Belfast Telegraph

Brexit sea border may deter firms in GB from trading here, say peers

- BY MICHAEL MCHUGH

UNCERTAINT­Y and lack of time before the end of Brexit transition poses a “potent threat” to prosperity and stability in Northern Ireland, a report has warned.

Businesses in Britain could decide it is economical­ly unviable to continue operations across the Irish Sea unless flexibilit­y is shown in the EU negotiatio­ns, a House of Lords committee warned.

The group of peers said: “The combinatio­n of uncertaint­y, lack of momentum and lack of time, compounded by the shock of the Covid-19 pandemic, is a potent threat to economic prosperity and political stability in Northern Ireland.”

The mechanism ensuring the country’s border with the Republic remains open after the Brexit transition period finishes at the end of this year is known as the Northern Ireland Protocol and was agreed between the EU and UK during the Brexit talks.

The UK Government, led by Boris Johnson (right), publisheda­documentat­tempting to flesh out some detail in May.

It said checks will be needed on some goods entering Northern Ireland from the rest of the UK as part of Brexit but bureaucrac­y will be kept to a “minimum”.

The House of Lords European Union committee’s report responded: “While some detail was provided, the command paper’s heavy reliance on the future tense underlines how little progress has been made thus far, how many issues remain to be resolved and how much work still needs to be done before the protocol becomes operationa­l on January 1, 2021.”

Unless the joint committee of EU and British officials overseeing the process adopted a flexible definition­ofgoodsatr­iskofendin­g up in the Republic, checks and processes on those moving from Britain to Northern Ireland could have a “serious detrimenta­l impact”, the House of Lords review added.

Its report said: “There is a real danger that businesses based in Great Britain could conclude that it is economical­ly unviable to continue to operate in Northern Ireland, leading in turn to reduced choice and higher costs for Northern Ireland consumers, thus underminin­g Northern Ireland’s economic model, its future prosperity and, potentiall­y, its political stability.”

Before the Covid-19 outbreak businesses here felt preparing for the protocol to become operationa­l on January 1 next year was a Herculean task, the committee said.

“That task has become even more difficult, given the impact of Covid-19 on the economy and the capacity of individual businesses to cope with the problems confrontin­g them. Given its refusal to countenanc­e an extension to the transition period, the Government must urgently explain to Northern Ireland stakeholde­rs the practical steps that will be taken to ensure the protocolis­operationa­lfromjanua­ry 1, 2021.”

It said the joint UK-EU committee will also need to take the changed circumstan­ces arising from the infection into account.

“Clarity on the practical measures that will be necessary to implement the protocol, and the steps that businesses based in or trading with Northern Ireland need to take to prepare, is now required as a matter of acute urgency if damage to the Northern Ireland economy is to be avoided.”

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