Post-Brexit customs checks a ‘catastrophe’ for UK shipping
london — The introduction of physical customs checks following Brexit would be a catastrophe for British ports and shipping and would likely reduce the volume of trade, the head of the sector’s UK industry body said on Wednesday.
Prime Minister Theresa May has said she wants a customs arrangement with the European Union which allows trade to be “as frictionless as possible”, but few expect goods will be able to continue to move as seamlessly as they do within the bloc.
“The nightmare scenario is actually having physical customs
You’ve suddenly got lorries stacked up, you’ve got sailings cancelled... the whole supply chain is completely affected Guy Platten, chief executive of the UK Chamber of Shipping
borders... it would be absolutely a catastrophe for the ports and for our sector,” Guy Platten, chief executive of the UK Chamber of Shipping, told reporters.
“You’ve suddenly got lorries stacked up, you’ve got sailings cancelled... the whole supply chain is completely affected.”
The chamber says 95 per cent of Britain’s international trade is moved via ship, and the industry supports 250,000 jobs.
Dover on the southeast coast of England, Europe’s busiest ferry port, currently handles around 500 non-EU trucks a day and around 8,000 from the EU, he said.
If the EU trucks faced the same customs checks as the non-EU trucks the whole process will be slowed, particularly impacting goods such as fresh food, he added.
“The sailings will still take place, but maybe they won’t be able to fit in as many sailings as they could do before... so that will affect the business of those ferry companies and potentially the viability of routes.” — Reuters