Statement from the Government on the Withdrawal Agreement Joint Committee (corrected)
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The Withdrawal Agreement Joint Committee met today at Lancaster
House, London. The meeting was chaired by the Chancellor of the
Duchy of Lancaster, Michael Gove, and the European Commission Vice
President, Maros Sefcovic, alongside the co-chairs of the
Committee, the Paymaster General, Penny Mordaunt, and Michel
Barnier. Representatives from the Northern Ireland Executive and
the EU 27 Member States also joined by videolink....Request free trial
The Withdrawal Agreement Joint Committee met today at Lancaster House, London. The meeting was chaired by the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, Michael Gove, and the European Commission Vice President, Maros Sefcovic, alongside the co-chairs of the Committee, the Paymaster General, Penny Mordaunt, and Michel Barnier. Representatives from the Northern Ireland Executive and the EU 27 Member States also joined by videolink. This meeting was an opportunity for both parties to set out their positions. Vice President Šefčovič detailed the European Union’s concerns, and requested that the UK withdraw the UK Internal Market Bill. The UK Government made clear that the legislative timetable for the Bill would continue as planned. The UK Government reiterated its commitment to implementing the Withdrawal Agreement, including the Northern Ireland Protocol. The Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster updated the Committee on the significant steps already taken to implement the protocol, with investment to support Northern Ireland businesses and new IT systems. The UK Government also stressed its obligations to the citizens of Northern Ireland, its determination to uphold the constitutional status of Northern Ireland within the UK, and its responsibility to provide good governance for the whole United Kingdom. As co-guarantor, along with Ireland, of the Belfast (Good Friday) Agreement, the Government’s commitment to that agreement remains absolute. The Protocol makes clear that Northern Ireland is fully part of the customs territory of the United Kingdom and that there will be unfettered access for goods moving from Northern Ireland to the rest of the United Kingdom. It is essential that, in the implementation of the Protocol, nothing undermines those fundamental principles. Accordingly, the measures set out in the United Kingdom Internal Market Bill are designed to create a ‘safety net’ that ensures ministers can always deliver on their obligations and take steps to best ensure the prosperity and protect the enormous progress the people of Northern Ireland have made in recent decades. The UK Government underlined its determination to continue to engage in Joint Committee discussions constructively, with the aim of finding a satisfactory outcome for both sides. Lord Frost, Chief Negotiator, said:
“We have just completed our eighth round of negotiations with
the EU. We covered all issues in some detail, including the
most difficult ones.
“These were useful exchanges. However, a number of
challenging areas remain and the divergences on some are
still significant.
“We have been consistently clear from the start of this
process about the basis on which agreement is possible
between us. Those fundamentals remain. We have engaged in
discussions in all areas. We have consistently made proposals
which provide for open and fair competition, on the basis of
high standards, in a way which is appropriate to a modern
free trade agreement between sovereign and autonomous equals.
“We remain committed to working hard to reach agreement by
the middle of October, as the Prime Minister set out earlier
this week.
“We have agreed to meet again, as planned, in Brussels next
week to continue discussions.”
BACKGROUND
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On trade in goods we had a constructive
round of talks so far as this was possible within the
constraints imposed by the EU’s unwillingness to discuss
potential textual compromises. We discussed issues relating
to each of the core areas of the goods elements of the
potential FTA, including the UK’s regulatory regime on SPS
and proposals for Product Specific Rules of Origin.
On services, investment and other FTA
issues, the UK and EU had further technical
discussions on a number of issues, including professional
qualifications, investment, telecommunications and
intellectual property (including geographical indications).
On the so-called “level playing field” talks
covered subsidies, tax and dispute settlement. The UK had
hoped to engage in text-based discussions in this Round on
some topics and was disappointed that the EU rejected this
approach. The UK is working hard to reach agreement and has
engaged constructively in every Round. However the EU
position cuts across UK sovereignty in a number of important
areas, most notably on subsidy control.
On fisheries, we will not accept any
proposals which compromise UK sovereignty over our own
fishing waters, and we look for a relationship based on the
EU’s existing bilateral arrangement with Norway. This week,
on quota-sharing the UK looked to make progress and proposed
categorising stock priorities to understand each side’s
position better. There was some progress, based on UK
proposals to consolidate a list of stocks that would be
within the scope of the agreement, with the number of
differences between the two Parties reduced to a small number
of stocks. The EU gave a presentation on cooperation and
objectives, where despite some convergence regarding the
nature of cooperation, we remain divergent on legal form and
the structure of the agreement.
We had a constructive discussion on civil nuclear
cooperation. We talked through some text proposals
from the UK that reflected the progress we’ve made in the
negotiations so far on issues including nuclear safety. Both
sides agreed that we could reach an agreement quickly when we
move to text based discussions.
We had a good discussion on road haulage
where the UK continued to propose arrangements that would
allow hauliers to do work within our respective territories
as well as between them in order to operate more efficiently.
The EU accepted that the UK is not looking for single market
type levels of access. We discussed the EU’s proposals on
standards for road haulage operations.
We had a cooperative discussion on aviation safety
and air services. We discussed ATM, aviation
security and the ownership and control of airlines operating
under the agreement.
On law enforcement we continued discussions
on the capabilities and the EU’s preconditions (fundamental
rights and data protection), notably on Mutual Legal
Assistance, Prum, extradition, and criminal records exchange.
Big divergences remain on human rights obligations and data
aspects.
On energy, we continued our constructive
discussions on possible efficient electricity trading
arrangements over the interconnectors outside of the EU’s
Internal Energy Market. We ran through how these could work
in practice and we now need to move discussions onto how
these work in the text of an agreement. The EU continued to
push for a series of supporting measures, a number of which
are not relevant to cross-border trade. We lastly had a
useful exchange of views on how system operators and
regulators will cooperate in future, in which we made clear
the importance of supporting renewable investments in the
North Sea.
On social security coordination we had
constructive discussions on the coordination of some
contributory benefits, applicable legislation and healthcare
arrangements, including an EHIC type scheme. There was
consensus that some progress had been made but that there are
still some significant issues to resolve when we move to a
discussion of legal text.
On participation in Union programmes,we had
detailed discussions on financial contributions towards the
programmes, the sound financial management of programmes, and
suspension and termination provisions. While exchanges were
detailed and constructive, further discussion is required on
those areas where our approach differs. We also had
discussions on possible service access agreements on EGNOS
(European Geostationary Navigation Overlay Service) and EU
SST (Space Surveillance and Tracking), and an agreement on
Peace+.
On governance, we had again had detailed
discussions on the committee structures which might support
any agreement, and constructive and technical exchanges on
other issues such as exceptions.
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