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With just days to go until the EU vote and the polls suggesting all is still to play for, we look at what sort of trading arrangements the UK could put in place if we vote to leave.










There are various options for UK-EU trade if we vote to leave the EU next week

One of the most important questions as far as farmers are concerned is what sort of trading relations the UK would put in place with the EU in the event of Brexit.

There are various options and the UK would have an official period of two years to negotiate the new arrangements, although Brexit campaigners say this period could be extended.

In a paper looking at possible implications of Brexit for the agri-food sector for the journal EuroChoices, Dr. Alan Swinbank outlines the various possible trade scenarios.

EU TURKEY-STYLE CUSTOMS UNION


Dr Swinbank suggested the simplest format would be to leave the EU but retain the existing customs union, along the lines of Turkey’s relationship with the EU.

But he also describes this as the most unlikely outcome.

The EU–Turkey customs union largely excludes agriculture, so if this precedent were to be followed, both the EU and the UK would apply their most-favoured-nation (MFN) tariffs on cross border agri-food trade, he added.

  • Read more: see FGInsight's Brexit Briefing analysis on the trade implications of Brexit for UK farmers

WTO PARTNERS


If no arrangement could be negotiated, then the EU and the UK would trade with each other as WTO partners, applying their respective Most-Favoured Nation tariffs against each other.

Fresh lamb carcasses dispatched from the UK to France would, for example, face a tariff of 12.8 per cent plus €1,713 per tonne.

Similarly, if the UK retained the MFN tariffs it currently applies on imports from outside the EU it would now charge them on shipments from its former EU partners as well.

Irish and Danish butter into the UK would pay €1,896 per tonne (for comparison the EU’s support price for butter is €2,463.9 per tonne).

Under WTO rules the UK could unilaterally reduce its MFN tariffs, rather than continue to apply a tariff schedule inherited from its EU membership, but, according to Dr Swinbank, this is ‘perhaps unlikely’.

Trade negotiators prefer to secure some quid pro quo from trading partners in exchange for tariff reductions.

FREE TRADE AREA


Between the two above extremes are various WTO-compatible Free Trade Area (FTA) agreements, either including or excluding agriculture.

In its simplest form, an FTA would remove trade barriers on goods covered by the agreement and originating within the FTA.

Rules of origin and border controls would be required to identify the shipments that can and those that cannot circulate freely.

The UK would continue to apply the EU’s tariff regime on third country trade, while there are varying assumptions regarding the additional costs that would be incurred on UK–EU trade.

THE EUROPEAN ECONOMIC AREA (EEA)


The EEA which includes Norway, Iceland and Lichtenstein as well as the EU, goes further than an FTA, extending many of the EU’s regulatory – internal market – provisions to the other EEA members.

Norway has no formal say in determining these measures, and pays a membership fee to the EU for participating in the EEA, comparable in some respects to the UK’s net contribution to the EU budget, Dr Swinbank said.

Moreover, as with many of the EU’s FTAs, trade in agri-food products is largely excluded from its provisions.

Dr Swinbank, among others, questions whether the UK, particularly its Eurosceptics, would be satisfied with an EEA-like outcome, particularly if the EU insisted on the inclusion of the internal market’s four freedoms covering the movement of goods, services, capital and labour’?

Ireland, for example, would undoubtedly want beef to be included in any EEA-like agreement to gain easy access to the British market, he said.

He added: “But what if the UK then lowered its tariff on beef to all suppliers (as in the final column of Table 1), allowing British consumers access to cheaper beef from Latin America for example, whilst continuing to export British bred and reared beef to the protected EU market?”

GLOBAL TRADE ARRANGEMENTS

Dr Swinbank said the assumption was the UK would simply drop out of the dozens of FTAs that the EU has with countries around the world, thereby forcing the UK to renegotiate dozens of trade deals.

This includes those under negotiation such as the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) with the USA.

However, the situation may not be quite that simple, he claimed.

Most recent FTAs are so-called ‘mixed’ agreements that have been ratified by both the EU and each of the Member States, and just how they would be unravelled and repackaged is unclear.

EU REFERENDUM - THE RACE TIGHTENS

 With just 10 days to the outcome of the EU Referendum appears to be wide open.

  • While overall polling puts the two sides neck-and-neck, some recent polls are suggesting a significant swing towards ‘Leave’ and have it well ahead.
  • But interestingly the bookmakers across the board still have Remain (typically 4/9) as favourites, although the odds on Leave (7/4) have shortened over the past week or so.

Article provided by Alistair Driver, Political Editor Farmers Guardian. To view more stories like this why not subscribe to FGinsight.com 
Member states have still not reached agreement on glyphosate after a vote in Brussels today.
UK farming unions are deeply concerned at the prospect of losing glyphosate

The European Commission has just over three weeks to find a solution on the future of glyphosate in the EU after member states again failed to reach agreement on a compromise proposal.

Experts representing member states met in Brussels on Monday to vote on a revised proposal to extend the marketing authorisation of the key herbicide for a further 18 months.

But, without the support of eight member states, including France and Germany, sufficient agreement for a qualified majority supporting the proposal was not reached. Seven member states, including France, Germany and Italy, abstained, with only Malta voting against.

