National Post (National Edition)

EU vows `final push' in U.K. Brexit talks

Deep rift remains over fishing rights

- GABRIELA BACZYNSKA

BRUS SE L S • The European Union is making a “final push” to strike a Brexit trade deal with Britain, although there are still deep rifts over fishing rights, the bloc’s chief negotiator said on Tuesday.

Britain will complete its departure from the EU on Dec. 31 when its current free trade arrangemen­ts expire. The two sides have been struggling for months to define a new relationsh­ip covering everything from trade to transport and energy.

The much-delayed final stages of the already tortuous negotiatio­ns now coincide with a fresh crisis after EU members and other countries suspended most travel to and from Britain to curb a new, more contagious variant of the coronaviru­s.

“We are really in a crucial moment. We are giving it a final push,” said the negotiator, Michel Barnier, as he arrived to update the bloc’s 27 national envoys on Brexit.

Ir i s h Pr i m e Mi n i s t e r Micheál Martin said he believed negotiator­s were more likely than not to strike a deal, but that talks may go beyond Dec. 25.

Barnier told the closeddoor gathering that the UK’s latest offer on sharing out the fish catch from British waters from 2021 was “totally unacceptab­le,” according to EU diplomats who spoke on condition of anonymity.

“Barnier is walking a tightrope between London and Paris,” said one diplomat in Brussels, a reference to the small but politicall­y prominent fishing community in northern France that would be affected by any reduction of the EU catch.

A senior diplomat who took part in the meeting with Barnier said the EU’s latest offer on fish was its final one, and added that there was still concern around regulating production standards and state aid to ensure corporate fair play.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who campaigned for Brexit in a 2016 referendum, arguing that it would restore Britain’s sovereignt­y, has repeatedly said it must control its waters and who fishes there.

EU officials and diplomats said the bloc could be willing to cut the value of its fish catch in British waters by around 25 per cent, while Britain was demanding a 30-35 per cent cut.

But the sources said the length of the fisheries transition regime was also an obstacle, as was the question of EU retaliatio­n if London excludes its vessels from British waters afterwards — something that Britain says is excessive.

The UK wants to gradually curb EU access to its fishing waters over three years, while the bloc is proposing six years, to give its fishing industry longer to adjust.

While EU sources said an agreement was getting closer, they warned it might not come in time.

“The EU will not close its door to the UK, and remains ready to negotiate even beyond the 1st of January,” said a third EU diplomat.

With London refusing to request an extension of Britain’s transition out of the EU beyond the end of this year, that would mean a dramatic rupture in trading ties in just nine days’ time.

Around US$900 mil - lion in annual trade is at risk if Britain, the world’s sixth-biggest economy, and the EU — a trading bloc of 450 million consumers — fail to craft a new accord.

Calls between Johnson and Ursula von der Leyen, head of the executive European Commission, which is negotiatin­g with Britain on behalf of the member states, will take place as needed, EU officials said.

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