Bob Blackman (Harrow East) (Con) I beg to move, That this House has
considered UK and Israel trade negotiations. It is a
pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Paisley, which I
think is for the first time. I declare my interest up front: I am
the chairman of the all-party parliamentary group
on Israel In the last year, we released an excellent
report, which I commend to my hon. Friend the Minister, on the
health tech part of our...Request free
trial
(Harrow East) (Con)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered UK and Israel trade
negotiations.
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Paisley,
which I think is for the first time.
I declare my interest up front: I am the chairman of the
all-party parliamentary group on Israel In the
last year, we released an excellent report, which I commend to my
hon. Friend the Minister, on the health tech part of our
industries. It is a very good read, which demonstrates the
importance of Israel-UK negotiations and having them set up.
Moreover, we are just about to release a report on research and
innovation, which I also commend to him.
Israel and the UK’s partnership on the technology front extends
to the fact, of course, that we have the Israel tech hub in the
embassy in Tel Aviv. This morning, I was talking to the all-party
parliamentary group on Romania, which wants to mirror that tech
hub, demonstrating that the relationship between the UK
and Israel is not only good
for the UK and Israel but means that
we can set up similar arrangements for like-minded countries
across Europe and across the world. So I welcome the Government’s
commitment to further strengthening the ties with Israel which of course
is a close friend and ally of the United Kingdom.
It is of course timely that we are having this debate, because I
know that very shortly we will embark on new trade talks to
enhance the UK’s trade relationship with Israel still further,
which is extremely welcome.
I also thank the Backbench Business Committee, on which I sit,
for granting this debate. I am not sure whether my sitting on the
Committee had anything to do with it; I suspect that possibly it
did. And I note that the hon. Member for Strangford () is here in Westminster Hall today; he has a season
ticket to the Backbench Business Committee, as well.
[Laughter.]
Israel is not just the sole democracy in the middle east; it is
also a true global high-tech start-up powerhouse, with huge
prowess in the fields of high-tech energy, medical science,
fintech and cyber-security, to name but a few areas. The UK is
Israel’s largest trade partner in Europe and its third largest
trade partner in the world. That gives us something to aim at; we
want to be Israel’s largest trade partner in the world.
Given the strength of our relationship, it is perhaps little
surprise that Israel was among the
first countries with which the UK agreed a free trade agreement
in principle, in January 2019, on our departure from the EU.
After successive record-breaking years, UK-Israel trade has
remained healthy, even during the pandemic, with an estimated
value of £5 billion. Whether it involves pharmaceuticals,
plastics, fintech or agri-tech, the UK-Israel trade relationship
covers all our major industries and has a natural focus on the
technology and services of the future. That is a key reason why
there are boundless opportunities for improvements in the
UK-Israel trade relationship. The signing of a strategic
agreement with Israel last November
was an important point in the process. In our ever-strengthening
bilateral relationship, that is the next step towards negotiating
the full post-Brexit trade deal with our friends in Israel that we want to
see.
So we are natural trade partners. As progressive liberal
democracies, our nations share the same values and the same
commitment to the open and free market. Israel’s business
community regards the UK as the gateway to Europe. The UK is an
appealing market. We have a shared language, as an estimated 85%
of Israelis speak English as their first language. We are also
obviously in close proximity to Israel and have
an enterprising business culture.
Israeli businesses hold the UK market in the highest regard. We
have seen many of them achieve great success here. I will mention
one or two of them shortly. Israel’s tech ecosystem does not just
provide economic benefits to our two great nations. Every day,
Israeli businesses will be enriching and improving the lives of
British citizens and making them healthier. A cab driver or
parent on the school run uses Israeli sat-nav app Waze to
efficiently complete their journey. A water engineer will be
alerted to a leak in the network by Takadu, a start-up based in
Tel Aviv. The cherry tomatoes that a shopper buys in the local
supermarket are an invention from Israel I could
go on. Many constituents of mine are issued generic prescription
drugs from their local GP surgery. These drugs are manufactured
by Israeli pharmaceutical giant Teva, which produces an
extraordinary one in six prescription drugs used in the NHS. That
fails to scratch even the surface of Israeli companies operating
in the UK.
There are 500 Israeli companies operating in the UK, employing
thousands of our constituents. A number of UK companies have
major operations in Israel including
Barclays, Rolls-Royce, GlaxoSmithKline and Unilever. Rolls-Royce
was responsible for the UK’s largest ever export deal
to Israel back in 2016
when it signed a £1 billion agreement with Israeli airline El Al
to provide Trent 1000 engines for El Al’s new fleet of Dreamliner
aircraft. A British visitor to Israel could not
fail to notice the ever-growing number of UK-manufactured cars in
the Jewish state.
In terms of high tech, the rapid expansion of UK-Israel trade
over the last decade has closely followed Israel’s emergence as
one of the world’s leaders in high tech. Israel is
now home to the highest density of start-ups anywhere in the
world. That impressed me, because I thought India was.
Clearly, Israel is more dense in
that respect. It deservedly earns its title as the start-up
nation. It is also home to the world’s major technology
powerhouses, including Google, Microsoft, Intel and Motorola. I
have had the privilege of visiting Israel on
a number of occasions with the Conservative Friends
of Israel and the
dynamism and forward-thinking nature of its high-tech sector and
young entrepreneurs is palpable. I particularly remember visiting
an early electrical vehicle pioneer back in 2011. Remember 2011?
That was 11 years ago. As is often the case, the Israeli company
was many years ahead of the market. The only thing holding it
back was battery technology at the time.
Israel has achieved this success with intellectual power in the
face of geographic and geo-political disadvantages, conflict and
a lack of natural resources. Another reason behind Israel’s
success story is that the country is an investor in research and
development, spending as much as 4.9% of its GDP on R&D in
2018. That is more than double that of the UK—something else we
should think about. It offers us very serious food for
thought.
Increasing trade with Israel has been a
long-standing UK objective. The UK-Israel tech hub, which was
established at the British embassy in 2011, was the first of its
kind to promote partnerships in technology and innovation between
the UK and Israel It has
successfully generated hundreds of tech partnerships between the
UK and Israel and is so far
worth more than £85 million. It has led to the additional tech
hubs in India, Indonesia, Kenya, South Africa, Nigeria, Brazil
and soon Romania.
Brexit has presented us with an exciting opportunity to negotiate
a bespoke UK-Israel free trade agreement. Our two nations are
closer than ever and share the same values and outlook on
international trade. There are endless possibilities for the UK
and Israel to work together
to become the world’s leading tech centres. I encourage my hon.
Friend the Minister to be ambitious in the forthcoming
negotiations. The trade continuity agreement, which was signed in
February 2019, ensured the continuation of the trade terms
covered by the EU-Israel association agreement. That should be
the bare minimum we seek to negotiate in the new UK-Israel trade
deal.
The International Trade Secretary said last month that her
Department would be opening a public consultation on this
important free trade agreement this January. We do not have long
to go, so I am looking to the Minister, and I do not want to hear
“soon” as an answer. Given the importance of the UK-Israel
bilateral deal, I wonder whether the Minister can shed some light
on the commencement date. I very much hope that the starting gun
will be fired in the forthcoming days.
I know many colleagues in this place are looking forward to the
UK hosting a joint innovation summit with Israel in March this
year, but I wonder whether the Secretary of State has any plans
to visit Israel in the near
future to see for herself the many trade opportunities emerging
from this tech powerhouse. I trust that she will visit and that
that can kick off the negotiations properly.
