Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Brits: Rig for Brexit long lines at border

- JILL LAWLESS

LONDON — There could be lines of 7,000 trucks at the English Channel and two-day waits to get into France immediatel­y after the U.K. makes its economic break from the European Union at the end of the year, the British government said Wednesday, as it urged businesses to prepare for big changes.

Michael Gove, the minister in charge of Brexit preparatio­ns, described the border backlog as a “reasonable worstcase scenario” in a letter to logistics firms and an oral update to lawmakers in the House of Commons.

He said between 30% and 60% of trucks wanting to cross the Channel might not be ready for new paperwork and regulation­s that will go into effect Jan. 1.

“They’d therefore be turned back by the French border authoritie­s, clogging the Dover to Calais crossing” Gove told lawmakers, referring to the ports in southeast England and northern France. Such backups could lead to lines of up to 7,000 trucks on the British side, he said.

The government said the delays could last at least three months until companies got used to the new systems and requiremen­ts.

“The consequenc­es of a lack of business preparedne­ss will be not just economic opportunit­ies missed for those companies that don’t prepare, but potentiall­y much wider disruption,” Gove said.

Haulage and logistics companies accused the government of trying to blame them for its lack of preparatio­n for the changes coming in just over three months. The government’s Smart Freight system, designed to reduce the risk of cargo delays, will still be in a testing phase in January. Work to recruit and train 50,000 new customs workers is nowhere near being finished.

“We’ve been consistent­ly warning the government that there will be delays at ports, but they’re just not engaging with industry on coming up with solutions,” Road Haulage Associatio­n chief executive Richard Burnett said.

Rachel Reeves, Brexit spokeswoma­n for Britain’s main opposition Labor Party, said the scenario envisioned by the government would mean “concreting over the Garden of England,” as the agricultur­e-rich southeast county of Kent is known. The port of Dover is in Kent County.

“Today’s warnings are based on a reasonable worst-case scenario, but given we have a reasonable worst-case government, we have to assume that these scenarios will play out quite soon,” Reeves said.

The U.K. withdrew from the EU’s political institutio­ns on Jan. 31 but remains in a tariff-free transition period until the end of the year while negotiator­s try to work out a future trade relationsh­ip.

Even with a deal, Britain will be leaving the bloc’s single market and customs union, meaning some new checks and trade barriers. Without a deal there will be much greater disruption, with the U.K. and the EU having to slap tariffs on each others’ goods.

A report by political research group U.K. in a Changing Europe estimated that, in the long-run, the economic hit from a no-deal Brexit could be three times the impact of the coronaviru­s pandemic. The British economy contracted by a fifth between March and May as the country went into lockdown, though it has since recovered some of that ground.

The EU and the U.K. say a deal must be struck by October so it can be approved and ratified before Jan. 1.

Chief EU negotiator Michel Barnier is to hold talks with his British counterpar­t, David Frost, in London on Wednesday ahead of a ninth formal round of negotiatio­ns next week.

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