The Scotsman

Brexit border post work under way as Minister raises Article 16 concerns

- By CONOR MATCHETT conor.matchett@jpimedia.co.uk

Work to construct a border control post near the port town of Cairnryan in Dumfries and Galloway has restarted, two months after the Scottish Government said it had paused due to Brexit “uncertaint­ies”.

It follows a letter from Cabinet external affairs secretary Angus Robertson to the UK Government’s Brexit minister, Lord Frost, raising concerns about the ongoing dispute between the EU and the UK over the Northern Ireland Protocol.

The protocol is a key aspect of the Brexit deal signed off by Boris Johnson last year, which sees checks on goods imported from Great Britain at Northern Irish ports to allow them to move across the border into the Republic of Ireland.

As part of these checks, a border control post close to Cairnryan, Scotland’s main port linking the country with Northern Ireland, was required for checks on goods arriving in the UK from Ireland and the wider EU via Northern Ireland.

However, in September the Scottish Government halted work on the post due to “major uncertaint­ies” over funding.

Despite this, preparator­y work is back underway, with US engineerin­g giant Tetra Tech handed a £310,000 contract to undertake ground inspection surveys.

A spokespers­on for the Scottish Government said: “Scottish ministers took the decision to pause the constructi­on of the Border Control Post (BCP) until there is greater clarity from the UK Government on the long-term funding, the need for this infrastruc­ture, and more informatio­n about the timescales when controls might come into effect.

“To ensure there is a rapid restart when the UK Government provides the assurances we need, we are progressin­g preparator­y work to acquire a suitable site for the facility, including ground investigat­ion surveys.”

The UK Government, led in negotiatio­ns by Lord Frost, wants fundamenta­l changes to the operation and governance of the protocol, while the EU has proposed measures which would mitigate the protocol’s impact.

The Brexit minister has warned that it may invoke Article 16, a key part of the protocol that allows either side to implement “safeguardi­ng measures”, should they believe the protocol is causing serious practical problems or the diversion of trade.

Maroš Šefčovič, the EU’S chief Brexit negotiator, welcomed a “changing tone of discussion” around the protocol following talks with Lord Frost in London last week.

However, Mr Robertson said in a letter to Lord Frost he was “increasing­ly alarmed” around the “continued lack of progress” of talks between the EU and UK, warning potential “further great harm to Scotland”.

He states: “It seems barely believable that the UK Government is now contemplat­ing an action – the triggering of Article 16 of the Northern Ireland Protocol – that could result in a disastrous trade dispute with the EU which would clearly hold back recovery from the pandemic.

"That would be a further act of economic vandalism at the worst possible time.”

 ?? ?? ↑ The new Stena Line Loch Ryan Port near Cairnryan in Scotland
↑ The new Stena Line Loch Ryan Port near Cairnryan in Scotland

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