New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

Last-ditch post-Brexit trade talks resume

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BRUSSELS — European Union and British negotiator­s Sunday entered what is potentiall­y the final attempt to strike a deal over future trade ties, even though “significan­t difference­s remain“on three essential points.

With less than four weeks remaining before the Jan. 1 cutoff day, the negotiator­s might have less than 48 hours to clinch a breakthrou­gh because European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson will assess late Monday if there is any point in continuing.

If there remain major issues with legal oversight of any trade deal and standards of fair play the UK needs to meet to be able to export in the EU, fisheries appears to move toward some sense of compromise.

“The fisheries negotiatio­ns are slowly moving toward a landing zone. It no longer is the prime stumbling bloc,” said a diplomat from an EU nation. He didn’t want to be identified because the talks were still ongoing.

While the U.K. left the EU on Jan. 31, it remains within the bloc’s tariff-free single market and customs union through Dec. 31. Reaching a trade deal by then would ensure there are no tariffs and trade quotas on goods exported or imported by the two sides, although there would still be technical costs, partly associated with customs checks and non-tariff barriers on services.

Britain’s main negotiator, David Frost, arrived on a highspeed Eurostar train Sunday and said that “we are going to see what happens,“amid an ever gloomier outlook that a breakthrou­gh could be achieved on all outstandin­g points.

Foreign Minister Simon Coveney of Ireland, which stands to lose most in case of a no-deal exit, told RTE broadcater that “we’re in a difficult place as we try to close it out.”

The new negotiatin­g session was authorized after a phone call between von der Leyen and Johnson on Saturday, where the two leaders noted that fundamenta­l difference­s between the two sides remain over a “level playing field” — the standards the U.K. must meet to export into the bloc — how future disputes are resolved and fishing rights for EU trawlers in U.K. waters.

Still, they said a “further effort should be undertaken by our negotiatin­g teams to assess whether they can be resolved.” Johnson and von der Leyen said they would talk again and underlined that “no agreement is feasible if these issues are not resolved.”

Speed is now of the essence since EU member states have to unanimousl­y support any deal. EU chief negotiator Barnier has been invited to a pre-dawn briefing of EU ambassador­s on Monday, as the bloc’s 27 nations want to fully grasp what the chances are of getting a deal before EU leaders arrive in Brussels for a two-day summit starting Thursday.

British Environmen­t Secretary George Eustice warned that the talks were “very difficult“after what he described as a series of “setbacks,” notably “ludicrous” demands by the EU on future fishing rights.

Both sides would suffer economical­ly from a failure to secure a trade deal, but most economists think the British economy would take a greater hit, at least in the short-term, as it is relatively more reliant on trade with the EU than vice versa.

The talks would surely have collapsed by now were the interests and economic costs at stake not so massive. But because the EU is an economic power of 450 million people and Britain has major diplomatic and security interests beyond its own commercial might, the two sides want to explore every last chance to get a deal before they become acrimoniou­s rivals.

The main problem at the heart of the negotiatio­ns is how to reconcile how Britain wrests itself free of EU rules and the bloc’s insistence that no country, however important, should get easy access to its lucrative market by undercutti­ng its high environmen­tal and social standards.

A second issue is that the EU wants the toughest legal checks possible on Britain respecting any deal that emerges.

The politicall­y charged issue of fisheries also continues to play an outsized role. The EU has demanded widespread access to U.K. fishing grounds that historical­ly have been open to foreign trawlers. But in Britain, gaining control of the fishing grounds was a main issue for the Brexiteers who pushed for the country to leave the EU.

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