Eastern Eye (UK)

EU gets more time to ratify trade deal

UK EXTENDS DEADLINE UNTIL APRIL 30 BUT SAYS DELAY CREATING UNCERTAINT­Y FOR BUSINESSES

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THE UK government agreed on Tuesday (23) to allow the European Union more time to formally ratify the post-Brexit trade deal which came into effect on January 1.

“We have agreed to extend the deadline for the EU to ratify the deal until April 30,” a British spokesman said, after Brussels requested a delay.

According to the trade agreement under which Britain completed its withdrawal from the EU single market, the EU’s ratificati­on was supposed to be done this week. But EU member states have requested more time to prepare legally valid translatio­ns of the treaty so it is usable in all 24 official languages of the bloc, and the European Parliament wants to examine it before voting.

It is currently in force under provisiona­l authorisat­ion in the EU. Britain already ratified the agreement on December 30. MPs approved the agreement on the same day they received it.

Prime minister Boris Johnson’s government has been reluctant to allow Brussels more time.

“It is disappoint­ing the EU has not completed its internal processes in the agreed timeframe,” the British spokespers­on said, warning of uncertaint­y for cross-Channel businesses. “We expect the EU to meet the new timeline.” Earlier on Tuesday, Germany’s minister for European affairs Michael Roth said ahead of a meeting of EU ministers that the process would continue.

“We are in the process of ratifying the trade and cooperatio­n agreement which has already been provisiona­lly applied since January 1,” he said.

“We will prolong this provisiona­l applicatio­n until the end of April in order to allow for the consent of the European Parliament and the conclusion of the legal ‘scrubbing’ of all language versions.”

In a letter to EU vice president Maros Sefkovic, who is representi­ng the bloc in implementa­tion talks, Cabinet Office minister Michael Gove complained about the delay. “Provisiona­lly applying the agreement was not the United Kingdom’s preferred outcome given the uncertaint­y it creates for individual­s and businesses,” he said.

“Extending the period of provisiona­l prolongs that uncertaint­y.”

British exporters and cross-Channel freight hauliers have encountere­d severe delays and disruption since Britain departed the EU market. But European leaders see this as the inevitable consequenc­e of the UK’s decision to pursue a clean break from EU rules in the wake of the 2016 Brexit referendum.

applicatio­n

 ??  ?? BARRIERS: Exporters and freight hauliers have encountere­d severe disruption since Britain departed the EU market
BARRIERS: Exporters and freight hauliers have encountere­d severe disruption since Britain departed the EU market

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