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		Lights out: Brexit shuts off market for English cheese truckles
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		 [February 02, 2021]  MATLOCK, 
		England (Reuters) - An English company that has long been selling its 
		wax-coated mini barrels of cheese directly to European consumers says it 
		can no longer do so because of Brexit, pushing it to consider new 
		investment in France. 
 Last year The Cheshire Cheese company sold 180,000 pounds ($247,000) 
		worth of artisan truckles -- the traditional name for cheese shaped like 
		a barrel -- to European Union customers, but Managing Director Simon 
		Spurrell says that is no longer possible.
 
 "That's completely gone. At the moment we've had to just switch that 
		light out," said Spurrell, surrounded by milking cows at the company's 
		creamery near Matlock, northern England.
 
		
		 
		
 London and Brussels agreed a last-minute trade deal last December which 
		averted border tariffs, but many companies, particularly smaller ones, 
		have warned that the deal has thrown up new obstacles to trade that are 
		killing business.
 
 Spurrell can no longer sell cheese gift boxes worth around 25 pounds to 
		the EU through his online shop because each consignment needs to be 
		accompanied by a health certificate signed off by a vet that costs 180 
		pounds per consignment, regardless of size.
 
 The company has therefore put on hold plans for a 1 million pound new 
		distribution centre in Macclesfield, northern England, and is instead 
		considering setting up its own hub in France, where it can still ship on 
		a wholesale basis.
 
		
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			A herd of British Friesian cows wait to be milked at Pikehall Farm 
			near Matlock, Britain, January 28, 2021. REUTERS/Phil Noble 
            
			 
Prime Minister Boris Johnson argued that Britain would be free to trade globally 
once it had cast off the shackles of the EU and has said the bureaucratic snags 
are teething problems.
 But for many companies that built up markets in the world's biggest trading bloc 
during Britain's 47-year membership, the new relationship is hitting sales and 
putting pressure on jobs and investment.
 
Smaller firms are bearing the brunt of the fallout, from specialist beef 
producers to shoe makers and fishing crews.
 At The Cheshire Cheese Company, which sells a type of crumbly cheese first 
recorded over 400 years ago, recent investments in multi-lingual websites helped 
European online sales jump last year and they had been forecasting a 40% rise 
this year.
 
 Spurrell thinks that the lack of an exemption from costly certificates for 
direct consumer sales was an oversight as negotiators rushed to seal the deal. 
He's in touch with the government about the difficulties he's facing but time is 
running out.
 
 (Reporting by Ben Makori, writing by Sarah Young; editing by Emelia 
Sithole-Matarise)
 
				 
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