Lack of UK IT Systems for Organic Imports Poses Challenges for ACP Fresh Produce Exporters

 

Summary
The UK’s reversion to paper based organic product documentation is generating additional costs and value losses for ACP organic exporters. This takes the form of increased internal administrative costs and value losses resulting from misplaced or delayed documentation.  These problems are particularly severe for small volume exports of mixed organic products. Bulk exports of single organic products are less severely affected, since additional costs are lower and there is less risk of document loss. Political relations between the EU and UK around Brexit related trade issues would appear to be such as to rule out any arrangements which might allow a temporary restoration of UK access to EU IT systems used for trade in organic products until such time as UK systems are fully in place. Read more “Lack of UK IT Systems for Organic Imports Poses Challenges for ACP Fresh Produce Exporters”

Brexit Costs Are Leading to a Restructuring of UK to EU Supply Chains

Summary
Brexit related cost increases are beginning give rise to a restructuring of supply chains to avoid crossing the UK/EU border. While analysis to date focusses on the impact on the UK livestock products sector, serious disruptions to ACP triangular supply chains for the delivery of fruit and vegetables to EU markets via the UK area also being impacted. This is in part a result of the phytosanitary certification and phytosanitary import control requirements not faced by re-exported ACP products. There is a need to take practical steps to address these phytosanitary related challenges, so as to avoid undermining export opportunities for a range of smaller ACP agri-food exporters. These exporters faced particular challenges because of the ‘thin’ nature of the EU/UK trade agreement, which has left important phytosanitary issues unaddressed. Read more “Brexit Costs Are Leading to a Restructuring of UK to EU Supply Chains”

Deadline for Transposition of EU UTP Regulation into National Law Passes but Major Questions Related to UTPs Remain

Summary
The EU UTPS regulation has not been transposed into member states national law, but with uneven results. Ensuring common standards of enforcement to uphold minimum EU requirements for removing UTPS in agri-food supply chins is no essential. Equally there is an urgent need to ensure enforcement mechanisms recognise the realities of ACP-to-EU supply chains and actively prevent the adoption of commercial practices between importers and exporters which de facto circumvent the intention of EU UTP regulations in regard to 3rd country-EU supply chains. Read more “Deadline for Transposition of EU UTP Regulation into National Law Passes but Major Questions Related to UTPs Remain”

ACP Mango Exporters Hoping for a Good 2021 Season in Face of Ongoing Covid-19 Disruptions and New Brexit Complications

 

Summary
The poor 2020 West African mango export season had as much to do with the impact of Covid on freight options as it di with demand suppression. Having flexibility in the routes to markets served is therefore of considerable importance in adjusting to the evolving economic effects of the Covid-19 pandemic in the mango sector. In this context Brexit related complications arising for mangoes onward traded across EU/UK borders narrows the freight options open to some ACP mango exporters, with this compounding and already difficult situation. Read more “ACP Mango Exporters Hoping for a Good 2021 Season in Face of Ongoing Covid-19 Disruptions and New Brexit Complications”

The Sea Freight Reefer Constraint on ACP Perishable Exports Compounds Brexit Complications

Summary
A shortage of refrigerated containers, and an in-balance in their geographical distribution is seeing raising reefer freight costs and a rescheduling of shipping services to seek to address the in-balance. This could potentially carry costs for smaller ACP exporters of perishable product exports to Europe. This situation is complicating efforts to deal with cost increasing effects of the rules of origin/MFN tariff complication and phytosanitary certification requirements for perishable products shipped along triangular supply chains, through re-routing such to direct shipment to either the UK or EU market. Read more “The Sea Freight Reefer Constraint on ACP Perishable Exports Compounds Brexit Complications”

EC Urged to Ensure Greater Reciprocity in SPS Protocols and More Effective Enforcement

 

