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EU-UK talks go late with post-Brexit deal 'in sight'

December 24, 2020 05:12 am | Updated 05:20 am IST - Brussels

The last-gasp deal, if it is reached, would come just days before Britain is set to leave the EU's single market at the end of the year, sparing the two sides from trade tariffs

European Union chief Ursula von der Leyen. File

The European Union and Britain were on the brink of agreeing a post-Brexit trade deal, European sources said on Wednesday, but negotiations continued late as they tried to hammer out the final details.

"We are in the final phase," one EU official told AFP. Asked whether this meant a deal later on Wednesday, a source close to the talks said: "Very likely, yes."

The British pound surged against the dollar on optimism that a deal could finally be reached, with sterling rising to $1.35 before 1600 GMT. The pound also gained against the euro, which stood at 90.16 pence.

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Diplomats from EU member states, which would have to approve any technical agreement, were less optimistic however, warning that they still needed to see a text and that problems may remain.

As the evening dragged on large quantities of pizza were seen being delivered to EU headquarters and von der Leyen's spokesman Eric Mamer tweeted a picture of the haul, questioning which flavours had been ordered, with the caption: "Suspense..."

A French government source said U.K. negotiators had made "huge concessions" on fisheries without confirming if it had been enough to clinch the deal.

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But a definitive breakthrough in almost 10 months of tortuous negotiations seemed close, after EU chief Ursula von der Leyen and Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson took control of the talks.

The last-gasp deal, if it is reached, would come just days before Britain is set to leave the EU's single market at the end of the year, sparing the two sides from trade tariffs.

Any agreement still faces a race to be signed off by the EU's 27 member states before Britain ends a half-century of economic integration at midnight on December 31.

A deal -- which would still need to be translated and tidied up by lawyers -- could be approved provisionally before the cut-off date and then scrutinised by EU lawmakers in the new year to avoid a cliff-edge.

Empty nets?

The focus in talks had shifted since Monday to cross-Channel calls between Johnson and von der Leyen after exhausted officials failed to close the gap on how to share access to U.K. fishing waters.

The remaining differences between the two camps were narrow but deep, in particular over fishing, with EU crews facing a dramatic cut in their catch from British waters.

London has pushed to reduce EU fishing fleets' share of the estimated 650-million-euro annual haul by more than a third, with changes phased in over three years.

The EU, in particular countries with northern fishing fleets like France, Denmark and the Netherlands -- was insisting on 25 percent over at least six years.

EU negotiator Michel Barnier briefed ambassadors and then senior MEPs on Tuesday that he had made his last offer on fish and that it was now up to political leaders to decide.

"Progress has been made. Most issues are preliminarily closed or close to being agreed," a senior diplomat said, recounting Barnier's briefing to EU envoys.

"However, differences on fisheries remain difficult to bridge. Unfortunately, the UK is not moving enough yet to clinch a fair deal on fisheries."

Narrow path?

Brussels was ready to negotiate until the end of the year -- or even "beyond", as Mr. Barnier suggested -- but time was running out for any deal to be provisionally applied.

EU members agreed to keep talking, but one diplomat warned: "Barnier was unable to tell member states whether there would be a deal tomorrow, before Christmas, the New Year or summer 2021.

"Also a narrow path might in the end prove a dead end," he said

A colleague from another member state earlier suggested that if there was no breakthrough on Wednesday talks could resume next week.

Failure to reach a deal would mean tariffs on cross-Channel trade in food and goods, exacerbating the economic shock of a return to a customs border after 47 years of integration.

Britain and France experienced a foretaste of what the chaos might look like this week when France abruptly closed its borders to British lorries, trains and planes.

Paris was responding to concerns about a new coronavirus variant spreading in Britain, but the huge queues of trucks and threats of supply shortages were taken as an ominous sign.

Both London and Brussels insist they are ready for a return to tariffs and a customs border -- but business groups are sounding the alarm about the possible disruption to come.

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