Houston Chronicle

As Brexit nears, food shortage feared

- By Danica Kirka and Jill Lawless

LONDON— TheU.K. food industry is urging the government to set aside competitio­n rules so companies can coordinate supply decisions to combat food shortages if Britain leaves the European Union without an agreement on trade relations.

The Food and Drink Federation said Wednesday it had asked the British government to direct the Competitio­n and Markets Authority to relax rules that prevent such coordinati­on. It hasn’t yet received a response.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson says Britain will leave the EU on the scheduled date of Oct. 31, with or without a divorce deal. Many economists say a nodeal Brexit will trigger a recession and cause economic mayhem, with shortages of fresh food and other goods likely as customs checks snarl Britain’s ports.

The federation said Britain’s decision to delay Brexit until Oct. 31fromthe original date inMarch ismakes it more difficult for supermarke­ts to keep shelves filled because normal stockpilin­g for the Christmas season means less warehouse space is available in the fall.

“If the government­wants the food supply chain to work together to tackle likely shortages — to decide where to prioritize shipments — they will have to provide cast-iron written reassuranc­es that competitio­n law will not be strictly applied to those discussion­s,” said Tim Rycroft, the federation’s chief operating officer. “Without such assurances, any such collaborat­ion would risk incurring large fines” fromthe regulator.

Christophe­r Haskins, a former chairman of Northern Foods, one of the country’s largest suppliers of package foods, said panic buying is possible.

“We could be in a sort of wartime situation of a limited amount of food rationing,” he told the BBC. “Those who can remember the war, that took a long time to put into place, and it was pretty haphazard and pretty unfair.

“I don’t think we’ll get to that, but I’m very concerned about the groups who aren’t in the supermarke­t chain, how they will deal with things.”

Michael Gove, the Cabinet minister in charge of preparing for a no-deal Brexit, said Britain had “a very resilient food supply system.”

“But, of course, we’re constantly talking to supermarke­ts, food distributo­rs and others to see what more the government can do to help,” he said.

Johnson has ordered British officials to “turbocharg­e” preparatio­ns for a no-deal exit, setting aside more than $2.4 billion to hire more border officials, stockpile medicines and prepare for backlogs of trucks around the major Channel port of Dover.

He and other Brexit supporters argue that any short-term turbulence from Brexit will be outweighed by the economic opportunit­ies once Britain leaves the 28-nation bloc and can strike new trade deals around the world.

Critics note that the EU accounts for almost half of Britain’s trade and argue that any newtrade deals are likely years away.

U.K. Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab, on a visit to Washington, was upbeat about the chances of a free trade deal with the United States.

“There’s a huge appetite on both sides to achieve that,” said Raab, who met President Donald Trump at the White House on Tuesday.

Raab said “there’s obviously going to be a lot of work to make that happen,” but added that Trump had been “effusive in his warmth” for Britain.

Raab is also visiting Canada and Mexico on a trip aimed at laying the groundwork for post-Brexit trade deals.

 ?? KirstyWigg­lesworth / Associated Press ?? The U.K. food industry is asking that regulation­s be eased so companies can work together post-Brexit.
KirstyWigg­lesworth / Associated Press The U.K. food industry is asking that regulation­s be eased so companies can work together post-Brexit.

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