My hon. Friend the Minister has spoken of the UK’s desire to
expand opportunities in financial services, infrastructure and
technology. Can he provide an update on the progress of these
sector-specific ambitions?
The UK and Israel can boast the
world’s two most successful covid-19 vaccination programmes,
which is a source of great personal pride to both countries. Our
beloved NHS has delivered a vaccination programme at a speed and
scale that is truly the envy of the world. Israel’s digitalised
healthcare system played an instrumental role in that success.
The Department for International Trade has previously expressed
the desire to seek a trade deal with a chapter focused on
advanced digital data and technology, including med-tech. Can my
hon. Friend the Minister assure me that that remains the plan?
What discussions has he had with his counterpart in Israel on the
subject?
Israel’s success in R&D is commendable. Will the Minister
consider using free trade negotiations to explore a binational
research and development programme to the mutual benefit of both
countries? Israel has such a
programme in place with the United States, known as
BIRD—Israel-US Binational Industrial Research and Development—and
cumulative sales of products co-developed by Israeli and American
companies through BIRD have exceeded $10 billion. Given the
immediate strategic challenge posed by disruptive actors on the
international stage, it is more important than ever that we work
with trusted allies to produce the technologies of the
future.
As we move to deliver on our net zero commitments, I call on my
hon. Friend the Minister to work closely with Israel The country has
been known as the superpower of sustainability. While we will not
be able to recreate here the solar tower that harnesses Negev
sunshine to generate electricity, we can certainly learn much
from Israel’s world-leading water reuse programme to avoid future
droughts. The UK and Israel boast
sector-leading green-tech and agri-tech start-ups, and there are
many opportunities to expand on that.
With this ambition in mind, I call on the Minister to seize the
opportunity of the historic Abraham accords, which have ushered
in a ground-breaking new chapter for peace in the middle east,
between Israel and her
neighbours in Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates. While the
accords have been in effect for less than two years, they have
already had a seismic effect on the region in terms of trade and
investment, which has rapidly expanded.
The breakthrough water-for-energy deal between Jordan
and Israel brokered by the
UAE, demonstrates that the peace is far-reaching and gives us,
tentatively, an opportunity for proper peace in the middle east.
I hope the UK will actively consider the ways in which we can
support these new links, and use our own strong relationships in
the region to further build on the Abraham accords.
There are challenges. The Government have prioritised the
relationship with Israel and have put in
place frameworks to stimulate collaboration, but there is much
more we can do to ensure that Israeli companies make the UK their
natural first stop internationally to trial and scale their
products.
I had the pleasure of releasing “A shot in the arm: Israel and UK
healthtech innovation”, a report from the all-party
Britain-Israel parliamentary group and UK Israel Business. The
report identified several impediments that face Israeli
health-tech companies seeking to enter the UK market. Many of the
proposals would also work across different sectors. For example,
the report recommends creating new UK-based landing pads to
assist Israeli companies touching down in the United Kingdom,
which should include advice on how best to position their value
proposition and achieve adoption at pace and scale in the UK.
Another challenge facing Israeli start-ups is the constraints
imposed by short-term visas. We contend that as part of the
Israel-UK landing pad, start-ups selected and incubated through
the scheme should be automatically awarded a start-up visa as
part of the scheme. A visa awarded to landing pad companies would
be time-bound by the landing pad programme horizon—a scheme that
already takes into account other critical factors such as capital
requirements, pilot testing and scale horizons. Will the Minister
take the time to read the report, consider its recommendations
and, I hope, act upon them?
While there is much to celebrate in our burgeoning trade
relationship with Israel it would be
remiss of me not to quickly touch on the so-called Boycott,
Divestment and Sanctions movement—or BDS, as it is more commonly
known. Simply put, BDS is a harmful, politically-motivated
campaign that seeks to delegitimise Israel
BDS does nothing to advance the Palestinian cause; in actuality,
it is anti-peace. I applaud the Government for their rejection of
BDS and their clear commitment to ever-greater trade
with Israel
The fact that many of those targeting Israel with economic
boycotts also actively seek to extend their harmful boycotts to
those in the cultural and educational spheres says everything we
need to know. It is unthinkable to me that anyone could seek to
minimise collaboration between UK and Israeli scientists tackling
some of the greatest health challenges facing our societies, such
as Alzheimer’s, covid-19 and Parkinson’s disease.
It is deeply regrettable that Ben & Jerry’s—the ice cream
makers owned by British company Unilever—has engaged in its own
recent boycott of Israel the
controversial move rightly provoked strong condemnation. I call
on Unilever to challenge such harmful measures.
The Government’s forthcoming legislation to stop public bodies
across the UK discriminating on grounds of country and territory
of origin must feature provisions to prevent procurement policy
being used as a tool of foreign policy or an attempt to regulate
international trade. Legislating on this important manifesto
commitment will be warmly welcomed by many of my constituents,
and I call on the Minister to work closely with colleagues in the
Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities to counter
discriminatory policies that are harmful not only to community
cohesion here in the UK but to the UK’s trade interests and
foreign policy goals. I commend the UK Government’s response to
BDS, which has been to seek ever-closer economic relations
with Israel Now is the time
to go one step further and ensure that the principles of fairness
and non-discrimination are enshrined at the heart of the UK’s
public procurement regime.
Having experienced a decade of record-breaking growth in trade,
the United Kingdom and Israel are natural
partners across a wide range of innovative fields—from financial
to agricultural technology, spanning government, the private
sector and higher education. We therefore have before us an
invaluable opportunity to reshape our trading relationship for
the future. The UK-Israel trade deal is much anticipated for its
many important economic benefits, but it also presents an
opportunity for the UK to expand its ever-tightening relationship
with a close ally. Given Israel’s status as a world-leading tech
power, it is important for the UK to make the most of the many
advantages of the trade deal by taking an ambitious approach to
trade negotiations.
Done right, this deal could serve as a model for UK partnerships
with other advanced, innovation-intensive states, including South
Korea, Singapore and Taiwan. My colleagues and I stand ready to
support work on an enhanced trade agreement. I hope that the
Minister can assure me and my hon. Friends that the call for
input is about to begin, and that we can look forward to an
excellent free trade deal with our friends in Israel
3.19pm
(Strangford) (DUP)
It is always a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr
Paisley, and to be in your company—I want to have that on the
record. We are close friends and colleagues, having come into
this House at the same time.
I congratulate the hon. Member for Harrow East () on setting the scene. We missed him this morning at
International Trade questions. I figured if he was not there,
something must be seriously wrong, but he was there later on—he
was alright. His question was still asked—I do not know how he
did that. He is always very helpful to me when I go to the
Backbench Business Committee to ask for a debate. I am not aware
of any occasions—touch wood—when I have been refused a debate by
the Backbench Business Committee, and the debates have always
been on topical issues, so it is good to have them. Today’s issue
is very close to my heart, and the hon. Gentleman outlined it
incredibly well.
I see that the hon. Member for Hendon (Dr Offord) has a debate
scheduled for Westminster Hall under a slightly different topic
heading; we will probably repeat the points that we have
addressed today. If God spares me until then, I will be here at
9.30 on Wednesday morning to support the hon. Gentleman in the
debate, as will others.
The hon. Member for Harrow East often raises the importance of
securing a trade deal with Israel and I agree. In
2017, Israel was voted the
fifth most innovative country in terms of technology and
cyber-security. There is absolutely no doubt that we need to
increase our co-operation, business and economic growth
alongside Israel so that both
countries can benefit. It is imperative that we continue to
improve trade relations with our friends and partners.
