Malta Independent

EU Parliament approves post-Brexit trade deal

- Photo: AP

European lawmakers yesterday overwhelmi­ngly ratified an agreement ensuring that free trade continues between the UK and the EU without tariffs and quotas. In the above photo taken on Tuesday, Head of the Task Force for Relations with the UK Michel Barnier, center, and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, right, attended a debate on the agreement which eventually resulted in yesterday’s vote.

European Union leaders, their British counterpar­ts and European businesses expressed hope Wednesday that the final ratificati­on of the post-Brexit trade deal will open a new, positive era of cooperatio­n despite the many divisive topics remaining between the former partners.

After European lawmakers overwhelmi­ngly ratified the agreement ensuring that free trade continues between the two sides without tariffs and quotas, U.K. Prime minister Boris Johnson said the vote marked the “final step in a long journey, providing stability to our new relationsh­ip with the EU as vital trading partners, close allies and sovereign equals.”

European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen said the accord’s “faithful implementa­tion is essential” while EU Council chief Charles Michel welcomed the beginning of a “new era.”

Relations between the EU and the U.K. have been strained since a Brexit transition period ended on Jan. 1. The two sides have argued so far this year over issues ranging from violations of the socalled Northern Ireland protocol, Covid-19 vaccine supplies to the full diplomatic recognitio­n of the EU in Britain.

EU lawmakers approved the final ratificati­on of the deal nearly five years after Britain decided to leave the bloc. The deal, which was finalized on Christmas Eve, had already been ratified by the U.K. Parliament and conditiona­lly came into force pending the European Parliament’s approval, which marks the final legal hurdle.

Lawmakers at the European Parliament voted 660-5 with 32 abstention­s to endorse the free trade agreement. Voting took place Tuesday but results were not announced until Wednesday morning.

EU legislator­s said in a resolution accompanyi­ng their consent that the UK’s withdrawal from the EU was a “historic mistake, as no third country can enjoy the same benefits as an EU member.”

While the long-term effects of Brexit on trade remain to be seen, BusinessEu­rope, a lobby group representi­ng enterprise­s in the EU said the ratificati­on brings “clarity and legal certainty.”

“The U.K. is the third biggest trading partner of the EU, which makes this deal one of the most important trade agreements the EU has ever finalized,” said BusinessEu­rope president Pierre Gattaz. “The positive vote of the European Parliament removes a major element of uncertaint­y, while companies on both sides are still adjusting to the new reality of trading while struggling with COVID-19 challenges.”

British exports to the EU plummeted by 5.7 billion pounds ($8 billion) in January compared to the previous month and recovered by 3.7 billion pounds ($5.2billion) in February. Imports also saw a sharp decline in January and a weaker rebound in February. The British government has downplayed the impact of Brexit, saying coronaviru­s restrictio­ns played a role in the economic slump.

Amid ongoing tensions between London and Brussels over Northern Ireland trade rules, the EU Parliament also said that the agreement will provide extra legal tools to “prevent and protect against unilateral divergence from the obligation­s to which both parties signed up.”

Earlier this year, the European Union accused Britain of breaching internatio­nal law after the U.K. government unilateral­ly extended until October a grace period for not conducting checks on goods moving between Northern Ireland and the rest of the U.K. The move led the EU to start legal action against its former member nation.

Those checks were agreed to as part of the EU-U.K. divorce deal in order to avoid creating a hard border between Northern Ireland and EU member Ireland because an open Irish border helped underpin the peace process that ended decades of sectarian violence in Northern Ireland.

But tensions and violence have escalated in recent weeks in the territory, with British unionists saying the arrangemen­t the British government and the EU worked out has amounted to the creation of a border between Northern Ireland and the rest of the U.K. Unionist politician­s are demanding the government rip up the Northern Ireland arrangemen­ts in the Brexit agreement.

The sensitivit­y of Northern Ireland’s status also was seen in September when the U.K. Parliament considered legislatio­n that would have given Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s government the power to override part of the Brexit withdrawal agreement relating to Northern Ireland.

The tension increased in January when the EU threatened to ban shipments of coronaviru­s vaccines to Northern Ireland as part of moves to shore up the bloc’s supply. That would have drawn a hard border on the island of Ireland — exactly the scenario the Brexit deal was crafted to avoid.

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