Western Daily Press (Saturday)

PM: Aussie deal will be a ‘fantastic opportunit­y’

- PATRICK DALY news@westerndai­lypress.co.uk

BORIS Johnson tried to reassure West livestock farmers that they will have a “fantastic opportunit­y” as part of free-trade deals, as reports suggest the Government is on the verge of signing a post-Brexit agreement with Australia.

Downing Street said “negotiatio­ns are still ongoing” with Canberra, despite several reports claiming ministers on Thursday had resolved their difference­s over the terms of a deal.

There had been concerns – said to have been aired around the Cabinet table by Environmen­t Secretary George Eustice and Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster Michael Gove – about the impact a zero-quota arrangemen­t with Australia could have on British meat produce, particular­ly beef and lamb, which has to reach higher standards.

But The Sun reported that the Prime Minister is set to offer Australia a 15-year transition to a zero-tariff, zero-quota trade pact, with the free trade arguments of Internatio­nal Trade Secretary Liz Truss and Business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng being successful.

The Prime Minister, asked about the prospectiv­e deal yesterday, said he wanted the UK to “see these new openings not as threats but as opportunit­ies” as he praised the benefits of free trade.

Speaking to broadcaste­rs in Portsmouth, where he was visiting the HMS Queen Elizabeth aircraft carrier, Mr Johnson said: “We are certainly looking at doing free trade deals with countries around the world, and I’m here on this incredible aircraft carrier, which is really a symbol of the way we want to do things – we see a global future for this country.

“I do think that free trade deals present a fantastic opportunit­y for our farmers, for businesses of all kinds, and for manufactur­ers.

“I think it is vital that as a great historic free-trading nation that grew to prosperity thanks to free trade, and thanks indeed to the Royal Navy, that we see these new openings not as threats but as opportunit­ies.”

Mr Johnson chaired a meeting of senior colleagues on Thursday as he looked to solve the alleged dispute between Ms Truss and Mr Eustice.

Ms Truss, who has said she wants an agreement in principle by early June – which would come in time to parade it at the G7 meeting in Cornwall – is thought to favour a zero-tariff, zero-quota approach in order to boost the flow of trade.

But such a move could leave British farmers vulnerable to competitio­n from beef and lamb producers in Australia, and Mr Eustice has suggested that quotas could be used to protect them.

Justice Secretary and Swindon MP Robert Buckland gave reassuranc­es to farmers that they would not be “undercut” as part of a deal with Canberra – which No 10 also repeated.

“The Government has always said that any free trade agreement reached with Australia, or indeed other countries around the world... will of course take into account the very high welfare standards we apply here in the UK and will of course make sure British farming and British farmers are not undercut, are not put at a disadvanta­ge, bearing in mind the quality and excellence of the products which are made here in the UK,” Mr Buckland told BBC Radio 4’s Today.

A spokesman for the Prime Minister, who said talks were ongoing, told reporters: “We’ve been clear that any deal with Australia must work for British businesses, producers and consumers, and we’re negotiatin­g on that basis.”

A zero-tariff deal could put Mr Johnson on a collision course with the incoming leader of the DUP, who said there was a “high risk” to Northern Irish farmers, as well as the rest of the UK, if such terms were agreed.

Edwin Poots, Northern Ireland’s agricultur­e minister, who will take over as DUP leader from Arlene Foster, said: “Australia has a number of distinct advantages over Northern Ireland and the rest of the UK, in terms of the land available for farming, climate and lower standards, that allows its farmers to be able to produce at a considerab­ly lower cost, particular­ly in the beef and sheep sectors.”

 ?? Leon Neal/WPA Pool/Getty Images ?? > Prime Minister Boris Johnson in the cockpit of a Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II during his visit to the HMS Queen Elizabeth aircraft carrier
Leon Neal/WPA Pool/Getty Images > Prime Minister Boris Johnson in the cockpit of a Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II during his visit to the HMS Queen Elizabeth aircraft carrier
 ?? POPhot Jay Allen/Ministry of Defence/Crown Copyright ?? > Aircraft carriers HMS Queen Elizabeth and HMS Prince of Wales meeting at sea for the first time off the Scottish coast this week
POPhot Jay Allen/Ministry of Defence/Crown Copyright > Aircraft carriers HMS Queen Elizabeth and HMS Prince of Wales meeting at sea for the first time off the Scottish coast this week

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom