Summary
UK meat exports to the EU are down 50% in the first six weeks of 2021, with the decline in poultry meat being initially most pronounced. In the long term it is expected UK exports will be down between 230% and 50% depending on the product and size of the exporting enterprises. Particularly in the poultry meat sector this could lead to a surge in exports to non-EU markets, with African and Caribbean markets for frozen poultry parts likely to be targeted. This could easily double current levels of UK exports to targeted African and Caribbean markets. The eventual level of UK trade diversion in the poultry sector will be determined by the nature of the controls placed on mainland UK to Northern Ireland poultry trade. Read more “Post Brexit Problems in UK Meat Exports to the EU and Implications for UK Poultry Meat exports to ACP Countries”
The Implications of the EUs More Assertive Trade Policy: The EU Trade Policy Review Part 2
Summary
The EC is proposing a ‘more assertive’ trade policy, emphasising the need for partner countries to fully live up to commitments entered into under trade agreements their governments have signed on to. There are concerns the more assertive promotion of EU trade and economic interests will dominate other EU trade policy objectives. The EC’s ‘Open Strategic Autonomy’ concept seeks to reconcile the EU’s ‘managed trade’ import regime applied in sensitive agri-food sector, with the need for more open markets for EU exporters. There is a contradiction at the heart of EU agri-food sector trade policy, with the EC seeking to deny ACP EPA signatories the right to use trade policy tools to regulate imports in trade with the EU which the EC itself routinely uses to manage imports from other major agri-food sector competitors. This contradiction is likely to come to the fore in the coming years as the EC seeks to operationalise its ‘more assertive’ trade policy. This will be especially the case if the application of full UK border controls on goods crossing from the EU, generate the kinds of agri-food sector disruptions which have affected UK exporters since 1 January 2021. This could then see surges in EU exports to ACP markets for livestock products such as poultry meat and milk powders. Read more “The Implications of the EUs More Assertive Trade Policy: The EU Trade Policy Review Part 2”
East African Air Freighted Horticulture and Floriculture Exports to UK facing Devastation Given UK ‘Red List’ Travel Restrictions
Summary
The UK’s new Covid-19 linked ‘red list’ travel restrictions threatens to undermine a nascent recovery in passenger-based air freight services from Eastern Africa to the UK. While the public health measures are understandable, they need to be seen in the context of new Brexit trade complications for air freighted fresh produce. This threatens to put Eastern African fresh produce exporters at a competitive disadvantage vis a vis competitors in major product areas such as fresh beans and cut flowers. It gives an added urgency to the promotion of unilateral UK initiatives to resolve the new rules of origin complications on ACP exports shipped to the UK market via the EU. Read more “East African Air Freighted Horticulture and Floriculture Exports to UK facing Devastation Given UK ‘Red List’ Travel Restrictions”
UK Parliamentary Report Reviews Operational Shortcomings of EU/UK TCA and Highlights Rules of Origin Problems Faced by ACP Re-Exports
Summary
While the House of Lords European Union Committee highlights the substantive unresolved issues under the EU/UK TCA, the focus is on the impact on UK businesses. While the impact on developing countries is referred to, this analysis is underdeveloped. A significant number of ACP supply chains are being affected. The new rules of origin complication is a particular area of concern, with ACP exporters being caught up in this new trade challenge. The affected ACP exports range from fresh horticulture, floriculture, and fisheries products, through the onward trade in ACP semi-processed products to ACP sugar exports. A solution to the rules of origin complication at the EU/UK level is unlikely. There is however scope for a solution for ACP exports shipped to the UK via the EU through the kind of UK pragmatic unilateral action which the Committee has called for and which the UK government is nominally open to. Coordinated action by ACP governments and business bodies to secure such unilateral pragmatic UK solutions in trade with the UK would appear urgent, given the scale of total ACP exports potentially facing export market losses. Read more “UK Parliamentary Report Reviews Operational Shortcomings of EU/UK TCA and Highlights Rules of Origin Problems Faced by ACP Re-Exports”
Overview of the EC Trade Policy Review and the Impact of EU Behind Border Concerns The EU Trade Policy Review Part 1
Summary
The EC sets out 3 core trade policy objectives: Supporting the recovery and fundamental transformation of the EU economy in line with its green and digital objectives’; ‘Increasing the EU’s capacity to pursue its interests and enforce its rights, including autonomously where needed’; ‘Shaping global rules for a more sustainable and fairer globalisation. Difficult operational choices will be faced in reconciling these three objectives, with this revolving around the question of who pays for the costs of more sustainable and socially responsible production processes, which at the same time delivers decent and more sustainable livelihoods for developing country producers? Care will need to be taken in ensuring the pursuit of EU interests and enforcement of EU rights does not become the dominant pillar of the EU’s new trade policy. Read more “Overview of the EC Trade Policy Review and the Impact of EU Behind Border Concerns The EU Trade Policy Review Part 1”
COLEACP Updated Brexit Impact Assessment Posted
Summary
The comprehensive nature of COLEACP’s Brexit assessment makes it a useful starting point for all ACP agri-food exporters in their efforts to get to grips with the new trade challenges thrown up by the culmination of the Brexit process. Its analysis of the short-term transitional and long-term structural challenges faced, also raises policy issues which now need to be addressed if disruptions to ACP supply chains which cross the new EU/UK customs and regulatory border are to be minimised. This sets an agenda for concerted ACP action, drawing in stakeholders from the multiplicity of sectors adversely affected by the new trade realities faced. While in the horticulture sector these issues primarily affect ACP exporters using triangular supply chains, in other sectors ACP exporters directly serving EU and UK markets could also be affected. This is particularly the case where imports are used in manufactured food and drink products and where the use of domestically produced alternatives (of either EU or UK origin) could avert any rules of origin complications (e.g., in the use of imported sugar in food and drink products destined for export). Read more “COLEACP Updated Brexit Impact Assessment Posted”
