The Scotsman

Food industry wants legal waiver if no-deal causes ‘panic buying’

- By PARIS GOURTSOYAN­NIS Westminste­r Correspond­ent paris.gourtsoyan­nis@scotsman.com

The UK food and drink industry asked the government for special protection­s in the event of a no-deal Brexit nearly a year ago, but are still waiting for an answer, it has emerged.

Producers asked the previous administra­tion for competitio­n law to be set aside so firms could co-ordinate direct supplies with one another.

“We asked for these reassuranc­es at the end of last year, but we’re still waiting,” the Food and Drink Federation said.

The revelation comes amid mounting fears of a no-deal Brexit as the UK and EU continue to refuse to negotiate with one another ahead of a 31 October deadline.

And research from the People’s Vote campaign, seeking a second EU referendum, yesterday claimed that food bills could rise by £190 a year per person in the event of No Deal.

The government sought to offer reassuranc­e about preparatio­ns for a no-deal Brexit, with the cabinet minister in charge, Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster Michael Gove, visiting the Port of Dover alongside Home Secretary Priti Patel and Transport Secretary Grant Shapps.

Theministe­rsmetrepre­sentatives of the haulage, freight and port sectors, with Mr Shapps pledging that “goods and transport will continue to move in a no-deal scenario”.

But because of stockpilin­g for Christmas, food industry experts warned leaving the EU in the autumn could pose more difficulti­es than the original Brexit date last March, with the UK reportedly needing 30 huge empty warehouses to store even a week’s extra food supply.

Justin King, former chief executive of Sainsbury’s and a People’s Vote backer, said: “There is, at best, less than ten days of food in the system at any one time and October is just about the worst time to be generating this kind of crisis.

“The warehouses are all at capacity ahead of Christmas and as we hit the autumn we are more reliant on imported fresh food, as our growing season comes to an end.”

Crossbench peer Lord

“There is, at best, less than ten days of food in the system at any one time and October is just about the worst time to be generating this kind of crisis”

JUSTIN KING

Former Sainsbury’s chief executive Haskins, a former chairman of Northern Foods, said he believed there could be “panic-buying” in the event of a nodeal Brexit.

He told the BBC’S Today programme: “We could be in a sort of wartime situation of a limitedamo­untoffoodr­ationing.”

Meanwhile, Scottish Liberal Democrat leader Willie Rennie has called for a cap on seasonal agricultur­al workers to be lifted after working a shift as a strawberry picker on a Fife farm. East Granemuir Farm requested 20 workers as part of a 2,500 UK pilot scheme, but received only eight.

“Brexit and the dramatic fall in the value of the pound has had an equally dramatic impact on the the number of workers from the rest of Europe travelling to work in the UK,” Mr Rennie said. “If the Prime Minister wants to boost agricultur­e he needs to urgently revisit the seasonal worker scheme and increase the number of staff available.”

 ??  ?? 0 Transport Secretary Grant Shapps, left, Home Secretary Priti Patel and no-deal Brexit ‘supremo’ Michael Gove in Dover yesterday
0 Transport Secretary Grant Shapps, left, Home Secretary Priti Patel and no-deal Brexit ‘supremo’ Michael Gove in Dover yesterday

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