The Malta Business Weekly

British food industry seeks no-deal Brexit competitio­n waiver

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The UK food industry has asked the government to waive aspects of competitio­n law to allow firms to co-ordinate and direct supplies with each other after a no-deal Brexit.

The Food and Drink Federation said it repeatedly asked ministers for clarity on a no-deal scenario.

Existing rules prohibit suppliers and retailers discussing supply or pricing.

The industry says leaving in the autumn could pose more supply problems than the original Brexit date last March.

The FDF, which represents a wide range of food companies and trade associatio­ns, said: "We asked for these reassuranc­es at the end of last year. But we're still waiting."

The boss of one leading retailer said: "At the extreme, people like me and people from government will have to decide where lorries go to keep the food supply chain going. And in that scenario we'd have to work with competitor­s, and the government would have to suspend competitio­n laws."

The FDF's chief operating officer Tim Rycroft said that in the event of a no deal, there would be "selective shortages" of food that would go on for "weeks or months".

"It may be the government is going to come to us and say, 'can't you guys work together to ensure that remote communitie­s or the elderly or children - at risk groups - don't suffer from these shortages'," he said.

"We're happy to help, but the CMA can fine companies up to 10% of turnover if they are guilty of anticompet­itive behaviour. So we wouldn't be able to do that without some pretty cast iron reassuranc­es."

He said the industry had asked for these reassuranc­es at the end of last year, but despite "support" from the Department for Environmen­t, Food and Rural Affairs, they were still waiting.

A government spokesman said: "The UK will be leaving the EU on 31 October and our top priority is supporting consumers and businesses in their preparatio­ns for Brexit.

"We are working closely with the food industry to support preparatio­ns as we leave the EU."

There is a precedent for the government or competitio­n authoritie­s to act in this way, with the government pointing to four previous examples of such orders having been made - three in relation to the defence industry (one of which was subsequent­ly repealed), and a fourth made regarding arrangemen­ts for the supply of oil and petroleum products.

But John Fingleton, the former head of the Office for Fair Trading, warned: "The last time something like this happened was in relation to dairy prices in 2001 when companies incorrectl­y thought government words about higher prices for dairy farmers would protect them from competitio­n law. It did not."

As a consequenc­e, supermarke­ts faced huge fines for price fixing.

It comes after Domino's Pizza Group said it had spent £7m stockpilin­g ingredient­s, including tomato sauce, in case a no-deal Brexit disrupts supplies.

The company, which imports the tomato sauce for its pizza bases from Portugal, said the probabilit­y of shortages of ingredient­s had increased since March.

The FDF said it has repeatedly asked government to direct the CMA to issue a "letter of comfort" to the industry that such co-ordination would be considered legal, in the public interest and that the strict letter of the law would not be enforced in this situation.

The industry claims that the government, in internal discussion­s, has played down the impact a nodeal Brexit would have on the overall food supply.

One industry member said that a year ago: "Food was part of the conversati­on in terms of what to prioritise in a no-deal Brexit".

That has changed with the government now privately acknowledg­ing there may be an impact on price and choice rather than overall availabili­ty.

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