France is leading a small group of countries demanding that European vessels maintain open access to British waters that are particularly rich in fish stocks (AFP Photo/William EDWARDS) |
Brussels (AFP) - EU envoys meet on Monday to finalise a negotiating mandate for Brexit trade talks with Britain, with France insisting on strict red lines to uphold European standards.
Establishing
the foundation for new ties with Britain is the next chapter in the Brexit
saga, with signs pointing to several months of acrimonious talks between London
and Brussels with the outcome highly uncertain.
Britain
left the European Union on January 31, but entered a transition phase until the
end of the year to give time to hammer out a new basis for relations on trade,
security and defence.
But there
are doubts the two sides will bridge their differences in that time, with
French President Emmanuel Macron warning at the weekend he was "not
sure" a deal would be struck by the end of December.
Trade will
be the biggest flashpoint, with the remaining 27 EU countries especially
nervous that Britain will backslide on standards to win a competitive edge
against European businesses.
Fishing is
also a hot-button issue, with France leading a small group of countries
demanding that European vessels maintain open access to British waters that are
particularly rich in fish stocks.
The EU
envoys meet at around 1400 GMT and if they find common ground, the matter will
then go to a meeting of European affairs ministers on Tuesday, whose final
green light would open the way for talks with the UK to start on March 2.
'The
whole point'
Recent days
have shown that tetchy talks lie ahead, with Britain insisting it is no longer
chasing a deep partnership with Europe that would require matching EU rules on
health, labour standards, environment and other matters.
Instead,
Prime Minister Boris Johnson is asking for a simplified deal similar to those
the EU has struck with Canada, Japan and South Korea that reduce tariff
barriers to near zero, but which have less strict controls on standards.
Bringing
that point home to Europe, in a speech in Brussels last week, Britain's chief
Brexit negotiator David Frost said his government's desire to throw off EU
regulations was not just a negotiating position but "the point of the
whole (Brexit) project".
"We
must have the ability to set laws that suit us -- to claim the right that every
other non-EU country in the world has," Frost said.
Even a
"no deal", with its heavy implications for the economy, does not seem
to frighten London, casting deep uncertainty in the forthcoming negotiations of
barely 10 three-week rounds of talks.
The
European side is annoyed and to some measure suspicious of the change of heart,
especially since British Prime Minister signed a political declaration in
October that called for an ambitious partnership.
The
negotiating mandate under consideration was first proposed by the EU's chief
negotiator Michel Barnier with bloc member states inserting their changes over
the past few weeks.
In drafts
seen by AFP, language on fishing and on upholding norms -- known as maintaining
the "level playing field" -- have been toughened up, which EU sources
said came at the insistence of Paris.
Some member
states have added language on issues close to them, including a call that
Britain must "return unlawfully removed cultural objects to their country
of origin", a problem dear to Greece, Italy and Cyprus.
Stefaan de
Rynck, a senior adviser to Barnier, warned last week that the next few months
of talks could be even tougher than the divorce negotiations that formally
ended Britain's 47-year membership of the EU.
"We
expect some of the negotiations to be rather difficult, perhaps more difficult
than during the withdrawal," de Rynck told an audience at the London
School of Economics.
French
Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian put it even more vivdly, predicting the two
sides would "rip each other apart".
London has
until the end of June to ask for a deadline extension should the talks fail to
make any headway in the coming months.
But Johnson
has ruled out asking for more time, a stance that raises the prospects of a
"no deal" or only a bare-bones deal which could also bring major
disruption.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.