China Daily

EU says time running out for post-Brexit deal

- By EARLE GALE in London earle@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

The man fronting the European Union’s negotiatio­ns with the United Kingdom on a possible future trade deal has said time is running out.

Michel Barnier expressed disappoint­ment at the lack of progress made on a deal to fill the void that will be left when the UK fully extricates itself from the bloc at the end of the year.

Barnier, the EU’s chief negotiator, said he would like to see “genuine progress” made before June, as well as a decision from the UK on whether it wants to extend the transition­al period beyond Dec 31. The transition­al period, during which the nation follows EU rules and procedures despite its exit from the bloc on Jan 31, was designed to allow the two sides to continue frictionle­ss trading until a replacemen­t trade deal could be agreed.

But repeated delays in the UK’s exit from the bloc ate into the transition­al period. And, subsequent­ly, the novel coronaviru­s outbreak, which left both Barnier and his opposite number battling symptoms, made negotiatio­ns all but impossible.

The BBC said Barnier believes only “limited progress” has been made and that he now wants talks to “move forward in a constructi­ve fashion”.

Two further rounds of negotiatio­ns — in May and June — are planned before the transition­al period concludes on Dec 31, but Barnier said he wants the two sides to make a decision by June 30 on whether the transition­al period should be extended to allow more time for talks.

The UK government has, however, repeatedly said it will not extend the transition­al period, in part because the EU would charge a fee for the extension.

“The UK has affirmed once again ... its wish to make tangible progress between now and June and we’re on the same wavelength on this and we respect the same timetable,” Barnier said. “That means that we need genuine progress by June if, at the end of this year, we want to strike an agreement which is commensura­te to the level of our economic interdepen­dence and geographic­al proximity.”

At loggerhead­s

But Barnier said the two sides are far from agreeing on the level of EU market access the UK could expect, and are at loggerhead­s on legal system cooperatio­n, and how to manage their shared fisheries. The two sides are also understood to disagree on how future disputes should be resolved.

Barnier said the EU will not agree to anything unless it is “balanced” and “sustainabl­e”. And he insists on a “level-playing field”.

But he said “the UK did not wish to commit seriously on a number of fundamenta­l points.

“The UK cannot refuse to extend transition and at the same time slow down discussion­s on important areas,” he said.

A UK government spokespers­on said: “We do not recognize the suggestion that we have not engaged seriously with the EU in any area. We have just had a negotiatin­g round lasting most of a week, including two full days talking about fisheries and three full days discussing so-called level-playingfie­ld issues.”

The Mail Online said the latest round of talks were the first for more than a month.

It said Barnier believes talks could collapse by June if progress is not made.

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