Will ACP Producers Currently Exporting to Irish Markets Via the UK or Using the UK ‘Land Bridge’ Take Advantage of Expanded Mainland EU to Republic of Ireland Ferry Services
Summary
There has been a 3-fold expansion of direct ferry services from the Republic of Ireland to France in 2021, as well as an expansion of direct services to Dutch and Belgian ports. Using these routes to serve Irish markets could enable ACP exporters traditionally using the UK ‘land bridge’ or serving Irish markets via the UK to sidestep export pre-notification requirements further phytosanitary certification requirements, further phytosanitary inspections, and major rules of origin complications, which result in a loss of duty-free access for onward traded goods, while allowing a continuation of low-cost ‘Groupage’ cargo haulage practices. The imbalance in Irish truck-based exports compared to imports could open up opportunities for securing low-cost freight services, which balance the more expensive ferry costs along these routes. However, this will require a process of ‘match making’ between ACP exporters and Irish hauliers, where potentially Irish government support could play a role. Read more “Will ACP Producers Currently Exporting to Irish Markets Via the UK or Using the UK ‘Land Bridge’ Take Advantage of Expanded Mainland EU to Republic of Ireland Ferry Services”
Brexit Bureaucracy Places Brake on Commercial Flexibility for ACP Horticultural Exports
Summary
Pre-export notification requirements, the need to re-issue phytosanitary certificates, problems in delivering ‘groupage’ cargoes, port clearance delays and rising road haulage charges are all undermining the commercial flexibility required for ACP exporters to exploit emerging market opportunities, where this involves the movement of goods across EU/UK borders. This is depressing export earnings, with this being a particular problem for smaller scale ACP exporters. In addition, new rules of origin complication which lead to standard MFN import tariffs being applied if goods delivered along triangular supply chains are not shipped under customs supervision, is requiring a fundamental rethink of the routes to market being used. A policy response, involving modification of the ‘Direct Transport’ provisions of the rules of origin applied under ACP-UK trade agreements and ACP-EU trade agreements is urgently needed, if smaller scale exporters shipping along triangular supply chains are not to be driven of UK and Irish markets. Read more “Brexit Bureaucracy Places Brake on Commercial Flexibility for ACP Horticultural Exports”
UK Deferment of Implementation of Phase 2 and Phase 3 UK/EU Border Controls Leave Problems Faced By ACP Triangular Supply Chain Exporters Unaddressed
Summary
On 11 March 2021, the UK government announced the deferment until 2022 of its planned phase 2 and phase 3 controls on goods crossing an EU/UK border. This has reduced concerns over potential disruptions of UK imports of fresh produce in the coming months and provides a 9-month breathing space for the UK authorities to set in place border control infrastructure and services which are ‘fit for purpose’. This deferment benefits EU producers, but largely leaves ACP exporters serving UK markets along triangular supply chains unaffected. ACP exporters will still face the dilemma of choosing between entering the EU customs union so as to benefit from the light UK import controls applied to EU products and losing ‘originating status and facing MFN tariffs, which is the consequence of leaving customs supervised transit arrangements. Clearly there is an urgent need to address specific ACP triangular supply chain issues if the functioning of many of these ACP triangular supply chains are not to be fundamentally undermined. Read more “UK Deferment of Implementation of Phase 2 and Phase 3 UK/EU Border Controls Leave Problems Faced By ACP Triangular Supply Chain Exporters Unaddressed”
An Alternative View on EU-West Africa Poultry Sector Trade: A Review of the European Commission’s West Africa-EU Poultry Sector Briefing
Summary
This article has a different structure to the normal epamonitoring.net articles, with it being structured as commentary on recent EU information materials supplied in the context of discussions over the coherence of EU poultry sector trade policy in West Africa. This paper was released as background to planned discussions on the EU’s poultry sector trade relationship with West African countries, the European Commission circulated an information note setting put the EC perspective on this trade. It sought to:
- Assert how EU poultry production growth was demand driven, but largely neglected the impact which the EU’s tightly regulated poultry meat import regime on investment and production decisions in the EU poultry sector.
- Set out the phenomenal increase in effective consumer demand for low-cost protein which was underway prior to the Covid-19 pandemic, a development which is incontestable.
- Explore the structure of poultry meat production and demand in West Africa and the constraints on competitive production faced, which undoubtedly exist.
- Sought to explore the issue of the right balance required between domestic production and imports, given evolving West African demand.
- Argue the EU provides no subsidies to EU poultry production and trade.
- Outline the scale of EU development assistance to agricultural development in West Africa.
- Briefly explore the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic and the EU’s health focussed ‘farm to fork’ strategy.
The following paper seeks to critically reflect on the arguments set out by the European Commission in this paper, with a particular focus on the impact of the EU’s trade policy in regard to EU imports of poultry meat and the sharp contrast this provides with the EU’s evolving approach to the use of trade policy tools by African governments in the poultry sector. Read more “An Alternative View on EU-West Africa Poultry Sector Trade: A Review of the European Commission’s West Africa-EU Poultry Sector Briefing”