Covid-19 Pandemic Raises Questions Over the Brexit Effect on ACP Triangular Supply Chains

 

Summary
The Covid-19 pandemic is highlighting the supply chain problems which can arise when border clearance arrangements come under stress from increased demands and reduced capacities. This is bringing into question the future commercial viability of existing ACP triangular supply chains for short shelf life products in serving the UK market. This needs to be seen in the light of the border clearance challenges and associated transportation disruptions which are likely to arise as a result of the UK governments’ current approach to future trade relations once it leaves the EU customs union and single market. Current policy responses to transportation disruptions associated with border clearance problems linked to the Covid-19 pandemic, could provide a basis for longer term arrangements to facilitate the continued smooth functioning of triangular supply chains. In the absence of such initiatives ACP exporters will need to explore opportunities for direct exports to the UK or diversification away from the UK market. Read more “Covid-19 Pandemic Raises Questions Over the Brexit Effect on ACP Triangular Supply Chains”

Size and Market Experience Affect the Impact of Corvid-19 Pandemic Disruptions on African Horticulture Exporters

 

Summary
Smaller scale ACP fruit and vegetable exporters are being more severely impacted by the economic effects of the Covid-19 pandemic than larger ACP fruit and vegetable exporters. This suggests smaller ACP exporters may well need financial assistance in surviving and bouncing back from the trade and economic consequences of the pandemic. There could potentially be a role for the EIB in providing bridging financing for smaller ACP fruit and vegetable exporters, provided mechanisms can be found for the early delivery of such support and reliable repayment. The EIB could usefully review its existing programmes to see which of these could provide a vehicle for the swift extension of support to the worst affected ACP fruit and vegetable exporting enterprises, which would otherwise be driven out of business by the export market disruptions they currently face. Read more “Size and Market Experience Affect the Impact of Corvid-19 Pandemic Disruptions on African Horticulture Exporters”

Dairy Price Recovery Likely to be Reversed by Covid-19 Pandemic

Summary
Covid-19 pandemic related disruptions to EU and global dairy markets has led the European Milk Board (EMB) to call for the implementation of a production restricting Market Responsibility Programme, which it is argued should become a permanent feature of the EU diary sector policy tool kit. While the EC is likely to resist such call, favouring traditional intervention buying, ACP milk producers could usefully support the EMB proposal in order to avert future ‘dumping’ of low priced EU milk powder on ACP markets, to the detriment of local milk producers and national efforts to boost local milk production. Read more “Dairy Price Recovery Likely to be Reversed by Covid-19 Pandemic”

Collapse of European Cut Flower Demand Threatens Immediate Future of Kenyan Cut Flower Sector

 

Summary
The Corvid-19 pandemic has caused economic disruptions which have crippled the Kenyan cut flower industry, which directly employs 200,000 people. Tens of thousands of workers are being sent home, with farms closing. Given the uncertainty over Kenya’s future duty free access to the UK market, many of these farms may not re-open, unless current uncertainties are urgently addressed.  With all East African Community meetings cancelled, this will require unilateral action from the UK government to reinstate the proposed Transitional Protection Mechanism put forward in October 2019 or the adoption of a similar such mechanism. Read more “Collapse of European Cut Flower Demand Threatens Immediate Future of Kenyan Cut Flower Sector”

What Challenges Does Kenya Face in Ensuring Continuity in its Current Access to the UK Market?

Summary
With nearly 40% of Kenya’s direct exports to the UK currently benefitting from significant margins of tariff preferences, concerns have arisen around the UK’s current MFN tariff review and the future basis for Kenya’s continued duty-free access to the UK market after 1st January 2021. In addition, there are growing concerns about the future commercial viability of the use of triangular supply chains for the delivery of Kenyan short shelf life products to the UK market if no comprehensive EU/UK trade agreement is in place by 1st January 2021. Any future EU/UK trade agreement would need, as far as possible, to replicate the current frictionless trade, on which the operation of these triangular supply chains depends. This is looking increasingly unlikely. The Government of Kenya thus faces a triple challenge in ensuring a continuation of current patterns of exports to the UK market into 2021. Read more “What Challenges Does Kenya Face in Ensuring Continuity in its Current Access to the UK Market?”

The Link Between EU Agri Food Sector Protectionism and the Value of ACP Trade Preferences Highlighted

 

Summary
The WTO has once again highlighted the EU’s extensive use of tariffs and non-tariff measures to manage EU agri-food markets. Preferred ACP exporters benefit from these protectionist EU trade policies, with any movement away from these policies potentially see mainly ACP/LDC exporters losing out to the tune of €1.6 billion.  The prospects of such losses are very real with regard to the UK market, where there is strong pressure under the current MFN tariff review to abandon MFN tariffs where the UK has no or only limited production interests to protect. Looking forward, within the EU, a long standing insistence on abolishing quantitative restrictions on imports from the EU under economic partnership agreements concluded with ACP countries, is being given new impetus with the creation a Chief Trade Enforcement Office, dedicated to making sure existing trade agreement commitments by 3rd countries are fully implemented. Such a course of action however sits uneasily with the EU’s own extensive use of quantitative restrictions in sensitive agri-food sectors. Read more “The Link Between EU Agri Food Sector Protectionism and the Value of ACP Trade Preferences Highlighted”

Will St Lucia Continue to Have an Export Trade Relationship with the UK once the UK Leaves the EU Customs and Single Market?