When I was at the Northern Ireland Assembly—I was there for 12
years—I was a member of the Northern Ireland Friends
of Israel group. When I
came here, I continued that relationship with the Friends
of Israel I am keen to
see relations between the United Kingdom and Israel continuing and,
indeed, increasing. The hon. Member for Harrow East said that,
too. We should appreciate that that is for everyone’s benefit.
Figures from the year 2017 show that UK exports to Israel were £2.3
billion, making it the UK’s 42nd largest export market—accounting
for 0.4% of all UK exports. UK imports from Israel were £1.6
billion, making it the UK’s 47th largest import source,
accounting for 0.3% of all UK imports. Most recent figures from
2020 also show that the UK had bilateral trade with Israel amounting to
£5.1 billion. It is clear that we have a good relationship, but
we always want to do better; that is the reason for this debate.
It is what the hon. Member for Harrow East is looking for.
There is certainly evidence that there is a need for progressive
trade relations with Israel in regards to
security—that is an important factor for us all and a key one for
me. The Foreign Secretary stated back in November, along with her
Israeli Counterpart, that,
“there is a need for a new strategic plan for the next decade,
spanning cyber, tech, trade and defence.”
The opportunities are enormous. It was also mentioned that the
two countries would work night and day, 24/7, to prevent the
Iranian regime from ever becoming a nuclear power. That would be
to the benefit of everyone, and to the benefit of world peace,
not just the UK and Israel That is
brilliant and we should all try and achieve that. Even the couple
of Members here who do not have active participation
with Israel should want to
make sure the Iran does not achieve nuclear power.
It was former Secretary of State who labelled science and
business ties
“one of the cornerstones of the relationship
between Israel and the UK.”
The strategic agreement signed with Israel is
the starting post for a series of activities that will deepen our
trading relationship. I understand a public consultation on our
enhanced bilateral free trade agreement will be opened this
month, and there will be further trade strategies in March, as
the hon. Member for Harrow East said. It is crucial that we do
all we can now to progress this trading relationship. It is
important to remember that our trade connections help to
strengthen our relationships not only with Israel but with the
rest of the world. It is only right that trade connections
benefit every one of us, and Israel is a key
friend and trading relationship.
The Minister says that there will be a joint innovation strategy.
With that in mind, will there be discussions with Education
Ministers? There is the possibility that we can do things in that
area, such as combining specialised research through our
universities. We have been very good at that with other
countries, so maybe the Minister could tell us what could be done
in relation to that with Israel
Israel has proven successful through some of the world’s leading
companies, such as Teva Pharmaceuticals, which is worth over £57
million, and computer specialist Intel, which is worth over £27
million. Combined, both of those companies employ over 53,000
people. In addition, UK exports to Israel amounted to £2.6
billion in the four quarters to the end of 2021, which represents
a slight decrease—I find that hard to comprehend, but it was
probably due to the pandemic and other factors. Could the
Minister give us an explanation of why there was a small
decrease? Total UK imports from Israel amounted
to £9.1 billion at the end of 2020, which was also a decrease of
10.8% from 2021. Again, was the pandemic the reason for that? If
it was, then we know that those numbers can only go one way,
which is upwards. We must do all we can to ensure that those
figures do not decrease any further. I am sure the Minister will
respond to that point.
Israel was the UK’s 40th largest trading partner at the end of
2020. I encourage the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development
Office to do all it can to ensure that we continue to show
interest through trade. I understand that trading figures may
have decreased due to the covid-19 pandemic, but it is essential
that we do not continue to let this become a problem. Our economy
is essential to our success, for jobs and for the benefit of all
of us in the UK, Israel and, of course,
the world.
I understand that other Members want to speak, so I will conclude
my remarks. It is crucial that we prioritise our trading links
with other countries. More discussion must take place between the
Minister and his counterparts to expand our products’ scope, and
how we can build on what we have and perhaps even develop it
more. When it comes to trade deals, our Government have been very
successful so far, so we look to see where we are
with Israel We all welcome
the prospect of an enhanced trade deal with Israel as well as
strong support from UK Export Finance to help finance exports
into Israel With that in
mind, I very much support what the hon. Member for Harrow East
has said, and look forward to the Minister’s response. It is good
to see him in his place: he has been missing for a while, but
wherever he has been, it is good to see him back.
(in the Chair)
The Minister will be able to explain those sleepless nights very
soon.
3.27pm
(Southport) (Con)
As always, Mr Paisley, it is a pleasure to serve under your
chairmanship, and I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for
Harrow East () on securing this important and timely debate. The
bilateral relationship between the UK and Israel runs deep, from
intelligence sharing and security co-operation to our trade ties,
which have flourished over many years. For example, the
Britain-Israel research and academic exchange partnership has
brought together scientists from both countries to tackle some of
the world’s most challenging medical conditions and diseases,
including cardiovascular and liver disease, diabetes and
Parkinson’s. That cutting-edge research and co-operation benefits
citizens in the UK, Israel and further
afield.
Israeli innovations benefit the British people, and our close
partnership keeps us all safe. I will take this opportunity to
reflect on those ties in my contribution today, and I urge the
Minister to explore further areas for collaboration in our
ongoing trade negotiations with Israel To list a
few examples, we have the Israeli pharmaceutical company Teva,
which has been mentioned, and which is a leading provider of
medicines to the NHS. With over 200 Teva tablets or capsules
taken on average by patients in the UK every second, not only
does Teva improve the health of millions of people in this
country every day, but it employs hundreds of British workers at
sites across our country. There is also the Israeli-designed
PillCam, a capsule camera that patients swallow painlessly to get
checked for cancer that is currently being trialled across the
NHS, and the Israeli-developed phone app that reads the results
of urine tests by using AI and colour metric analysis, sharing
the results instantly with the individual’s GP practice. These
home testing kits, which detect early stage chronic kidney
disease, have already started shipping to half a million UK
patients.
The brave men and women of our armed forces also benefit greatly
from Israeli technology, which protects our soldiers on the
battlefield. Israeli-developed virtual reality training scenarios
have prepared British soldiers for a range of hostile battle
situations, and Israeli intelligence-collecting drones help to
keep our troops safe. The list goes on. However, there remain
those who seek to dismantle our close ties with Israel and call for a
trade embargo, as mentioned by my hon. Friend the Member for
Harrow East. Boycott campaigns that seek to undermine this
important cooperation, and to make peace harder to achieve, must
be opposed. Boycotts of Israel harm the Israeli
and Palestinian people, and they threaten our close collaboration
in defence, science and medicine. I warmly welcome the
Government’s commitment to stopping public bodies from imposing
needless boycotts on foreign countries. All too often, these
aggressive campaigns target the state of Israel and single out
the world’s only Jewish state for criticism.
I am sure that the Minister will reiterate the importance of our
close ties with Israel in his remarks.
I urge him to do everything possible to oppose needless boycotts
and sanctions against Israel including
introducing the legislation committed in the manifesto on which
we were both elected, and I urge him to continue working to
further strengthen the bilateral relationship
between Israel and the United
Kingdom.
