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With just over two weeks left, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said he hoped the EU would โsee senseโ and agree a deal that respected Britainโs sovereignty, while German Chancellor Angela Merkel said the bloc favoured agreement.
Britain and the European Union have moved closer to sealing a new trade deal but it was still unclear if they would succeed, the blocโs chief executive said on Wednesday.
Britain and the EU are in the final stretch of talks to keep an estimated one trillion dollars of annual trade free of tariffs and quotas beyond Dec. 31, when the United Kingdom finally transitions out of the worldโs largest trading bloc.
With just over two weeks left, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said he hoped the EU would โsee senseโ and agree a deal that respected Britainโs sovereignty, while German Chancellor Angela Merkel said the bloc favoured agreement.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen told the European Parliament: โI cannot tell you whether there will be a deal or not. But I can tell you that there is a path to an agreement now. The path may be very narrow but it is there.โ
Her relatively upbeat comments on the long-running Brexit crisis helped nudge sterling upwards on currency markets. However, von der Leyen also said two issues were still unsolved.
โWe have found a way forward on most issues but two issues still remain outstanding: the level playing field and fisheries,โ she said. โIssues linked to governance now have largely been resolved. The next days are going to be decisive.โ
The level playing field refers to EU insistence that Britain does not undercut it on environmental, labour and social standards, as well as state aid, while governance covers the resolution of disputes.
Von der Leyen said discussions about access to UK fishing waters for EU vessels were still very difficult.
Britain formally left the EU on Jan. 31 but has been in a transition period since then under which rules on trade, travel and business remain unchanged. It finally exits the blocโs single market and customs union on Dec. 31.
Failure to agree a deal would erect trade barriers between the EU and Britain, snarl borders, send shockwaves through financial markets and cause chaos in supply chains across Europe as it also struggles with COVID-19.
โSEE SENSEโ
Johnson, who won election last year pledging to โget Brexit doneโ and for Britain to โtake back controlโ, said he hoped the EU would โsee sense and do a dealโ.
He emphasised the point at a press conference, when he said: โWhere we get to with the EU โ well, again, that is very much a matter for our friends. They know what the parameters are.โ
His spokesman said no trade deal was still the mostly likely outcome. A later statement from Johnsonโs office said talks would continue over the coming days.
Britainโs parliament will begin its Christmas break on Thursday, but could be recalled at short notice and as early as next week to legislate if a deal is reached.
Merkel said the EU would prefer a deal but is prepared either way, adding there was no breakthrough yet.
French President Emmanuel Macron, who is at odds with Britain over fish quotas, said he wanted the best relationship with London.
But the two sides have yet to narrow gaps on two of the thorniest issues: fishing rights in British waters and the level playing field.
An EU official told Reuters the bloc had rejected Britainโs offer of phased access to its waters over three years by EU fishing vessels and the sides were โan ocean apartโ on the issue.
Von der Leyen hailed a โbig step forwardโ in agreeing a so-called non-regression clause, which would โensure that our common high labour, social and environmental standards will not be undercutโ.
Sources said there were disagreements over โbalanced equivalenceโ, which London saw as tying Britain to the EUโs regulatory orbit, and a dispute resolution mechanism to determine whether competition was distorted and remedies if so.
Britain saw the EUโs pitch for โeffective remedial measuresโ as giving the bloc too much leeway to retaliate on trade.
REUTERS