The Denver Post

EU, UK leaders stuck on fisheries in post- Brexit talks

- By Samuel Petrequin and Pan Pylas

» The U. K. and the European Union provided sober updates Thursday on the state of postBrexit trade discussion­s, with two weeks to go before a potentiall­y chaotic split.

While Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Union’s executive commission, noted “substantia­l progress on many issues,” she voiced concerns about the discussion­s taking place around fishing rights. British Prime Minister Boris Johnson also warned that that a no- deal outcome seemed “very likely.”

The two spoke early Thursday evening, their latest in a series of conversati­ons in the past couple of weeks aimed at unclogging the talks which have moved at a snail’s pace ever since the U. K. left the EU on Jan. 31.

The U. K. still remains within the EU’s tariff- free single market and customs union until Dec. 31. A failure to reach a post- Brexit deal would likely lead to chaos on the borders at the start of 2021 as tariffs and other impediment­s to trade are enacted by both sides. The talks have been bogged down on three main issues — the EU’s access to U. K. fishing waters, the level playing field to ensure fair competitio­n between businesses and the governance of any deal.

Von der Leyen warned that bridging big difference­s, in particular on fisheries, “will be very challengin­g.” Negotiatio­ns, she added, would continue on Friday.

According to a statement from Johnson’s office at 10. Downing Street, the prime minister stressed that “time was very short” and that it “now looked very likely that agreement would not be reached unless the EU position changed substantia­lly.”

Johnson, like von der Leyen, focused on the lack of progress on fisheries. which has proved to be a hugely intractabl­e issue in the talks — even though it accounts for only a very small amount of economic output.

On fisheries, the EU has repeatedly said it wants an agreement that guarantees a reciprocal access to markets and waters. EU fishermen are keen to keep working in British waters and the U. K. seafood industry is extremely dependent on exports to the 27- nation bloc. Johnson has made fisheries and U. K. control over its waters a key demand in the long saga of Britain’s departure from the EU.

According to Downing Street, Johnson stressed that the U. K. could “not accept a situation where it was the only sovereign country in the world not to be able to control access to its own waters for an extended period and to be faced with fisheries quotas which hugely disadvanta­ged its own industry.”

Earlier, the European Parliament issued a threeday ultimatum to negotiator­s to strike a trade deal if it’s to be in a position to ratify an agreement this year. European lawmakers said they will need to have the terms of any deal in front of them by late Sunday if they are to organize a special gathering before the end of the year. If a deal comes later, it could only be ratified in 2021.

A trade deal would ensure there are no tariffs and quotas on trade in goods between the two sides, but there would still be technical costs, partly associated with customs checks and non- tariff barriers on services.

Britain’s Parliament must also approve any Brexit deal and the Christmas break adds to the timing complicati­ons.

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