These leaves the Commission with limited options before glyphosate’s licence requires on July 1.

According to Reuters, without a qualified majority, the Commission has the option of submitting its proposal to an appeal committee of political representatives of the 28 member states within one month.

If, again, there is no decision, the European Commission may adopt its own proposal. This would be a last resort for the Commission, which has previously stated its reluctance to push the proposal through without the necessary support of member states.

A Commission spokesman said EU commissioners would discuss the issue when they met on Tuesday.

SCIENTIFIC ASSESSMENT

The European Commission proposed an 18-month extension in order to give the European Union’s Agency for Chemical Products (ECHA) time to report on its scientific assessment on the carcinogenicity of the glyphosate before the issue is addressed again at EU level.

The Commission had already had proposals to extend glyphosate’s EU marketing authorisation blocked twice in recent months.

Glyphosate’s current authorisation expires on July 1.

Should there be no extension by then, member states would have to withdraw the authorisations for plant protection products containing glyphosate from their market.

Speaking ahead of Monday’s meeting, EU Health and Food Safety Commissioner Vytenis Andriukaitis urged member states who had not taken a position in recent months, including Germany, to back the latest compromise and those, led by France, who want to ban the herbicide not to ’hide behind the Commission’.

The 18-month extension compares with previous proposed extensions of 15 years and nine years. The European Parliament voted infavour of a seven-year extension in April.

Mr Andriukaitis said: "I believe it is important to clarify that once an active substance is approved – or renewed at EU level – it is then up to Member States to authorise the final products (the herbicides and pesticides themselves) put on their respective markets.

"The EU approval of an active substance only means that the Member States can authorise plant protection products on their territory, but they are not obliged to do that.

"The Member States who wish not to use glyphosate based products have the possibility to restrict their use. They do not need to hide behind the Commission’s decision."

RESTRICTIONS ON USE

The Commission is also preparing a second decision, reviewing the conditions of use of glyphosate in the form of three clear recommendations:
  •          Ban a co-formulant called POE-tallowamine from glyphosate based products
  •          Minimise the use in public parks, public playgrounds and gardens
  •          Minimise the pre-harvest use of glyphosate.


The Commissioner reiterated his view that ’high level of protection of human health and the environment, as provided for by the EU legislation, is paramount’.

He said: "At the same time, I remain deeply convinced that our decisions should remain based on science, not on political convenience."

He said the proposals and decisions on glyphosate were based on the guided assessment done by the European Food SafetyAuthority and, before it, the German Federal institute for Risk Assessment (Bundesinstitut für Risikobewertung).

"They both concluded that Glyphosate is unlikely to be carcinogenic," he said.

REACTION
Greenpeace EU food policy director Franziska Achterberg said the outcome of Monday’s meeting showed governments ’remain sceptical about the continued use of the controversial weedkiller’.

She said: “Extending the glyphosate licence would be like smelling gas and refusing to evacuate to check for a leak.

"As long as there is no meaningful EU-wide restriction on glyphosate use, we will continue to live in a world that is awash in a weedkiller which is a likely cause of cancer.”

“It’s scandalous, but not unusual for the Commission to keep dangerous pesticides on the market after their licences expire.

"It has even extended the licence for substances that Europe’s own chemicals agency has identified as highly damaging to our health.

"What’s new this time is that governments paid attention and didn’t just sign off on the Commission’s proposal."

UK FARMING UNIONS URGE POLICYMAKERS TO BACK GLYPHOSATE
Presidents of four UK farming unions have sent a letter to European policymakers and elected officials highlighting the importance of the reauthorisation of glyphosate ahead of the vote.

The NFU, NFU Cymru, NFU Scotland and UFU warned banning glyphosate would have 'grave consequences for European agriculture'.

The UK farming unions said there is no well-reasoned argument holding back a full re-authorisation of glyphosate in line with the regulatory process.

The letter stated that the glyphosate decision has been subject to ‘political bargaining’
Elected officials and policymakers were urged by unions to ‘respect the process’ for the re-registration of plant protection products.

The letters stated: "The ongoing situation has already severely damaged the credibility of the European Food Safety Authority and as a consequence has eroded confidence and certainty in the regulatory system.

"It is deeply worrying that a decision that has very real consequences on millions of peoples’ everyday lives is the subject of political bargaining.

It adds: "European farmers need glyphosate to provide a safe, secure and affordable food supply while increasingly responding to consumer demand for greater environmental sensitivity.

ESSENTIAL TOOL

"Glyphosate is subject to regulation, as with all other pesticides, so that it is not found in dangerous quantities in the food chain.

"It is also an essential tool used in farming practices that actually improve soil structure and require less work with machinery; thus helping reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

"Furthermore, application pre-harvest not only ensures the quality of the crop, but also means that less drying after harvest is required."

It warned: "The removal of such a tool carries the very real risk of yet another pressure on our incomes at a time when economic returns are already severely squeezed."

The letter concluded: "In our view there is no well-reasoned argument holding back a full reauthorisation of glyphosate in line with the regulatory process.

"We fear that without such a course of action there would be grave consequences for European agriculture that will resonate for years."


Article provided by Alistair Driver, Political Editor Farmers Guardian. To view more stories like this why not subscribe to FGinsight.com 
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