Brexit: Britain will have to stay aligned to EU rules if it wants trade deal, Michel Barnier says

EU chief negotiator says bloc will impose 'very demanding' conditions on UK as it publishes plan

Jon Stone
Brussels
Monday 03 February 2020 11:52 GMT
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Michel Barnier Warns That 'It Will Not Be Business As Usual For The UK'

Britain will have to stay aligned to EU rules in a whole set of areas after Brexit if it wants a trade deal, the bloc's chief negotiator has said.

Michel Barnier said tariff- and quota-free access to EU markets was dependent on the inclusion of "a mechanism to uphold the high standards we have on social, environmental, tax, and state aid matters today and in their future developments".

He also said a deal was "conditional" on an agreement giving EU fishing fleets access to British waters, and that it would be governed by the EU's European Court of Justice.

How aligned the UK stays to EU rules is set to be a major battleground in the coming trade talks. Mr Barnier warned that the EU would be "very demanding" in its stipulations on the UK and that its objective was "to ensure that [regulatory] divergence doesn't become an instrument for unfair competition whereby there would be disadvantages for EU industry".

The negotiator's suggestion that "future developments" in EU rules should be incorporated into UK law is likely to be a particular stumbling block, as it rules out a simple "non-regression" clause in the deal keeping British standards at the level they are now.

The European Commission on Monday published its negotiating mandate, which the chief negotiator was unveiling at a press conference in Brussels. It will have to be approved by member states at a meeting later this month.

It comes the same day as Boris Johnson lays out the UK approach to talks in a speech in London. The prime minister says he would be willing to accept tariffs in trade with the EU if it means the UK can diverge on its regulations.

But if the prime minister fails to negotiate a zero-tariff and zero-quota trade agreement, there will be tariffs and quotas payable on goods moving between different parts of the United Kingdom – across the Irish Sea. This is because Mr Johnson's withdrawal agreement puts a customs border between Great Britain and Northern Ireland. There will be customs and regulatory checks whether or not a deal is negotiated.

In a separate complicating issue, the EU's negotiating mandate says the trade deal will not apply to Gibraltar. The mandate says that any "separate agreements" will require "a prior agreement of the Kingdom of Spain" – effectively giving the Spanish government a veto.

Mr Barnier would not be drawn on the details of how the regulatory alignment could be enforced, telling journalists in Brussels: "I can't get embroiled in the details of the mechanism, that will all be discussed in the negotiation".

Regarding the European Court of Justice's role in overseeing the deal, one official said: "The European Court of Justice's role is important: it will apply to the whole agreement. Whenever there is a question of interpreting EU law, the only court that can do that is the ECJ. We cannot invent a new court, a new legal system to do this. Of course, international agreements are EU law, so they are part of the interpretation that the court has to give."

They added: "It's not a choice, its reality – if it's a question of EU law it's for the ECJ to do that."

Under the EU's governance proposal, a joint disputes committee would decide whether any issue was a matter of EU law or not – and call in the ECJ if it was. If the issue is deemed not to be a matter of European law it would be decided by the committee itself.

Talks, which are set to start in the first week of March, will take place in both Brussels and London, the EU official confirmed. Member states are expected to confirm the negotiating mandate at a meeting of ministers on 25 February.

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