Khaleej Times

EDF, IBM warn UK of risks after Brexit

- Nate Lanxon

london — Electricit­e de France is among companies warning the UK government about significan­t threats to their businesses after Britain leaves the European Union, according to a report in the Mail on Sunday, citing confidenti­al documents.

The companies complained about a possible shortage of skilled workers as they submitted comments to the Home Office as part of a consultati­on on post-Brexit immigratio­n policies, the newspaper said.

The disclosure follows the release of a report commission­ed by the government that found UK businesses are reliant on EU workers and are concerned about restrictio­ns after Brexit. UK net migration from other EU countries plunged by more than a half since the 2016 referendum, with the decline most acute among citizens of the eight eastern countries, including Poland, that joined the bloc in 2004.

France’s biggest utility, which is building the £20 billion ($28 billion) Hinkley Point C nuclear reactor in Somerset, England, warned that the cost of the project could soar and the 2027 completion target could be pushed back if the 7,500 nonBritish workers it needs are not available, the Mail said. Other firms, including Amazon.com, high-street retailer John Lewis, AstraZenec­a, McDonald’s Corp and British Gas parent Centrica, have cited a range of other postBrexit threats. These include moving of head offices from the UK, potential shortages of lifesaving drugs and possible bottleneck­s in e-commerce deliveries during peak buying seasons.

Internatio­nal Business Machines Corp in its comments said Britain risks losing its status as a home for artificial intelligen­ce excellence, as well as leadership in cyber-security matters, according to the Mail. In 2016, the company announced it was tripling the number of data centers it would operate in the UK, all of which included its Watson AI technology.

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 ??  ?? UK migration from other EU plunged by more than a half since 2016 referendum.
UK migration from other EU plunged by more than a half since 2016 referendum.

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