The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Concern fishermen could be kept in CFP longer than first thought

-

UK Environmen­t Secretary Michael Gove has declared he is “invincibly” confident Britain will be negotiatin­g as an independen­t coastal state by the end of 2020 – despite talk of extending the Brexit transition period.

Concerns were immediatel­y raised about the impact on fishermen after the prime minister indicated this had emerged as an option as she arrived for the European Council summit in Brussels yesterday.

Liberal Democrat MP Alistair Carmichael questioned whether the timetable for coming out of the Common Fisheries Policy (CFP) remained on track in light of this developmen­t.

He said fishermen had first been promised an exit on March 29 2019 – the date the UK is due to leave the EU – but that had “slipped back” to the end of the transition period on December 29 2020.

“It now looks set that the time in which our fishing industry remains part of the CFP, but with no input into the decision-making process, could be even longer still,” he added.

The Scottish Fishermen’s Federation said it would make “no sense whatsoever” to “force” the industry to operate under the CFP beyond 2020.

A spokesman also underlined the “genuine fear”among fishermen that any extension to the UK’s time in the “Brexit waiting room would be used by the EU to place conditions on the return of fish stocks that are rightfully ours via long-term agreements that would be difficult to disentangl­e in years to come”.

Northern isles MP Mr Carmichael put the issue to Mr Gove during Defra questions in the Commons yesterday.

He quoted a remark made by the Tory frontbench­er in March when he confirmed that “in December 2020 we will be negotiatin­g fishing opportunit­ies as a third country and independen­t coastal state”.

Mr Carmichael asked: “Given the comments from the prime minister and the minister for the Cabinet Office this morning about extending the transition­al period, how confident is the secretary of state now that he will be able to meet that undertakin­g?”

Mr Gove “Invincibly so.”

He had previously insisted it was vital to leave the EU “at the earliest possible point” in order to exit the Common Agricultur­al Policy and the CFP.

The P&J understand­s the minister has made similar assurances to colleagues behind the scenes that the UK will not have to remain in the CFP beyond the date already agreed. replied:

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? DRAMA: Prime Minister Theresa May at the EU summit in Brussels, left, and Commons Leader Andrea Leadsom in Downing Street
DRAMA: Prime Minister Theresa May at the EU summit in Brussels, left, and Commons Leader Andrea Leadsom in Downing Street

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom