Sunday Independent (Ireland)

Sport of kings highlights Brexit trade threat amid fears of losing UK ‘twin’

- Peter Flanagan

FOR a primer on the risks to trade from Brexit, just ask the Irish horse industry. The €1bn billion bloodstock sector — made up of racing and breeding — employs close to 15,000 people in Ireland, according to Deloitte.

Much of the business centres around the UK, leaving one of the world’s biggest bloodstock producers vulnerable to its nearest neighbour’s departure from the European Union.

“Eighty per cent of our exports are to the UK and it’s not like you can turn around and say ‘let’s replicate that somewhere else’, so it’s a big worry,” said Brian Kavanagh, ceo of governing body Horse Racing Ireland.

The sector is a microcosm of the wider challenges presented by Brexit, and last month, Irish industry representa­tives met EU officials in Brussels to highlight the scale of those potential problems.

Sterling’s decline has already hurt revenue, and the Irish and British horse industries, so close they are essentiall­y twins, face the prospect of delays, tariffs and a long-drawn out spell of uncertaint­y.

“As a company, we can’t make any concrete plans because we don’t know where Brexit will end up,” said Henry Beeby, CEO of Goffs, the horse auction house in Kildare, about 20 miles from Dublin.

“We have no clarity on something that could have such a big impact on our lives.”

With about 15pc of its exports going to the UK, Ireland is the EU nation most exposed to Brexit.

Outside Dublin, home to the European headquarte­rs of companies like Google, much of the economy remains agricultur­e-based. Close to 40pc of all Irish food and drink exports go to the UK — Ireland accounts for 70pc of Britain’s beef imports, for example.

In the horse trade, much of the money is in flat racing, where top race winners can earn their owners millions in stud fees after retirement.

Irish bloodstock millionair­e John Magnier’s Coolmore cut its fees by as much as 43pc in the wake of Brexit, with the average reduction 12pc.

“Many of our clients trade in sterling so in response to its decline in value we have reduced the fees for the majority of our stallions,” David O’Loughlin, a spokesman for Coolmore said when the fees were announced. “They are now very competitiv­ely priced.”

About 10,000 horses move back and forth between Ireland and UK for racing and breeding a year, eased in part by an agreement allowing free movement of thoroughbr­eds between the two nations and France. The next closest is France at about 5,000.

“To a large extent the horse racing and breeding industries of the UK and Ireland operate as one with horses, trainers, riders, agents, stable lads, owners, vets regularly moving between both jurisdicti­ons,” the Irish Thoroughbr­ed Breeders’ Associatio­n told a parliament­ary inquiry into the impact of Brexit.

Horses movements could be slashed if Brexit means horses entering the UK have to go through new quarantine procedures and other border checks, while trade in geldings, a castrated horse, could be hit with an 11.5pc tariff if no trade deal is agreed.

Meanwhile, outside the EU, the UK industry could quickly grow more competitiv­e.

“The possibilit­y of the UK introducin­g incentives for its industry over time is a real threat, especially if racing in Ireland is still excluded from the usual state aid exemptions for agricultur­e,” Elizabeth Headon of the Alliance for Racing and Breeding, which represents about 10,000 people in the industry, told the committee.

Brexit could also hurt the UK industry. Nine out of 10 horses racing at the Northern Irish tracks of Downpatric­k and Down Royal are trained in the Republic of Ireland, according to Headon, who described the Irish and UK sectors as “twin industries”.

“It isn’t two separate markets, it’s really one,’’ says Beeby.

“The UK relies on Irish horses to supply its race meetings and that would be hit hard by Brexit too. There’s no other country that can replicate that relationsh­ip for the UK.”

 ??  ?? Horse Racing Ireland ceo Brian Kavanagh
Horse Racing Ireland ceo Brian Kavanagh

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