EU Urged to Continue to Use High Tariffs to Protect EU Egg Sector

 

Summary
A WUR report suggests the EU egg sector would face serious competitiveness challenges from imports without continued high levels of tariff protection. While this is justified on the basis of the high regulatory standards applied in the EU, even in the absence of higher EU regulatory standards major 3rd country egg exporters would still enjoy significant cost advantages. The contradiction between the EU’s continued use of a combination of high tariffs and quantitative restrictions on imports to regulate the EU egg market and the EU’s inclusion of provisions in trade agreements with ACP countries which seek to ban the use of quantitative restriction on imports from the EU needs to be recognised and addressed through continuing to flexibly interpret and enforce such commitments in trade with ACP countries. ACP governments need to be allowed to continue to use a range of trade policy tools in trade with the EU (including quantitative restrictions) where patterns of EU exports threaten national sector development strategies and aspirations. Read more “EU Urged to Continue to Use High Tariffs to Protect EU Egg Sector”

Uganda Takes Steps to Improve Traceability Around SPS Export Controls

Summary
Steps to register exporters of horticulture products subject to stricter SPS requirements constitute a first step in ensuring continued access to the EU market. However ensuring new systems are effectively operated will be critical. It remains to be seen whether the resources can be mobilised in Uganda to enhance the effectiveness of the new regulatory framework being established. This is likely to prove critical to whether or not the recent growth in Ugandan horticulture exports to the EU can be sustained. Read more “Uganda Takes Steps to Improve Traceability Around SPS Export Controls”

Ghanaian Pre-emptive Export Ban on Chilli Peppers, Aubergines and other Leafy Vegetables May Be Just the Beginning

Ghanaian Pre-emptive Export Ban on Chilli Peppers, Aubergines and other Leafy Vegetables May Be Just the Beginning

Summary

In the face of increasingly strict EU SPS implementing regulations the Ghanaian government has introduced  a pre-emptive export ban on leafy vegetables. A comprehensive system based approach to pest controls is urgently needed in Ghana, with the South African Phytclean electronic compliance database scheme potentially offering a model for private sector initiatives and private/public sector partnership. Initiating a dialogue with the UK authorities in the context of on-going Continuity Agreement negotiations, on future UK SPS controls, could prove of value in the face of increasingly strict EU SPS controls. In a range of areas, given UK agro-climatic conditions and production conditions the UK authorities assess risks far lower than the EU as whole for a range of fruit and vegetable products of export interest to ACP countries. Securing a reduction in these UK-only SPS controls in line with agro-climatic conditions in the UK could open up new market opportunities for Ghanaian exporters. Read more “Ghanaian Pre-emptive Export Ban on Chilli Peppers, Aubergines and other Leafy Vegetables May Be Just the Beginning”

COLEACP Warning Highlights New EU Requirements for Retaining Access to EU Market for Chilli and Pepper Exports

Summary
COLEACP is offering support to ACP producers of chillies and pepper in getting to grips with new EU documentation requirements related to effective treatment against False Codling Moth infestations. While such initiatives are welcome the increasing commercial costs of compliance is likely to progressively squeeze smaller scale producers out of EU market supply chains. This is likely to be compounded by the ongoing EU review of the acceptable minimum residue levels for pesticides applied to a range of fruit and vegetable imports. Read more “COLEACP Warning Highlights New EU Requirements for Retaining Access to EU Market for Chilli and Pepper Exports”

South Africa-EU CBS Dispute Takes a New Twist

Summary
The discovery of the Citrus Black Spot (CBS) fungal infection in citrus imports from Tunisia could prove a game changer in terms of South African efforts to secure a reduction of the EU’s commercially costly CBS control requirements. This is likely to give added important to discussions with the UK on its’ future SPS control arrangements to be applied under ‘no-deal’ Brexit Continuity Agreements. Removing controls on a citrus specific infection in a context where the UK has no commercial citrus production, alongside a lifting of TRQ restrictions on South African duty free access to the UK market, could help unlock the currently stalled UK-SADC EPA Continuity Agreement negotiations. This would be particularly the case if such a move signalled the UK governments’ willingness to respond more broadly to the changed trade realities which a ‘no-deal’ Brexit will give rise to. Read more “South Africa-EU CBS Dispute Takes a New Twist”

EU Formally Challenges Application of SACU Safeguard Duties in the Poultry Sector

