178
The European Union offered Britain a package of measures to ease the transit of goods to Northern Ireland, but it looked unlikely to end tensions over post-Brexit trading rules for the province as it stopped short of the overhaul that London has demanded.
The EUโs executive said the measures could halve customs paperwork and cut checks on meat, dairy and other food products coming to Northern Ireland from mainland Britain by 80%. New rules would ensure the flow of medicines, notably generics, was not disturbed.
While remaining part of the United Kingdom, Northern Ireland has stayed in the EUโs single market for goods since Britainโs departure from the EU, meaning its exports to the rest of the 27-nation bloc face no customs checks, tariffs or paperwork.
European Commission vice-president Maros Sefcovic, who oversees post-Brexit relations with Britain, has said the arrangement allows Northern Irish businesses to enjoy the best of both worlds.
However, the result is an effective customs border in the Irish Sea, disturbing trade from the rest of the United Kingdom to Northern Ireland and angering the provinceโs pro-British unionists.
Sefcovic told Reuters in an interview he believed the proposals โticked all the boxesโ by resolving problems and keeping open Northern Irelandโs border with EU member Ireland.
โThis new alternative implementation of the protocolโฆ also takes care of the sausages,โ he said.
The EU ban on importing certain chilled meat products had led to talk of a โsausage warโ, but Sefcovic said Northern Irish people would have access to the sausages they preferred.
Sefcovic said the package should not be seen as a โtake it or leave itโ offer, but the foundation for joint agreement with Britain. However, there would be no next package if this was rejected.
The Commission says that, in return for concessions, the EU wants proper sharing of live data, reinforced monitoring of supply chains and labelling to ensure British products did not slip into the EU single market via a Northern Ireland back door.
The Commission will also set out plans to make greater efforts to explain its position to and involve people in Northern Ireland.
However, the executive Commission will not open up for renegotiation the protocol which governs Northern Irelandโs unique trading position, leaving Brussels and London on a potential collision course.
โIT TAKES TWO TO TANGOโ
Oliver Dowden, the co-chairman of Britainโs ruling Conservative Party, said the British government would engage fully and constructively with the EU on the proposals, adding that the steps he had read about so far were โwelcomeโ.
โWe will look at them and engage properly with them,โ he told Sky News, while also saying it was important there was โfundamental changeโ to the protocol.
Irish Prime Minister Micheal Martin told Newstalk radio station that the EU had listened to legitimate concerns about the protocol and was in โsolution modeโ and the British government had a responsibility to be in that mode too.
โIt takes two to tango,โ he said.
British Brexit Minister David Frost said in a speech on Tuesday that London would be ready to discuss the proposals โwhatever they sayโ, but also demanded a new โforward-lookingโ protocol, one without oversight from European judges.
Sefcovic said oversight by the European Court of Justice was the price of access to the European single market, which Northern Ireland enjoys.
REUTERS