3.31pm
(Buckingham) (Con)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Paisley. It
is an equal pleasure to follow my hon. Friend the Member for
Southport (), who delivered a powerful
speech that I entirely endorse, particularly those parts towards
the end of his remarks about the dangerous nature of those who
seek to boycott Israel in trade, which
has a knock-on impact on peace, people’s jobs and prosperity. I
also congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for Harrow East
() on securing the debate and on setting out the case
so eloquently and powerfully at the start of it. The facts and
case studies that he outlined speak for themselves.
Israel has cemented itself as a major economic partner of our
United Kingdom and is on an upward trajectory, and a more
extensive trade deal between two of the world’s most
technologically advanced economies will reap enormous benefits
for both nations as well as the wider world. We have heard how
omnipresent Israeli-made technology is in our day-to-day lives in
the United Kingdom, and I was interested to learn recently that
many of the banking transactions made by customers online or via
smartphones are protected by Israeli-made software running in the
background. From digital printers to USB sticks—they might seem
like old hat now—and car safety cameras, Israelis have played a
huge role in the rapid advancement of our digital economy and
digital society in recent decades. Tesco recently opened its
first fully autonomous store in London after partnering with the
Israeli company Trigo, which uses computer vision technology and
advanced artificial intelligence algorithms to enable shoppers to
choose their items and leave without having to stop at the tills,
providing a seamless experience and saving time. I look forward
to visiting Israel in the near
future to see for myself more of the exciting technologies and
the companies, scientists and innovators behind them.
Now that we are free of the European Union, the opportunity
afforded to us to become a proud free-trading nation, with one of
the world’s largest and most forward-thinking economies, must not
be wasted. I join hon. Members of different parties who have
spoken in the debate—I notice that the hon. Member for Strangford
() has left the room, but I endorse his speech as
well—in urging the Government to make concerted efforts to secure
the much-anticipated deal with Israel as early
as time affords.
Tourism should be an important consideration for the trade talks
ahead. Prior to the pandemic, Israel was
establishing itself as a go-to destination for many Brits, and
the UK remains ever popular with tourists from Israel Travel between
the countries has become so popular in recent years that we have
seen the likes of Virgin Atlantic open a route, Wizz Air about to
expand its number of flights to Israel
and Israel become one of
easyJet’s busiest routes.
I join other speakers in welcoming the important work of the
UK-Israel tech hub, which connects businesses in both countries,
but there is so much more that can be done to support British
companies seeking to increase their presence in Israel As I conclude
my remarks, I ask the Minister what action he is taking to
explore those further ways to expand this market and to support
British businesses in my constituency and beyond to partner with
Israeli companies. I am extremely optimistic about this unique
opportunity for our two countries to negotiate an ambitious and
wider free trade agreement that looks to the future. I look
forward to hearing from the Minister when he expects the
consultation to begin.
3.36pm
(Hendon) (Con)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Paisley. It
is custom and practice in a Westminster Hall debate to pay
tribute to the hon. Member who proposed the debate, so I thank my
hon. Friend the Member for Harrow East () for his promotion of his UK-Israel trade
negotiations debate. However, as the hon. Member for Strangford
() pointed out, I too had a debate on UK trade
with Israel hence the word
“negotiations” not being part of my title. I have to disappoint
the hon. Member by saying that I have decided there is no need
for my debate to go forward, and I can only wish that he is able
to have a more leisurely breakfast next Wednesday. Indeed, other
hon. Members may decide to go for an early morning run instead of
coming to hear probably the same speech that I will give now.
On a serious note, I welcome the growing collaboration between
our two countries, including the new UK-Israel bilateral road
map, which will extend and deepen our relationship over the next
decade. In recent years, the UK Government have worked to build
on our existing ties with Israel securing a
multitude of agreements in cyber-security, academia and medicine,
as well as Israeli investment bringing more jobs to the United
Kingdom. Israelis see the United Kingdom as an ideal place to
trade, as they are attracted by our culture, language and
institutions.
I was pleased to see the former International Trade Secretary
visit Israel last year for
meetings to discuss the forthcoming trade agreement and to
increase bilateral ties. Many people in the Chamber have
visited Israel and I look
forward to my hon. Friend the Member for Buckingham () being able to visit the
country. Colleagues who have travelled to Israel will no doubt
agree that visiting the start-up nation is an eye-opening
experience. I repeat the call of my hon. Friend the Member for
Harrow East for the current Secretary of State to
visit Israel in the near
future.
The relationship between the United Kingdom and Israel is one that
dates back to Israel’s creation, but it has certainly accelerated
at a remarkable rate in the last decade. I hope that, in some
small way, I have played my part in that. In 2013, I asked on the Floor of the House of
Commons if he would be the first serving British Prime Minister
to visit the country, and I was very pleased that the following
year he did so, and I was able to accompany him on that visit. It
was a great opportunity for him to not only see the workings of
the country, its culture and its history, but his remarks in the
Knesset were equally prescient. There was a small dispute going
on between Members and he said, on this particular Wednesday
afternoon, that it was quieter than he would usually experience
in the House of Commons.
While others may reflect on the expansion of Israel’s tech scene,
it is important to note that this Conservative Government and
those of the last 11 years have made Israel a
real strategic priority. The UK’s high regard for Israel was evidenced by
the fact that it was one of the first countries to agree a free
trade deal in principle following the referendum. The
ever-strengthening trade relationship is to be welcomed, and it
has clearly paid dividends, with over 500 Israeli companies
operating in the United Kingdom. Thousands of people, including
many in my own constituency of Hendon, are directly benefiting
from that employment. Those companies are creating wealth and
encouraging growth between our two countries.
Importantly, strong ties are also being forged between our two
countries by non-governmental organisations in both the UK
and Israel Accordingly, I
pay tribute to UK Israel Business and
the Israel British Chamber
of Commerce, which in 2017 was recognised with an award of
excellence by the Council of British Chambers of Commerce in
Europe. It is worth noting that that was the first time that an
Israeli chamber of commerce has won such an award from a European
organisation.
Given the scientific and engineering excellence of our two
countries, I repeat the calls for the Minister to explore
establishing bilateral centres and incubators to enable British
and Israeli companies and scientists to come together and tackle
the great challenges of the day. One of those issues may be
covid, which we are now passing by, but there are many more that
we can work on. A trade deal will enable us to work jointly to
tackle climate change, strengthen cyber-security against some of
the malign actors that have been mentioned—mainly Iran—and
produce the next generation of med-tech, which my hon. Friend the
Member for Southport () mentioned, to keep us all
healthier and improve our wellbeing. All that would come of a
good trade deal.
There are several barriers to address, however, before we can
take advantage of the opportunity before us. To better facilitate
the important opportunities that I have outlined, I encourage the
Minister to review visa and entry requirements to enable Israelis
to work more easily in the UK. In my humble opinion, the Minister
should also review the existing regulations, such as on opening a
bank account, which can make it difficult for Israelis to start
businesses in the UK. There is also an opportunity to consider
tax tariffs on a range of goods, including food and beverages and
medicines. I am sure the Minister also recognises the importance
of reaching an agreeable position on data protection matters so
that organisations are not unduly burdened—although I welcome the
fact that the UK has deemed Israel one of the
countries that provides adequate levels of data protection.
I will make two points further to those made by my hon. Friend
the Member for Harrow East. First, Israel spends about 5%
of its gross domestic product on research and development, which
is more than most developing countries around the world. However,
there is large, untapped potential for UK investment in research
and development in Israel Does the
Minister agree that there is more work to be done in that area?
It would be a great opportunity for people in this country to
benefit financially.
