Brexit trade deal is 'unlikely' by end of the
year, says Barnier
UK’s David Frost also warns of prospect of no deal but
insists agreement can still be reached
Daniel
Boffey, Peter Walker and Lisa O'Carroll
Thu 23 Jul
2020 15.09 BSTFirst published on Thu 23 Jul 2020 12.54 BST
Michel
Barnier has said a trade and security deal with Boris Johnson’s government by
the end of the year appeared “unlikely”, as he complained that Britain was
demanding “near total exclusion” of European fishing boats from its waters.
After the
latest round of negotiations in London, the EU’s chief negotiator told
reporters in a virtual press conference that the two sides were “still far
away” from agreement with just three full months to go before a 31 October
deadline.
Despite
signs of compromise in some key issues, including on the need for a single deal
rather than multiple sectoral agreements, the EU official said there had been
“no progress” on the two most difficult areas: the rights of European fleets in
British waters; and ensuring neither side drives down regulatory standards or
is able to unfairly subsidise their businesses.
In a
statement, the UK’s chief negotiator, David Frost, concurred that there were
“considerable gaps” but insisted that an agreement could still be reached in
September. UK sources said Barnier’s assessment that the talks were “back at an
impasse” accurately described the situation, but added this was for technical
reasons that could be surmounted over the summer.
The two
sides are to meet for two days of informal talks next week before a formal
round of negotiations in mid-August. But Johnson’s optimistic hopes of agreeing
an outline of the principles of a deal by the end of this month had been
dashed, Frost conceded.
“It is
unfortunately clear that we will not reach in July the ‘early understanding on
the principles underlying any agreement’ that was set as an aim,” the UK
official said.
In his
remarks at the end of the week’s talks, Barnier had focused on fishing rights
and the UK’s failure to offer reassurances on its state aid regime from the end
of the 2020 as the major obstacles to a deal.
“The UK is
effectively asking for near total exclusion of EU fishing vessels from UK
waters,” Barnier said. “That is simply unacceptable.”
He said the
EU was willing to accept that “there may be change to the benefit of UK
fishermen” but that it would not be at the price of the “destruction of the EU
fishing industry”.
On state
aid, Barnier said the UK had failed to offer any assurances on how it would
regulate subsidies once the country was outside the single market and customs
union at the end of 2020.
“We need
consistency or some sort of equivalence between our respective systems,” he
said. “We need to see what is ahead of us. I understand what David said that
the UK is still going through an ongoing debate, parliament and government are
still working on this but the debate does still have to make some sort of
progress.”
Barnier
said: “Over the past few weeks the UK has not shown the same level of
engagement and readiness to find solutions respecting the EU fundamental
principles and interests.”
He added:
“It means simply that by its current refusal to commit to the condition of open
and fair competition, and to a balanced agreement on fisheries, the UK makes a
trade agreement at this point unlikely.”
In notably
more optimistic comments, Frost highlighted the EU’s “pragmatic” acceptance
that the European court of justice would not have any jurisdiction in the UK
and the British recognition, in turn, of the need for there to be one
all-encompassing deal.
“We have
heard the EU’s concerns about a complex Switzerland-style set of agreements and
we are ready to consider simpler structures, provided satisfactory terms can be
found for dispute settlement and governance,” he said.
Frost
conceded, however, that given the difficulties that remained, there was still
the risk of a deal not being secured.
“Although
we will continue energetically to seek an agreement with the EU, we must face
the possibility that one will not be reached, and we must therefore continue
preparing for all possible scenarios for the end of the transition period at
the end of this year,” he said.
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