Summary
Freshfel Europe has called for the EC and member states to developa concrete EU SPS strategy’ to improve access for EU fruit and vegetable exporters to 3rd country markets. ACP governments will need to take a nuanced approach to such overtures, paying careful attention to the practical operational policy implications of any commitments entered into, especially in regard to the possible impact on their relations with other major third country trading partners and regional trade integration initiatives. Read more “EC Urged to Ensure Greater Reciprocity in SPS Protocols and More Effective Enforcement”

UK Relaxation of Citrus Sector Phytosanitary Requirement Comes as Relief in Face of Mounting Spanish Citrus Producer Pressures, but Not Without its Complications

 

Summary
Spanish citrus producers continue to push for stricter phytosanitary controls on imports from Southern Africa. It is unclear whether this is driven by genuine phytosanitary concerns or commercial concerns. The increased commercial threat facing Spanish producers comes from Egyptian exporters, rather than Southern African suppliers, while the principal phytosanitary threat comes from Turkey. Despite this situation, Spanish citrus industry concerns may be taken up forcefully under the EU-SADC EPA review, given the other agri-food sector dispute the EU has with the SADC EPA region (e.g., in regard to safeguard restrictions on poultry meat imports from the EU). While Southern African citrus exporters see Brexit as an opportunity, given more relaxed UK phytosanitary import requirements, this will be at the cost of increased rules of origin and phytosanitary control complications along triangular supply chains (both EU to UK and UK to Ireland). These complications may require a restructuring of some routes to market used by Southern African citrus exporters serving UK and Irish markets.   Read more “UK Relaxation of Citrus Sector Phytosanitary Requirement Comes as Relief in Face of Mounting Spanish Citrus Producer Pressures, but Not Without its Complications”

EU/UK Cross Border Trade Picking Up but Impact on ACP Triangular Supply Chains Remains Un-Addressed

Summary
While recovery in UK exports to the EU is underway after unprecedented declines in January 2021, the recovery in EU exports to the UK is less pronounced, with trade still down significantly compared to 2020. No data is available on the impact this is having on ACP goods shipped along triangular supply chains. However, the need to get to grips at the policy level with the sources of cost increases along triangular supply chains has bene given a new urgency by the UK’s Covid-19 linked ‘red list’ of countries subject to restrictions on entry to the UK. Read more “EU/UK Cross Border Trade Picking Up but Impact on ACP Triangular Supply Chains Remains Un-Addressed”

Can Evolving EU UK Technical Discussions on Northern Ireland Trade Issues Help Ease Triangular Supply Chain Challenges?

Summary
EU/UK technical discussions on solutions which could facilitate agri-food sector trade between the mainland UK and Northern Ireland, within the framework of the mutually agreed Northern Ireland protocol, could offer hope for solutions to the wider challenges now faced along ACP triangular supply chains.  However, any progress on these technical issues would leave unaddressed the issue of the MFN tariffs now levied on ACP exports to final markets where the shipment arrangements require these goods to cross and EU/UK border outside of customs supervision.  This issue needs to be addressed unilaterally by the UK through the adoption of practical trade documentation requirements if the commitments to continuity in market access for ACP exports is to be fully upheld. Parallel unilateral action is also required from the EU. Read more “Can Evolving EU UK Technical Discussions on Northern Ireland Trade Issues Help Ease Triangular Supply Chain Challenges?”

The UK Trade and Business Commission Offers Opportunities for Highlighting ACP Triangular Supply Chain Concerns

Summary
A UK Trade and Business Commission consisting of cross-party Parliamentary and business representation has been launched. The aim is to review the UK’s new trade agreements and offer evidence-based recommendation for improvements which could facilitate frictionless trade. Given the Commission’s focus on food supply chains and the new rules of origin and SPS complications which have arisen since 1 January 2021, this initiative could offer an opportunity to raise the profile of ACP agri-food sector trade concerns linked to the Brexit process and advance practical solutions for the renewal of frictionless trade along ACP triangular supply chains used to serve markets in both the UK and EU. Read more “The UK Trade and Business Commission Offers Opportunities for Highlighting ACP Triangular Supply Chain Concerns”