Secondly, boycotts do not work—I am sure the Minister can accept
that. When the SodaStream factory in the west bank was forced to
close following pressure from the BDS movement, more than 500
Palestinians lost their jobs. Those people were all in
employment, with a wage and a standard of living higher than
people in other employment in that part of Israel All that does
is force those Palestinian people into the arms of Hamas and
Hezbollah. We all want peace and security in the middle east—we
certainly want a two-state solution—but the divisive actions of
the BDS movement will not allow that to happen. Will the Minister
bring forward as soon as possible legislation to prevent such
divisive activities in the UK?
Although it is not strictly the subject of this debate, I also
think it is important that the Government restate their
commitment to the religious practice of shechita, which is very
important to my constituents and which contributes to the economy
of both the UK and Israel
My constituents and I are fully supportive of the Government in
their ambition to secure a comprehensive trade deal
with Israel and we look
forward to the formal process beginning in earnest in the coming
days. I am sure that the Minister has listened closely to what
colleagues have said and that he will take this opportunity to
ramp up and lead the way on trade deals. Israel would certainly
be a good place to start.
3.44am
Ms Anum Qaisar (Airdrie and Shotts) (SNP)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Paisley. I
congratulate the hon. Member for Harrow East () on securing this debate. He brought a significant
amount of knowledge to the House. The hon. Member for Strangford
() spoke passionately, as he always does. The hon.
Members for Southport () and for Buckingham () both gave interesting
contributions, providing a lot of food for thought. It was a
delight to hear from the hon. Member for Hendon (Dr Offord); I
was due to speak in his debate next week, but I appreciated the
opportunity to hear his contribution today.
The UK and Israel have only
recently signed a strategic plan that is entirely devoid of human
rights demands on Israel and it is a
real concern that this free trade deal will be similar. The UK
Government will open a call for input on an enhanced bilateral
free trade agreement with Israel this year, and
the Scottish Government will provide a submission. However, there
is no substitute for ongoing, meaningful engagement with Scottish
Government officials on FTA negotiation matters—something that
was not there in the talks with New Zealand and Australia.
We in the SNP are neither anti-trade nor anti-free trade. We
recognise that there are many avenues for more trade
co-operation, such as in the spaces of digital, data, science and
technology.
Once we gain independence, the SNP will seek for Scotland to
rejoin the EU. In doing so, it would rejoin the EU’s deal
with Israel That deal, of
course, makes it categorically clear that trade with the Occupied
Palestinian Territories should not be treated as if it were trade
with Israel
Until Scotland gains her independence, we in the SNP urge the UK
Government in the strongest possible terms to use every
opportunity—indeed, this rare opportunity of trade
negotiations—to end the persecution of the Palestinian people. As
with any negotiation, there are trade-offs, but turning a blind
eye to persecution should not be one of them. It must remain a
priority for the UK Government, and a red line throughout every
single stage of the negotiations. If human rights demands are not
met, a free trade deal must come off the table. A life free from
persecution and, to quote Human Rights Watch, “apartheid
conditions”, and a decent standard of living—something we all
deserve as human beings—are worth much more than a few tariff
reductions between two already incredibly rich countries.
There is no doubt that trade relationships can lead to wider
relationships and can often be used as a way of influencing—for
good and sometimes for ill—the actions of other countries and
Governments. The safety of the Palestinian people and their
freedom from an illegal occupation should be a condition for any
UK-Israeli free trade deal. Human rights concerns must be
consistently raised throughout every stage, including at the
inaugural UK-Israel joint committee to be held in the UK this
year and the joint UK-Israel innovation summit in March. If
previous free trade deals are anything to go by, it is no
surprise that the Department for International Trade has not yet
published its objectives and scoping assessments for this set of
negotiations. I would appreciate clarification from the Minister
on when they will be available.
Israel accounts for much less than 1% of UK exports. Anything it
does will not fix the huge absence of trade caused by Brexit,
which, I remind the House, Scotland did not vote for. The UK’s
total bilateral trade relationship with Israel stood at £5
billion in 2020. In comparison, UK exports to the EU were £251
billion, representing 42% of all UK exports. We could increase
exports to Israel by a factor of
10 and it would still be only a relatively minor trading partner
compared with the EU and others. This deal will not compensate
for what we have lost because of Brexit.
In 2019, Scottish exports were growing consistently in all
directions—to the rest of the UK, the EU and the rest of the
world. We now have clear evidence that that is no longer the
case, as Scottish goods exports fell by 25% in the year to June
2021, compared with the equivalent period in 2019-20.
An industry that has a significant number of farmers contributing
to it, including in my constituency, is the food and drinks
industry. House of Commons research found that Brexit is costing
the industry £62 million a week. That is £62 million a week that
farmers and producers cannot afford to lose, but I do not
remember seeing that figure on the side of a bus.
We seek assurances that nothing will be done to land a deal
with Israel that will make
it easier for goods that have been produced in the illegally
occupied territories to be marked, sold and exported as produce
of Israel These goods
should be regarded as the proceeds of crime. We know that a free
trade deal solely benefiting Israeli products and not products
that have been produced in illegally occupied territories will
reduce the competitiveness of Palestinian produce, put
Palestinian producers at a disadvantage and potentially distort
the comparative prices of similar goods from both sides of the
wire fence for UK consumers.
I would therefore appreciate clarification from the Minister on
two points. First, so that customers across the four nations can
decide for themselves where to buy from, we seek assurances that
the Department for International Trade will follow a policy of
non-divergence from our European partners when it comes to
labelling. The possible free trade deal must include clauses that
mandate accurate labelling of Israeli goods and settlement goods,
so as not to mislead the consumer.
Secondly, we urge the Department to engage in every effort to
improve the competitiveness of Palestinian products and the trade
links between the UK and the occupied territories. That should
include redoubling diplomatic efforts to see the end of the
blockade of the Gaza strip—an embargo that covers trade. It
should also include looking at the merits of advising UK
businesses against trading with illegal settlements, as a
disincentive to Israeli settlement-building in the Occupied
Palestinian Territories. It must be remembered that aid cuts by
the Conservative Government have hit the occupied territories
hard and badly impacted livelihoods, and they are hampering trade
growth. Improving trade with Palestine is also a way out of
poverty.
I will make a final point about the UK arms trade
with Israel Over the last
three years, £76 million of arms sales have been exported
to Israel The Minister
must categorically state today that offensive arms and small
weapons—the weapons most commonly used against civilians—will be
outside the free trade agreement negotiations.
Ultimately, what cannot happen is that these trade negotiations
decouple Israel’s behaviour in the occupied territories—behaviour
that is categorically illegal under international law.
3.53pm
(Brentford and Isleworth)
(Lab)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairship, Mr Paisley. I
congratulate the hon. Member for Harrow East () on securing this debate. I hope he will pass on our
thanks to his fellow members of the Backbench Business Committee
for allowing us to have this debate. I thank the hon. Member for
Hendon (Dr Offord) for graciously saying that we do not all have
to come back here again next Wednesday morning. Otherwise, I
would be reusing, rather than recycling, my speech. I also thank
the other speakers we have heard so far, and I will try to refer
to them all during my speech. I refer Members to my entry in the
Register of Members’ Financial Interests, as I have previously
visited Jerusalem, the west bank and the Knesset as part of a
parliamentary delegation.
Successive Israeli leaders, from Golda Meir to Yitzhak Rabin,
were proud members of the Israeli Labour party and proud
socialists. In the case of Yitzhak Rabin, he was murdered because
of his historic work and commitment to peace through the Oslo
accord. The British Labour party has strong and historic links
with Israel through the
Israeli Labour party.
