kingdom first sought membership of the European Economic
Community (EEC) in 1961, but Charles de Gaulle vetoed Britain’s
accession in 1961 and 1967, accusing the British of “deep-seated
hostility” to the European project.
It eventually joined in 1973, but voted to leave by 52 to 48 percent
on June 23, 2016.
Britain and Japan formally signed a trade agreement on Friday,
marking the UK's first big post-Brexit deal on trade, as it
continues to struggle to agree on a deal with its closest trading
partners in the EU.
(Additional reporting by Padraic Halpin in Dublin, Editing by Guy
Faulconbridge, William Maclean)
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