National Post (National Edition)

U.K. Tories admit untidy Brexit will bring pain YOU WILL STILL BE ABLE TO ENJOY ABLTAFTER BREXIT.

Plans released to limit instabilit­y if no deal inked

- Jill lawless

LONDON • Businesses could face red tape at the border, customers could see higher credit card fees, patients could endure delays to medical treatment and there could even be a sperm shortage if Britain leaves the European Union next year without a deal, the U.K. government acknowledg­ed Thursday.

But Prime Minister Theresa May’s Conservati­ve government vowed it would limit the instabilit­y that could be triggered by a disorderly Brexit, releasing documents outlining its plans to cope.

Even if Britain crashes out of the bloc next year without a trade deal, its plans include unilateral­ly accepting some EU rules and giving EU financial services firms continued access to the U.K. market.

Brexit Secretary Dominic Raab said Britain was determined to “manage the risks and embrace the opportunit­ies” of Brexit.

“We have made clear that if negotiatio­ns don’t achieve the optimum outcome, we will continue to be a responsibl­e European neighbour and partner,” he said in a speech Thursday to business leaders in London.

With seven months until Britain leaves the EU on March 29, negotiatio­ns on divorce terms and future trade have bogged down amid infighting within May’s divided government about how close an economic relationsh­ip to seek with the EU.

The government insists it’s confident of getting a deal, but is preparing for all outcomes. On Thursday it published the first 25 of more than 70 papers covering “no-deal” planning for sectors including financial services, medicines and nuclear materials. The rest are to be released by the end of September.

The papers say Britain will allow EU financial services firms continued “passportin­g” rights to operate in the U.K. for up to three years, even if no agreement is reached with the EU — although it can’t guarantee that the bloc will let U.K. companies operate in EU nations. That could leave British retirees living in EU countries unable to receive their pensions.

Raab dismissed alarming headlines suggesting the U.K. could run out of sandwich supplies and other staples because of economic barriers between Britain and the EU, its biggest trading partner.

“You will still be able to enjoy a BLT after Brexit,” Raab said.

But the documents reveal the possible scale of disruption to the British economy and daily life that could follow Brexit.

For goods going to and coming in from the EU, “an import declaratio­n will be required, customs checks may be arrived out and any customs duties must be paid,” one document says.

And one of the thorniest questions — how to maintain an open border, free of customs posts, between EU member Ireland and the U.K.’S Northern Ireland — remains unanswered.

The government said the U.K. will recognize EU standards for testing medicines, so drugs from the bloc won’t need to be re-tested in the U.K. But new drugs and treatments would still need approval from the U.K. medicines regulator before they could be sold in Britain.

Brexit could also affect the supply of semen for fertility treatment, the papers say. Almost half of Britain’s donor sperm currently comes from Denmark. If there’s no deal, Britain will be outside the EU’S directive on organs, tissues and cells, and U.K. fertility clinics will need to strike new written agreements with their suppliers.

The papers reveal that British organic farmers won’t be able to export their produce to the EU unless the bloc certifies U.K. standards — a process that can’t start until after Brexit and takes nine months. And the widely recognized organic logo plastered across everything from vegetables to beef belongs to the EU, so U.K. producers will no longer be able to use it.

Cigarette packaging also will have to be redesigned, because the EU holds the copyright on the photos of diseased lungs and other offputting images emblazoned on the packs.

 ?? LUKE MACGREGOR / BLOOMBERG ?? The U.K. Conservati­ve government’s Brexit secretary Dominic Raab departs after delivering a speech on Brexit plans Thursday to business leaders in London.
LUKE MACGREGOR / BLOOMBERG The U.K. Conservati­ve government’s Brexit secretary Dominic Raab departs after delivering a speech on Brexit plans Thursday to business leaders in London.

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