It is in that spirit that we welcome and support increasing and
improving the UK’s trade links with Israel
Of course, we welcome any trade deals that support jobs here in
the UK and British businesses. That is why our Government should
be taking advantage of trade with countries such as Israel—to
ensure that UK exporters and businesses can do well and that
British business can bounce back after the pandemic.
Speakers today have pointed out that the UK and Israel are two of the
world’s most high-tech economies. That is surely a benefit, and a
key issue, as speakers have said, in future negotiations
with Israel
The total trade in goods and services with Israel was worth £4.6
billion in the last available figures. I thought
that Israel was the UK’s
40th largest partner, but the hon. Member for Strangford (), who has temporarily left the room, said it was
42nd. Either way, as the hon. Member for Airdrie and Shotts (Ms
Qaisar), the SNP Front-Bench spokesperson, said, this is a
proportionately small amount of the UK’s total trade. Let us get
these things in proportion.
UK exports to Israel are, however,
worth more than £2 billion and support about 37,000 jobs in the
UK, including, as speakers have said, many in skilled
manufacturing industries, such as the car industry, but also
technology, health-tech, security, data and so on. According to
Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs, 6,600 VAT-registered
businesses currently export goods to Israel I
would welcome the Minister’s providing further information about
what targets the Government want to reach for the number of
businesses exporting to Israel in the future. I
am talking about both the level of jobs and the level of
investment. Is that a target for any future trade negotiations?
There are also a number of important areas where Israel provides crucial
imports for consumers here in the UK. That is especially the
case, as others have said, in relation to pharmaceuticals and
companies such as Teva, whose largest customer is of course the
NHS.
There are other business links. The hon. Member for Harrow East
mentioned the tech hub run through the UK embassy and the
importance of technology and data in the economy. The hon. Member
for Southport () told us about the trials of
the very interesting camera that people swallow for cancer checks
and about VR training. The hon. Member for Buckingham () mentioned digital security,
which I did not know about. It is very important for any of
us—all of us—who have bank accounts and do our banking online and
on our phones. He also mentioned tourism, which is of course an
important source of business for Israel and of
course for Palestine, because in and around Jerusalem we have the
holiest sites for the three largest monotheistic religions in the
world. Also, the world centre for the Baha’i faith is in Haifa, I
think.
Additionally, more than 300 Israeli high-tech companies have
bases in the UK, with 100 of those having been established in the
last decade. Those firms bring jobs and investment to the UK. I
look forward to hearing from the Minister about what steps the
Government are taking to support our tech industry and to build
strong partnerships between UK and Israeli tech hubs.
The Government have recently signed a further deal
with Israel which builds
off the continuity FTA signed in 2019. This “road map” commits to
further action around issues ranging from cyber-security to
improving business links through the UK-Israel innovation summit
in March of this year. We welcome these steps and hope that our
Government continue to work with the Israeli Government on these
important bilateral issues. The memorandum of understanding says
that the UK and Israel will work on
the
“development of a new, higher ambition free trade agreement.”
I look forward to hearing more details from the Minister about
this and the benefits it could bring to so many sectors of our
economy in the UK. We want trade deals that support well-paid and
skilled jobs here, and we will support those that do so, as
an Israel trade deal
would.
It is equally important, however, that the Government ensure that
human rights issues are considered and addressed when any trade
deal is being struck. Trade should not happen in a vacuum, and
British values are important in our trade deals. Around the world
there has been a worrying pattern of the Government seeming to
adopt an “any deal will do” approach, with key issues being
jettisoned and ignored. We have already seen evidence of this in
the Government’s recent deal with Australia, with British farmers
thrown under the bus. I am extremely concerned that in future
negotiations, such as those with the Gulf Council, human rights
and rule of law issues could be cast aside. The Minister for
Trade Policy did not take the opportunity this morning to answer
my question about the Gulf Council deal.
The SNP Front-Bench spokesperson, the hon. Member for Airdrie and
Shotts, made a number of key points about human rights and
illegal settlements. Illegal settlements are possibly the top
human rights issue, and they are in breach of international law.
We have seen their continued expansion at a rapidly increasing
pace, especially since the start of the Trump Administration in
the US. Our Government must object in the strongest possible
terms in all relevant forums, not least in trade negotiations, to
the expansion of illegal settlements.
We know that settlements in the occupied Palestinian territory
are illegal in international law, and that includes settlements
in East Jerusalem, as well as in the west bank. United Nations
Security Council resolution 2334 states that
“the establishment…of settlements in the Palestinian territory
occupied since 1967…has no legal validity and constitutes a
flagrant violation under international law”.
These settlements entrench divisions, and I know from meeting
Palestinians when I visited the west bank that these settlements
make a just and lasting peace deal even harder to achieve. I was
told that around five years ago, and I fear the prospects have
only got worse since then.
The recent change of Government in Israel offers an
opportunity for a change in approach, especially as the previous
Government’s formal proposal in which they threatened to annex
the west bank has been stopped after widespread and near
universal opposition, including from parliamentarians across all
parties here in Westminster. Although the formal annexation has
been stopped, the expansion of illegal settlements continues, and
Palestinian families in East Jerusalem and the west bank continue
to experience eviction from their homes and even demolition of
their homes and property.
Both the EU’s agreement and the subsequent continuity agreement
between the UK and Israel mandated that
goods from illegal settlements would be excluded from the
preferential terms of any UK-Israeli trade agreements. On this
issue, I have a few questions for the Minister. First, will he
confirm that the UK Government still support the principle of
non-preferential trade for goods from illegal settlements, and
will the Government uphold that non-preferential treatment in any
future FTA or deal with Israel Secondly, are
the Government aware of the current level of known UK trade with
Israeli settlements? Additionally, will the Minister make it
clear that British companies have an obligation to ensure that
their products and services are not used in grave breaches of
international law?
I know that some people have called for the UK to block all trade
with Israel but that is not
an action that we support. Such an indiscriminate measure would
hurt millions of ordinary Israelis and Palestinians, both
in Israel and in the west
bank and Jerusalem, and it is not a policy applied to other
countries. We do not support a ban on goods from the state
of Israel nor do we
support the policy of boycott, disinvestment and sanctions, which
is often known as BDS. The hon. Member for Hendon explained how
the boycott has affected Palestinian businesses. They already
suffer from a lot of difficulties, and this boycott could make
things even worse. I therefore share the concerns about BDS that
were raised by the hon. Members for Harrow East, for Southport,
for Buckingham and for Hendon and others in this debate.
In the wider context of our overall relations with Israel the Labour
party insists on a renewed focus on negotiating a two-state
solution that ensures a viable and sovereign Palestinian state
alongside a safe and secure Israel We
welcome the Government taking this step towards a new free trade
agreement with Israel which we hope
will benefit UK businesses and consumers, but we also want to
ensure that the Government address the key issues around human
rights and specifically those relating to settlements. I look
forward to the Minister’s response.
4.05pm
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for International
Trade ( )
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship for the first
time, Mr Paisley, and I welcome the hon. Members for Brentford
and Isleworth () and for Airdrie and Shotts
(Ms Qaisar) to their places. I should also like to thank my hon.
Friend the Member for Harrow East () for securing this important debate and all Members
who have been present this Thursday afternoon and made important
contributions.
