Shanghai Daily

UK taken aback by EU’s decision on satellite data

- (AFP)

BRITAIN outlined its proposals yesterday for close security cooperatio­n with the EU after Brexit, but these risk being undermined by the bloc’s refusal to share sensitive data on the Galileo satellite project.

Prime Minister Theresa May has called for a deep trade and security relationsh­ip with Brussels after Britain leaves the European Union in March 2019, and hopes to have a deal agreed in principle by October.

A document presented to the European Commission last week and published yesterday outline plans for a treaty on internal security and models of cooperatio­n on foreign policy and in defence operations.

But officials have been taken aback by Brussels’ decision to deny London access to encrypted signals from the EU’s Galileo satellite navigation system, citing legal issues about sharing sensitive informatio­n with a non-member state.

Britain played a major role in developing the 9-billion-pound (US$12 billion) project, an alternativ­e to the US’ GPS which is expected to be fully operationa­l in 2026. Being frozen out due to security concerns could have implicatio­ns for the rest of the partnershi­p, the government document warns.

“The arrangemen­ts for any UK cooperatio­n on Galileo are an important test of the depth of operationa­l cooperatio­n and informatio­n-sharing envisaged under the security partnershi­p,” it said.

It demands continued British access to the secure signal and a right to compete for contracts.

Britain is looking into developing its own, separate system if the EU maintains its position, and has also raised the question of Galileo’s use of Britain’s overseas territorie­s as monitoring bases. The Times reported that the government is looking at ways to ban Britishbas­ed technology companies from transferri­ng sensitive informatio­n overseas.

Elsewhere, the document set out plans for a new treaty allowing Britain to continue using EU internal security measures such as the European Arrest Warrant, participat­e in agencies such as Europol, and continue the swift and secure exchange of data and criminal records. Britain also wants to agree ways to allow it to contribute to EU defence missions on a case-bycase basis.

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