Food and Drink Exports to the EU Gavin Newlands (Paisley and
Renfrewshire North) (SNP) What recent assessment his Department has
made of trends in the level of UK exports of food and drink to the
EU. The Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs
(George Eustice) The combination of falling demand in the EU due to
coronavirus restrictions and the introduction of new procedures at
the end of the transition period meant that exports fell
significantly in the first month of...Request free trial
Food and Drink Exports to
the EU
(Paisley and Renfrewshire North) (SNP)
What recent assessment his Department has made of trends in
the level of UK exports of food and drink to the EU.
The Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural
Affairs ()
The combination of falling demand in the EU due to
coronavirus restrictions and the introduction of new procedures at
the end of the transition period meant that exports fell
significantly in the first month of January. Exports of food and
drink recovered in February, increasing by 77% on the previous
month. While official statistics for March are not yet available,
we know that the number of applications for export health
certificates has continued to grow.
[V]
Since the Government’s precious Brexit, fish exports to the
EU have collapsed and the Government said it was teething problems;
cheese exports collapsed and the Government blamed exporters for
poor paperwork; seafood exports collapsed and the Government said
they might reclassify waters to make them cleaner. But nothing
substantive has happened on any of it. What will it take to get
action from Ministers, or do we have to wait for a text from a
crony?
We have indeed taken action right from the moment that there
were teething problems in that first week of January as import
agents, exporters and border control officials struggled to get
used to the paperwork. As I pointed out, it is an improving
situation. The hon. Member asked about trends. The trend is a
rising one, increasing by 77% in February, and with export health
certificates continuing to grow.
(Edinburgh North and Leith) (SNP) [V]
Scottish exports make up a quarter of the UK’s food and drink
exports. Those exports have been hammered by Brexit, losing out on
hundreds of millions of pounds in sales in January and February
alone, with some products seeing their market all but collapse, and
virtually nothing is being done about it. A new Brexit cliff has
arrived before we finished plummeting off the last one: composite
food products now need export health certificates. The chaos of the
last set of regs is still haunting our exports, and this new chaos
will further dent them. Vets say they will not have the capacity to
deal with this. What plans do the Government have to address that
clear danger?
The European Union has changed some of its export health
certificates, particularly for composite goods, from 21 April. We
have been working very closely with industry and all those affected
over the last few months. We knew that this was going to happen. We
have worked with it on getting those replacement health
certificates and, in some cases, the need for a private
attestation. Yes, it is complicated. It is a change in law that the
EU has made and always intended to make, but we worked very closely
with industry and all those affected to make sure that they were
ready.