The hon. Member for Strangford () raised the question of why I had been away from the
House in recent weeks. In his absence, but for the record, I
should say that I have been away for a couple of weeks due to the
birth of my son. [Hon. Members: “Hear, hear.”] Thank you.
That explains why the hon. Gentleman has not seen me in the
Palace, but I am delighted to be back and discussing this
important topic, because Britain is strongly committed to her
trade and investment relationship with Israel
one of the middle east’s most dynamic and innovative
economies. Israel is a key ally
and friend to the United Kingdom. We share the same values and
are key strategic partners in the middle east. The bilateral
trade relationship is very strong, and we want to continue to
work with Israel to strengthen
our relationship as we emerge as an independent trading nation
for the first time in 50 years.
Let me be crystal clear at the outset: we are strongly opposed to
boycotts. Open, honest conversations best support peace efforts.
The United Kingdom is very clear about this—always has been and
always will be. We have also made clear our commitment to
supporting the Abraham accords and to working with Israeli and
Arab partners to promote our shared prosperity and regional
security.
The continuity agreement that we signed on 18 February 2019 was
one of Britain’s first. It replicated the scope of the EU-Israel
agreement, with key provisions covering tariff liberalisation,
customs, regulation and public procurement. This trade and
partnership agreement, which entered into force on 1 January last
year, secured the future of our bilateral trade relationship.
Anglo-Israeli trade was worth £4.6 billion in the four quarters
to the end of Q2 2021, making Israel—I am pleased to say that I
agree with my counterpart, the hon. Member for Brentford and
Isleworth—the United Kingdom’s 40th largest trading partner
globally. The United Kingdom is Israel’s second largest trading
partner, behind only the United States.
While it is difficult to disaggregate trade figures, it is
certainly true—to respond the comments by the hon. Member for
Strangford—that covid has depressed trade around the world, but
that makes trade with Israel all the more
important. Co-operation between us in sectors such as science and
technology—and particularly medical science, which we have heard
a lot about this afternoon—is already very strong, with Israel’s
status as a start-up nation and the United Kingdom’s as a science
superpower going hand in hand.
We have heard some great examples from so many colleagues,
including my hon. Friend the Member for Harrow East. I was also
particularly drawn to the examples given by my hon. Friend the
Member for Southport (), which showed the huge scale
of imports that we benefit from here in Britain, but we export
to Israel too. We should
not lose sight of that benefit to both countries. The London
Electric Vehicle Company, for example, makes taxis in
Warwickshire—I am sorry to say that to my hon. Friend the Member
for Harrow East, although I am sure Members from Warwickshire
will be pleased with that news. LEVC vehicle exports totalled
something like £1.46 million in 2021—a year when trade was
depressed because of covid—and the company anticipates purchases
of something like £730,000 a month this year. That is just one
example but, to the point made by the hon. Member for Brentford
and Isleworth (), as far as I am concerned,
the sky is the limit.
As my hon. Friend the Member for Hendon (Dr Offord) said, around
500 Israeli firms operate in the United Kingdom. That investment
from overseas is creating thousands of jobs in high-value
sectors, and over 20 Israeli firms are listed on the London Stock
Exchange or AIM—its alternative investment market—demonstrating
the benefit and strength of capital markets in the City of
London. Of course, we can always do more to assist the
relationship, and I know that Ministers across Government will
look carefully at the comments made by Members, including their
suggestions on changes to the visa regime.
We can always do more to help businesses succeed, and the
Department for International Trade is doing that right now. We
have a dedicated team of trade advisers in Tel Aviv, and UK
Export Finance has a risk appetite for Israel of
at least £4 billion, which is helping firms operating from the
United Kingdom to win contracts, insure their operations and
obtain trade financing. The United Kingdom and Israel share a
world-leading culture of entrepreneurial, tech-savvy and
innovative businesses, which will be celebrated in an innovation
summit later this year—a clear opportunity to highlight our
ambitious trade, science and innovation relationship, and a
chance to showcase the shared talents and skills of world-leading
British and Israeli businesses. My hon. Friend the Member for
Harrow East asked about what more we could do to enable
binational approaches to research and development, and I am
pleased to say that the UK Science and Innovation Network is
already making great strides in that direction.
Outwardly, the stock of foreign direct investment from the United
Kingdom to Israel was £1.4 billion
as of 2019. We trade across a huge range of sectors, as I have
said, but both our economies are also highly oriented towards
services, which represent over 70% of GDP for each country. After
the United States, we are Israel’s second-largest collaborator in
pharmaceuticals and medical products, and the pandemic has
catapulted the need for digital health solutions,
with Israel already being
the world’s leader in this area. It has therefore become even
more important. Beyond that, we seek opportunities in business
services, research and development, and professional and
management consulting services—the biggest traded services
between our countries, making up 12.5% of the overall trade
relationship. Although our trading relationship continues to be
predominantly goods-based, at around 65% of our trade, our
economies are highly services-oriented, and I believe that huge
scope for the future lies in our trade in services.
As two like-minded partners, with expertise in areas such as
technology, innovation, data and digital, we are confident that
the United Kingdom and Israel can agree an
ambitious deal that will complement both our economies. On 29
November, the Prime Minister announced that we would begin talks
with Israel this year on an
enhanced free trade agreement. Given both the political and
economic importance of our trading relationship
with Israel we expect the
FTA to form a substantial part of our bilateral trading
relationship. I should emphasise that Her Majesty’s Government
are committed to scrutiny and openness in our FTA negotiations.
We aim to be transparent, consultative and accountable throughout
our trade agenda, and we believe we compare favourably with other
parliamentary systems around the world.
On 2 December, the Secretary of State for International Trade
announced that the United Kingdom would open our formal call for
evidence very shortly. This call for input will allow the views
of businesses, the British people, civil society and others—not
only parliamentarians —to be fully heard during the mandate
development process, helping us shape the negotiations for our
comprehensive FTA. The specific coverage of the objectives for an
FTA, as asked for by the hon. Member for Airdrie and Shotts, will
be concluded following this call for input, to ensure that we
have fully listened to the views of all British people,
businesses and civil society. It simply would not be appropriate
to speculate on the contents of such a call for input—and,
indeed, on our objectives—before completing that work. However, I
am pleased to be able to say that the Secretary of State plans to
travel to Israel in early
February.
We will publish our strategic approach, an initial scoping
assessment and a Government response to the call for input before
starting negotiations, giving the House the means to scrutinise
our negotiation approach, its projected impact, what we have been
told by British people and businesses and our response to their
views. We will, of course, update the House in the usual manner
after each negotiation round and when requested to appear before
the relevant parliamentary Committees.
I must apologise for not being present when the Minister
mentioned me. I have a private Member’s Bill tomorrow and the
Minister responsible has been trying to catch me, so I had to
speak to her. I just wanted to ask if, when those meetings are
held with the Minister’s counterparts in Israel
we could have some indication of the input of Northern Ireland
companies in that process? Obviously we want every part of the
United Kingdom—all the regions—to benefit.
Mr Jayawardena
The hon. Gentleman can be absolutely assured that the views of
every part of our United Kingdom will be fully taken into
account. In fact, the Board of Trade recently visited Belfast to
demonstrate our commitment to ensuring that the Department for
International Trade works for every corner of our United Kingdom.
The timings of the negotiations will very much depend on the
readiness of both sides, which, of course, means agreement with
the Israeli Government.