Summary
The EC has initiated a process leading to the establishment of an arbitration panel to rule on the validity of safeguard measures taken against EU poultry meat imports under the EU-SADC Group EPA. While many of the EC’s objections are technically correct they ignore the wider context of the evolution of EU poultry meat exports, to which tariff reduction and ‘tariff standstill’ commitments contained in the pre-existing EU-South Africa TDCA made a unique contribution prior to the introduction of SPS related import restrictions in December 2016. With the progressive lifting of these restrictions, the longer term structural trend towards increasing EU exports of poultry meat to South Africa is beginning to re-assert itself. This needs to be seen against the background of concerns a ‘no deal’ Brexit could lead to a huge surge in EU27 poultry meat exports to extra-EU markets. In this context the current EC action can be seen as part of EU ‘no-deal’ Brexit preparations.  As such this raises the spectre of the aggressive pursuit by the EC of the full implementation of nominal EPA commitments, so as to open up new market possibilities for EU27 export sectors facing the prospect of severe trade and market disruptions under a ‘no-deal’ outcome to the ongoing Brexit process. Read more “EU Formally Challenges Application of SACU Safeguard Duties in the Poultry Sector”

Low EU sugar prices lead to calls for greater market transparency

 

Summary
EU sugar production estimates have been revised down, with the prospect of a greater market balance and some price recovery emerging. However a ‘no-deal’ Brexit could push 550,000 tonnes of EU27 white sugar back onto the EU27 market, exerting a downward pressure on EU27 sugar prices. In contrast shortages of sugar would be likely to emerge on the UK market which would increase demand for imports of both raw cane sugar and refined sugar from preferred suppliers as well as an increase in UK sugar prices. With spot market prices currently above contracted sugar prices ACP exporters may need to re-evaluate their marketing strategies. However not only is their uncertainty over the basis of the UK’s departure from the EU but also over which existing trade agreements the UK will succeed in ‘rolling over’ by November 2019. The EC is busy preparing for a ‘no-deal’ Brexit in the sugar sector. The ACP Ambassadorial Working Group on Sugar should initiate a dialogue with the EC on the nature of these preparations and the likely implications for ACP sugar producers, given the profound effects EU policy measures can have on the functioning of the EU sugar market. Read more “Low EU sugar prices lead to calls for greater market transparency”

EU Poultry Exports to Sub-Saharan Africa Once Again on the Rise

Summary
EU poultry meat exports to sub-Saharan Africa are once again on the rise after the shock of the SPS based partial closure of the South African market from December 2016. While growth is likely to continue it is unclear if the very strong growth in the first months of 2019 will be sustained.  This is likely to be critically influences by the outcome of the Brexit process, with a no-deal Brexit creating enormous pressures on both EU27 and UK poultry meat exporters to find alternative markets or over 1 million tonnes of mutual trade in poultry meat. Read more “EU Poultry Exports to Sub-Saharan Africa Once Again on the Rise”

Reasonable Preparations for a ‘No Deal’ Brexit are Needed Says UK Institute of Directors

Summary
The IoD has highlighted the need for businesses to ‘carefully consider their exposure’ to Brexit related trade disruptions and to ‘draw up mitigation plans’ to mitigate such disruption given the growing prospect of a ‘no-deal’ Brexit. This advice is equally relevant to ACP exporters serving UK markets whether directly or indirectly via triangular supply chains. ACP exporters  need to: consult with their trade partners (including port authorities, logistic service providers and final customers) on their no-deal Brexit planning and its’ consistency with their current export operations; explore new direct routes to UK markets where necessary; assess their vulnerability to ‘delisting’, warehousing and cold store space shortages; review contractual arrangements to include provisions on ‘loss sharing’ in the event of ‘no-deal’ Brexit related trade disruptions; lobby their government to initiate dialogues with UK and EU27 authorities on the regulatory actions needed to keep ACP export supply chains operating smoothly and the practical steps required to operationalise and apply at an early date the EU’s new unfair trading practices regulations in regard to ACP-EU agro-food supply chains. Read more “Reasonable Preparations for a ‘No Deal’ Brexit are Needed Says UK Institute of Directors”

UNCTAD Reviews Impact of Future UK MFN Policy on Low Income Developing Countries

Summary
The UNCTAD analysis highlights the central importance of future UK MFN tariffs to the value of any ‘rolled over’ ACP preferential access to the UK market. This is an important issue under both a ‘no-deal Brexit and a ‘hard Brexit’. This will require effective ACP lobbying of the UK government to retain in place existing MFN tariffs in areas of greatest interest to ACP exporters. In the country and product analysis undertaken by UNCTAD the importance of triangular trade flows to the UK via the Netherlands is neglected, with this trade also being adversely impacted by any changes in EU MFN tariffs. Read more “UNCTAD Reviews Impact of Future UK MFN Policy on Low Income Developing Countries”