Summary
With the UK’s current MFN tariff review posing the question: should the UK government remove all tariffs where the UK has ‘zero or limited production interest’,  the St Lucian banana sector could lose significant  margins of tariff preferences which could prove to be the final nail in the coffin of St Lucia’s banana exports to Europe. The UK is the only EU market served by St Lucian banana exports with bananas accounting for fully 83% of total exports to the UK. This could see only a marginal residual export trade relationship remaining from 2021. With the UK market taking more in exports from St. Lucia than all the other EU27 market combined, this would also profoundly undermine St Lucia’s export trade relationship with the EU. Given the basis the banana trade provides for ongoing efforts at agricultural export diversification, retaining in place existing UK MFN tariffs is essential to St Lucia’s continued trade relationship with the UK Read more “Will St Lucia Continue to Have an Export Trade Relationship with the UK once the UK Leaves the EU Customs and Single Market?”

UK to Strike Out on Bold New Trade Policy but Will Africa and the Caribbean Take the Hit?

 

Summary
The UK has formally announced the launch of an on-line public consultation on its future MFN tariff regime.  This consultation appears limited to UK stakeholders and largely ignores the UK’s trade and development commitments enshrined in a host of preferential trade arrangements the UK has sought to ‘roll over’. The value of these ‘rolled-over’ trade arrangements would be profoundly undermined by any move towards the kind of zero UK MFN tariff regime which the Secretary of State appears to be championing. Some €1.5 billion in African and Caribbean exports, mainly from Commonwealth countries would be adversely affected, with 8 countries seeing over 70% of their current direct exports to the UK adversely affected and a further 7 countries likely to see between 46% and 69% of their direct exports to the UK adversely affected. With no formal structure for dialogue with the UK government operative, there is a need for special initiatives from African and Caribbean governments to place their concerns around the current UK MFN tariff review on the table for consideration by the UK government. Read more “UK to Strike Out on Bold New Trade Policy but Will Africa and the Caribbean Take the Hit?”

Opening Salvoes Setting Out UK ‘Redlines’ in UK/EU Negotiations Pose Challenges for ACP Triangular Supply Chains

 

Summary
The UK governments rejection of binding commitments on regulatory alignment with the EU and insistence on preparing for full border controls if a comprehensive FTA with the EU cannot be agreed and in place by 1st January 2021 is causing concern in business circles. The British Ports Authorities has described this new policy approach as likely to create a situation which looks ‘a bit like a no-deal’. This could seriously disrupt the functioning of ACP supply chains which serve UK markets for short shelf life horticulture and floriculture products via initial ports of landing in EU27 member states. Special arrangements for the handling of this onward trade are required if a range of ACP exporters of short shelf life horticulture and floriculture products are not to be driven out of the UK market.  These special arrangements need to be agreed in a matter of weeks if private sector operators are to make the necessary investments in ensuring the continued smooth flow of ACP goods to the UK market along these triangular supply chains from 1st January 2021. Read more “Opening Salvoes Setting Out UK ‘Redlines’ in UK/EU Negotiations Pose Challenges for ACP Triangular Supply Chains”

EU Sugar Sector Restructuring Seeing Stabilisation of EU Production Import and Export Trends Which Pose Challenges for Some ACP Sugar Exporters

 

Summary
EU sugar production is stabilising but on a gradual upward trend to 2030, in the context of declining human consumption of sugar in the EU.  This will see reduced EU sugar imports and increased EU sugar exports with the EU being a growing net sugar exporter from 2024. EU corporate adjustment to the post quota market realities continues apace, with factor closures in efficient beet sugar production zones as processing operations are consolidated to maximise cost reductions. Maximisation of utilisation of installed capacity efforts place beet co-refiners in a more competitive position than traditional raw cane sugar refiners, with some ACP exporters still needing to rethink their marketing strategies in light of the evolving EU27 market realities. Some ACP sugar exporters however are constrained in their marketing options by existing patterns of corporate ownership. Responding effectively to evolving EU market realities and the UK’s future sugar sector MFN tariff policy will be critical to the commercial viability of existing patterns of ACP sugar exports to the EU27 and UK market respectively. Read more “EU Sugar Sector Restructuring Seeing Stabilisation of EU Production Import and Export Trends Which Pose Challenges for Some ACP Sugar Exporters”