Brexit deal jammed on fishing dilemma
BRUSSELS: The EU has rejected the latest UK offer on fishing but is ready to pursue a post-Brexit trade deal even beyond the end of the year, diplomats said on Tuesday.
According to sources in a meeting of ambassadors, EU negotiator Michel Barnier said he could not guarantee there would be a deal but that the EU’s “door will remain open”.
Britain is due to leave the EU single market at midnight on December 31, with or without a deal.
The only way for any agreement to go into effect before then is if the member states agree to apply it provisionally — pending the approval of the EU parliament.
Britain has rejected the idea of continuing talks next year. “EU negotiators are in a last push now to make progress and to clinch a deal acceptable for both sides,” Mr Barnier said, according to several European diplomats.
“The EU will not close its door to the UK and remains ready to negotiate even beyond January 1.”
According to the diplomats, Britain had suggested EU access to UK fish stocks be reduced by 35 per cent, phased in over three years.
The EU had suggested a level of 25 per cent, and over six years. But crucially the British offer did not include “pelagic fish” — those that swim freely away from coasts or the seabed — and had not addressed inshore fishing at all.
If the loss of access to pelagic species is included the EU would lose 60 per cent of its current catch, they said.
“In other words quite far outside the mandate of the EU negotiator,” one EU source said, adding: “Barnier has not asked for his mandate to change.”
Member states with northern fishing fleets such as France, Denmark and the Netherlands are holding out on fish, but the EU remains broadly united, sources said.
In addition to fish, members are concerned about UK attempts to set time limits on some rules to ensure fair competition in business and regulate state subsidies.
“Progress has been made. Most issues are preliminarily closed or close to being agreed,” another diplomat said, recounting Mr Barnier’s briefing to EU ambassadors.
“However, differences on fisheries remain difficult to bridge. Unfortunately, the UK is not moving enough yet to clinch a fair deal on fisheries.”
If Mr Barnier and his UK counterpart David Frost fail, the UK will leave without a follow-on trade deal and tariffs would be reimposed on cross-Channel trade in food and goods.
On Monday, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and EU chief Ursula von der Leyen held a crisis call to discuss the Brexit talks but failed to make progress.
The 11th-hour talks have also been overshadowed by the fast-moving crisis over the new coronavirus strain found by London.
Amid reports the new strain might spread more quickly than previous ones, 40 countries in Europe and around the world cut travel links to Britain.
The EU is scrambling to come up with a co-ordinated response after cross-Channel traffic was left snarled as France shut down entry for passengers and goods. France said on Tuesday that it would begin to ease measures.