Khaleej Times

EU ready to offer Britain a ‘super-charged’ trade deal

- Ian Wishart

brussels — The European Union is set to offer the UK a free-trade deal deeper than any agreement that’s gone before, but will reject Prime Minister Theresa May’s demand for “frictionle­ss trade”, according to EU diplomats.

The EU’s vision for future ties with Britain will contain “about 3040 per cent” of May’s pitch for a wide-ranging trade and security deal, according to two of the diplomats. Chief negotiator Michel Barnier’s team gave European ambassador­s an outline of his proposal, and will formally present it to them — at least in part — on Wednesday.

Talks are accelerati­ng — and work is expected to continue through the weekend — as both sides are racing to clinch a deal next month. The pound strengthen­ed.

The offer falls short of what May wants, potentiall­y making it harder to get the deal approved in the UK Parliament, where she faces opposition on all sides. However, the document is expected to be vaguely worded, and with as much positive language as possible to help her sell it at home. Hardline Brexit-backers in her party might find it easier to vote for the EU’s offer instead of the tighter ties sought by May, since they have been pushing for a regular free-trade deal all along.

The risk is that because the EU’s plan doesn’t include frictionle­ss trade across the EU-UK border, it will focus more attention on the most controvers­ial part of the divorce deal — how to keep the Irish border open. It will make it even more important that the so-called Irish backstop is acceptable to the UK government and its Northern Irish allies.

The offer will be in the form of a non-binding declaratio­n that will form part of the Brexit deal that officials want to wrap up by mid-November. It would offer the UK an unpreceden­ted “super-charged” free-trade agreement, in the words

of one of the diplomats. Negotiator­s are making progress on the other part of the deal — the legallybin­ding terms of the divorce — but agreement on that hinges on the specifics of a solution on the Irish border. That could yet derail the process, the diplomats said. The

UK is expected to present a new solution this week.

Both sides are hoping for a breakthrou­gh in time for a dinner of EU leaders on October 17. If all goes well, another summit will then be called for mid-November. The European Commission is “working day and night” to make progress, president Jean-Claude Juncker said.

Juncker told a group of Austrian newspapers on Thursday he is optimistic that a deal can be reached and the EU’s ‘will is unbroken to achieve an understand­ing with the British government,” according to a report of the interview published Saturday. He reiterated that a “no deal” scenario would be bad for both the UK and the EU.

The EU’s draft on how Britain and the bloc will trade in future will probably run to fewer than 10 pages, three diplomats said, leaving negotiatio­ns for the full-blown trade deal to take place after the UK leaves in the bloc in March. UK officials say it will be much longer.

While it falls short of what May wants, it will be broader and deeper than any FTA the EU has struck with other countries and will include “add-ons.” Some frictions in trade will be inevitable, diplomats said. —

 ?? AFP ?? The EU and UK are hoping for a breakthrou­gh in time for a dinner of EU leaders on October 17. —
AFP The EU and UK are hoping for a breakthrou­gh in time for a dinner of EU leaders on October 17. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates