'It'll be carnage': British companies dread a Brexit border breakdown
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[October 26, 2020]
By Kate Holton
SEVINGTON, England (Reuters) - Deal or no
deal, British companies will have to confront a wall of bureaucracy that
threatens chaos at the border if they want to sell into the world's
biggest trading bloc when life after Brexit begins on January 1.
When Britain casts off from the European Union, firms that drive nearly
$1 trillion in annual trade will have to navigate myriad new rules and
red tape that will increase costs just as COVID-19 bleeds the economies
of the West.
Outside the EU single market where trade flows freely, Britain's
exporters will have to complete a raft of paperwork including customs
and safety declarations and navigate multiple IT systems to gain entry
to Europe.
But with a matter of weeks to go, companies used to trading as easily to
Berlin as to Birmingham are yet to see the new IT systems.
Customs brokers have not been trained, operators do not know what
information is required nor how the rules will be enforced.
Many have predicted chaos. Even the government has said 7,000 trucks
could be held in 100-km queues in Kent, south-east England, if companies
do not prepare.
"It's going to be carnage," Tony Shally, managing director of freight
specialist Espace Europe, told Reuters. "We'll be fire-fighting from the
1st of January."
The current row over whether Britain leaves the EU with or without a
deal has helped mask the fact that the deal on offer represents the
biggest change to UK trade since the formation of the single market in
1993.
Outside the bloc, companies will have to complete paperwork and submit
goods for random checks to cross borders, increasing both the cost and
time it takes to do business.
In 2019 Britain, the world's sixth-largest economy, imported EU goods
worth 253 billion pounds ($331 billion) and exported 138 billion
pounds-worth to the bloc, when removing goods like oil and gold which
distort trade flows.
To keep goods moving after Brexit, the government has published a new
271-page Border Operating Model, covering everything from the trade of
rough diamonds to molluscs, chemicals and cultural goods.
A step-by-step guide on one of the main customs clearance sites gives a
flavour of what traders can expect.
Points 12 to 15 state that "A Movement Reference Number" is generated by
a "Transit Accompanying Document" and "Exit Summary Declaration", and
should be lodged with the "Goods Vehicle Movement Service".
This then generates a "Goods Movement Reference" which is given to the
driver, before a "Kent Access Permit" is secured to enter the county of
Kent. Point 16 notes that anyone arriving in France without the correct
documents could be sent back.
Customs brokers say the cost of paperwork could exceed the cost of
moving small consignments. Completing a typical export declaration can
require more than 50 pieces of information on transport, commodity codes
and value.
The logistics industry estimates an additional 215 million customs
declarations will need to be filled in each year after Brexit.
'HOW DO YOU TEST THE SYSTEM?'
While disruption is expected in early 2021, British companies could be
ousted from the complex manufacturing supply chains which stretch across
Europe if that persists.
Customs adviser Anna Jerzewska said every potential delay adds up when
trying to predict delivery times for operators of trucks and their
drivers, known as hauliers in Britain.
"If you can get your goods elsewhere, why would you not?" she asked.
"Why would you continue trading with the UK if you can get something for
the same price elsewhere without the hassle and the uncertainty."
Richard Burnett, head of Britain's Road Haulage Association (RHA), said
industry faced a colossal challenge, with even some large companies in
Britain and Europe not yet prepared.
One senior director at a big British supermarket said he did not know
whether he could keep his trucks rolling. "If it's fresh food, if you
lose a day and you lose the sequence, the whole thing falls over," he
said, declining to be named.
The RHA's Burnett warned that many European drivers would simply stop
coming to Britain if they risk sitting for days in queues. With
European-registered trucks making the vast majority of EU-UK crossings,
that would hit capacity and prices.
"There is an enormous amount of work still to do," he told Reuters. "But
how do you test the systems, and train people on them, when we haven't
seen them yet?"
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Freight trucks move through the terminal at the Port of Dover,
Britain October 11, 2019. Picture taken October 11, 2019.
REUTERS/Simon Dawson/File Photo
'WHO'S RESPONSIBLE FOR WHAT?'
A September survey of UK freight forwarders - firms that arrange
transportation of goods - found 64% said they did not have enough
staff to cope with extra customs demands. A separate October survey
of UK supply chain managers found 46% were less prepared for Brexit
than last year due to the pandemic.
What makes British logistics so vulnerable to huge change is the
fact that the industry is so fragmented, with a dense mosaic of
drivers, freight forwarders and customs brokers working with small
exporters and importers.
While logistics giants like DPD, DHL and UPS offer a range of
services, most independent drivers do not have any experience of
dealing with paperwork, meaning they will rely on their customers or
customs brokers to complete it.
But it is drivers who will be penalised if they arrive at the border
with loads that have not been properly cleared, and can face a
300-pound fine.
"To me, the single biggest risk of Brexit is the different links in
the chain not knowing who is responsible for what," said Shane
Brennan, the head of the Cold Chain Federation trade group for
companies moving chilled food and pharmaceuticals.
Paul Jackson, a federation member who runs Chiltern Distribution, is
helping his customers prepare because he knows a delay at the border
hurts everyone.
"Time is money," he said, adding that he was "obsessed" with finding
any titbit of information to prepare.
'LORRY PARK OF ENGLAND'
Some truck owners are going further, hiring customs staff and
registering to move goods in one transit movement across several EU
countries to limit the checks. But they have complained of having to
deal with multiple government departments and months of delays.
With the clock ticking down, the tension is mounting. Minister
Theodore Agnew this month accused many traders of taking a
"head-in-the-sand approach", infuriating those who have demanded
greater clarity for months.
Darren Jones, from the main opposition Labour Party and the head of
the parliamentary business committee, told Reuters that companies
were not ready because the government was not either.
Britain's Brexit supremo Michael Gove accepts there will be
disruption even with a deal, and warned of turbulence if Britain
leaves without one, meaning traders would have to pay tariffs.
In its defence, the government says it has set aside 84 million
pounds to train new customs intermediaries and phased in paperwork
demands for imports, reducing the initial impact.
It has identified 10 potential inland customs sites and is launching
pop-up sites and a haulier handbook to help.
"There are both new challenges and new opportunities for
businesses," a government spokesperson said. "These changes are
coming in just 70 days, come what may, and time is running out for
businesses to act."
If trucks do fail to cross the border it will most immediately be
felt in Kent, home to the ports of Dover and Folkestone, which
funnel around 10,000 trucks a day between Britain and Europe.
On a bright autumnal day in Sevington, diggers and dumper trucks
were working on a 93-hectare site, nestled between an ancient church
and pretty red brick cottages, that will hold around 1,700 trucks.
Locals accept the site is needed but hope any disruption will ease
over time. The government expects to use it for five years, a letter
to residents shows.
"You look at it and think, how can that possibly be ready for the
first of January?" neighbour Mandy Rossi said, speaking over the
loud din of the work.
"Kent has always been known as the Garden of England. Now it's
rapidly becoming the lorry park of England."
($1 = 0.7642 pounds)
(Additional reporting by William James; editing by Guy Faulconbridge
and Pravin Char)
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