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EU puts onus on Britain to agree new trade terms, stands ready for no deal

EU leaders grant more time for talks but say ready for no-deal; Covid-19 devastatio­n makes deal more essential, says Ireland; €1tn of annual EU-UK trade in the balance

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The European Union put the onus on Britain yesterday to compromise on their new economic partnershi­p, saying it was ready for an abrupt split which could disrupt trade worth a trillion euros every year.

Sporting face masks and guarding their distance during only their third face-toface meeting during the coronaviru­s pandemic, EU national leaders granted more time for negotiatio­ns with Britain to produce a new trade pact before the end of the year.

“We want a deal, but obviously not at any price. It has to be a fair agreement that serves the interests of both sides. This is worth every effort,” said German

Chancellor Angela Merkel.

Britain left the EU in January and, during a standstill transition period, the estranged allies have been locked in complex negotiatio­ns to keep trade between them free of tariffs or quotas from 2021.

Talks have narrowed gaps on issues from social welfare to transport but three contentiou­s areas have so far prevented a deal: fair competitio­n, dispute resolution and fisheries, which is particular­ly important to France.

“In no case shall our fishermen be sacrificed for Brexit,” said French President Emmanuel Macron.”If the right terms can’t be found at the end of these discussion­s, we’re ready for a no-deal for our future relations.”

With businesses and markets increasing­ly jittery as the deadline nears, EU leaders demanded Britain “make the necessary moves to make an agreement possible” and decided to step up contingenc­y preparatio­ns for an abrupt split. While EU leaders stressed the unity of the 27-nation bloc in the face off, British

Prime Minister Boris Johnson will assess the summit’s decision before deciding his next steps.

His Brexit negotiator David Frost, however, is expected to advise him to go on negotiatin­g and a spokesman for the British premier said: “We’ve always been clear that a negotiated outcome is our preference.”

Ireland, the EU member most exposed to any chaotic rupture, said smooth postBrexit trade between the world’s sixth largest economy and biggest trading bloc was even more essential given the economic havoc of the Covid-19 crisis. “We still can get this resolved within the timeframe available to us,” said Irish Prime Minister Micheal Martin.

The pandemic has thrust Europe into unpreceden­ted recession and many nations are tightening restrictio­ns again to combat a second infection wave sweeping the continent as winter looms.

The coronaviru­s upset the summit itself when one of the key participan­ts, the head of the bloc’s executive, Ursula von der Leyen, left the meeting abruptly to go into precaution­ary self-isolation after one of her staff tested positive.

Given the economic malaise and global instabilit­y, it would be “crazy” if the two sides failed to agree a deal, said Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte.

Many in financial markets expect a thin deal by early November, though after several more weeks of drama.

The EU has warned, however, it will not leave fishing rights to be settled last and they must be part of a wider deal together with issues like financial services where London has a weaker hand.

The sides are also far apart on fair competitio­n safeguards covering social, labour and environmen­t standards, as well as state aid.

Britain wants to be able to regulate its own corporate subsidies freely in the future, while the EU seeks to lock in joint rules. Otherwise, the bloc says Britain cannot have free access to its cherished single market of 450mn consumers.

“We want a good deal, but not at any cost,” von der Leyen said shortly before having to leave the summit room.

 ??  ?? “We want a deal, but obviously not at any price. It has to be a fair agreement that serves the interests of both sides. This is worth every effort,” said German Chancellor Angela Merkel
“We want a deal, but obviously not at any price. It has to be a fair agreement that serves the interests of both sides. This is worth every effort,” said German Chancellor Angela Merkel

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