My hon. Friend the Member for Harrow East and the hon. Member for
Strangford raised the potential opportunities that a future FTA
might provide. While British businesses already benefit from our
existing trade and partnership agreement and we would not, of
course, want to prejudice the call for input, I believe the
potential to take our trading relationship to the next level
through an enhanced and improved FTA is very clear. There is the
opportunity to remove or significantly lower tariffs for major
British exports, such as in the food and drink sector. We see
opportunities to give easier access for all British
companies—whatever corner of the country they are from, and
including small and medium-sized enterprises—to set up, do
business and access the Israeli market.
There is significant scope to expand our trade in services,
including digital services, which grew a remarkable 73%, albeit
from a low base, between 2010—remember 2010?—and 2020.
Co-operation in this area is, frankly, very limited in the
existing trade and partnership agreement, and we see real
opportunities for an enhanced FTA to supercharge the trade in
services, which would complement our services-based economies, as
we have discussed during the debate, and cement the United
Kingdom as the international services hub.
My hon. Friend the Member for Harrow East and the hon. Member for
Strangford asked how such an agreement would fit into the United
Kingdom’s wider trade agenda. Of course, our potential FTA
with Israel is just one
component of our ambitious wider international trade strategy. As
an independent trading nation, the United Kingdom has the freedom
to forge new bonds of trade with partners, friends and
like-minded souls worldwide, based on British interests and
shaped by British priorities. We will continue to carefully plan
and sequence our negotiation programme to ensure that it delivers
the maximum benefits for the United Kingdom. No longer restricted
by anti-competitive and protectionist one-size-fits-all
regulation from the EU, the United Kingdom will pursue prosperity
through free and fair trade with sovereign nations, based on our
shared interests and underpinned by the agreements we are forging
worldwide.
We have signed deals covering 70 countries, plus the EU, that
account for more than three quarters of a trillion pounds-worth
of trade, and we intend to continue that record of success in
2022. We have a clear and ambitious goal that will put global
Britain in pole position to pursue new opportunities to connect
British businesses to the most dynamic economies of the decades
ahead.
The International Trade Secretary recently kicked off
negotiations with India, one of the world’s largest and
fastest-growing economies. We are looking to accede to the
trans-Pacific partnership, one of the world’s largest free trade
areas, and we have launched our consultation on a potential deal
with the Gulf Co-operation Council. Of course, Members will
already know that we have secured an agreement in principle with
New Zealand and have finalised our agreement with Australia.
Those deals are aimed at unlocking growth in every corner of our
United Kingdom.
The hon. Members for Brentford and Isleworth and for Airdrie and
Shotts raised the matter of the Occupied Palestinian Territories
and their status in a potential FTA. The United Kingdom has an
interim political, trade and partnership agreement with the
Palestinian Authority, which entered into force on 1 January
2021, which we are committed to implementing. That will help
protect our bilateral trade relationship, which was worth £24
million in the four quarters to the end of Q2 2021. We value our
bilateral trade relationship with the Palestinian Authority and
will continue to work closely together to build on our trade
continuity agreement.
Dr Offord
Is the Minister aware that the Palestinian Authority themselves
do not agree with any kind of boycott? In December 2013, the
Palestinian Authority President, Mahmoud Abbas, stated:
“We don’t ask anyone to boycott Israel itself. We
have relations with Israel we have mutual
recognition of Israel ”
Mr Jayawardena
I am delighted to have that contribution on the record. Just as
we stand clearly against boycotts and support the Abraham
accords, the United Kingdom’s position on the settlements is
clear. Settlements are illegal under international law, damaging
to peace efforts, and call into question, I am sorry to say,
Israel’s commitment to the two-state solution. We have
urged Israel to halt its
settlement expansion, which threatens the physical viability of a
Palestinian state. Britain’s view is that the settlements in the
Occupied Palestinian Territories are illegal under international
law, so they are not covered within the scope of our trade
agreement. This means that goods imported from illegal
settlements are not entitled to the benefits from trade
preferences, and we remain committed to that approach. This shows
that more trade need not come at the expense of our values.
The hon. Member for Airdrie and Shotts raised the matter of arms
exports to Israel Her Majesty’s
Government take their arms export responsibilities very
seriously. We do not want any British equipment to be misused,
and we aim to operate one of the most robust arms export control
regimes in the world, complying with all our international
obligations. We consider all export licence applications
thoroughly against a strict risk assessment framework, and keep
all licences under careful and continual review as standard.
The Government will not grant an export licence if to do so would
be inconsistent with the strategic export licensing criteria.
Those criteria provide a thorough risk assessment framework for
assessing export licence applications, and require us to think
hard about the impact of providing equipment and its
capabilities. These are not decisions we take lightly. We
continue to monitor the situation in Israel and the Occupied
Palestinian Territories closely and keep relevant licences under
review. If necessary, we will take action to suspend, refuse or
revoke licences in line with the criteria, but only if
circumstances require.
The economic relationship between Israel and the
United Kingdom is strong, based on the trade and partnership
agreement that allows British and Israeli businesses, exporters
and consumers to buy and sell freely and with
confidence. Israel is a friend and
ally in the middle east, with an innovative and dynamic economy.
Tech, science and innovation co-operation between businesses of
both countries continues to grow, with real benefits for
consumers across our United Kingdom. Through an ambitious,
forward-looking and comprehensive free trade agreement, founded
on the strength of the Israeli and British economies, we look
forward to developing and improving that relationship even
further in the future as an independent trading nation.
(in the Chair)
Mr Blackman, you have some time for your winding-up speech. You
do not need to take it all.
4.24pm
I will try not to abuse your offer, Mr Paisley. I thank
colleagues across the Chamber for their contributions on this
important debate. I thank the Minister for his replies to some of
the questions. The one that he did not answer was when these
trade negotiations would actually begin. We look forward to those
beginning and bearing fruit as we come forward.
To update the hon. Member for Strangford (), I was stuck in a tremendous traffic jam on the way
to the House. That is why I was not there for the beginning of
International Trade questions, but I got there in the end. I put
that on the record.
I thank my colleagues and friends who have made contributions. We
have highlighted, in many aspects, the opportunities for trade. I
say to the hon. Member for Airdrie and Shotts (Ms Qaisar) that
one of the issues here is that we are not seeking to replace
trade anywhere else, but to enhance trade. By expanding trade,
everyone gains. The fact is that Israeli businesses and
Palestinian businesses gain from trade agreements that we have
with both Israel and the
Palestinian Authority. Those individuals in Palestine who work
for different companies—some work for Israeli companies—actually
benefit directly as a result of free trade being created and
enhanced.
I thank the hon. Member for Brentford and Isleworth () for her contribution. I
noted, of course, that she referred to the historical ties
between the British Labour party and the Israeli Labour party. Of
course, the Israeli Labour party is now currently in the
coalition Government, and has agreed to further settlements in
the west bank, so I am not sure quite where that fits with the
hon. Lady’s particular speech as we went along.
I thank everyone here for this debate, my colleagues on the
Backbench Business Committee for allowing it to take place, and
my hon. Friend the Member for Hendon (Dr Offord) for enabling
everyone to have a morning off next Wednesday—in preparation,
presumably for Prime Minister’s Question Time, so we can hone our
skills. I look forward to the Secretary of State for
International Trade, my right hon. Friend the Member for
Berwick-upon-Tweed ()
visiting Israel and hopefully
announcing on her visit the start of those trade talks, so that
we can look forward to that free trade agreement being in place
by the end of this calendar year.
Question put and agreed to.
Resolved,
That this House has considered UK and Israel trade
negotiations.
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