London and Brussels have achieved a breakthrough in the devastating dispute over Northern Ireland’s post-Brexit trade relations, paving the way for a fresh push to resolve the long-running problem.
After months of inertia and acrimony, the United Kingdom and the European Union issued a joint statement Announcing a tentative deal that would give Brussels access to UK IT systems for trade across the Irish Sea.
The statement described the talks between James Cleverley, UK Foreign Secretary, and Maroš Šefovic, Vice President of the European Commission, as “friendly and constructive”. “It looks good,” said an EU official.
Brilliant and Sefcovic will meet again on January 16, with EU and UK officials hoping the two sides will agree shortly thereafter to enter a final negotiating “tunnel” to resolve important outstanding issues.
Securing a deal would be complex and politically risky, at least for UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, whom Eurosceptic Conservative MPs could turn against if he is deemed to have “sold out” to Brussels.
Today’s progress in sharing data is a positive step in discussions about the NI protocol
Pro-British Unionist politicians in Northern Ireland also oppose the Brexit trade relationship and refuse to sit in the district’s elected assembly at Stormont until the issue is resolved.
But the atmosphere around the negotiations has changed dramatically since Boris Johnson, who negotiated the so-called Northern Ireland Protocol in 2019, left office last September.
“They are now talking as friends,” said one EU official. “We are entering a new cycle and there seems to be a real will on both sides to get things done.”
Joe Biden, the US president, has urged both sides to resolve the dispute before the 25th anniversary of the Good Friday Agreement on Easter Sunday. Hoping to visit Ireland and the UK around that time.
Meanwhile, UK and European leaders have also pointed out that it is foolish for Western allies to be divided on Brexit issues when they must unite to face the threat posed by Russia.
Cleverly’s allies said the two sides are not working on a fixed deadline, but said it was “a possibility” they could soon enter a “tunnel,” with talks taking place in conditions of strict secrecy until an agreement is reached.
“Today’s progress in data sharing is a positive step in the discussions around the NI protocol,” Cleverly said, while Šifovic said chirp That breakthrough means there is now “a new basis for discussions about the protocol”.
The EU has complained about a lack of “real-time” access to the system it says is needed to provide full visibility into goods moving into Northern Ireland across the Irish Sea border, which was created under the deal on post-Brexit trade arrangements. for the region.
In a statement, both sides agreed that access to the UK’s data system was an “essential prerequisite for building trust”.
The Democratic Unionist Party, which wants to abolish the protocol because it sets trade borders between Great Britain and Northern Ireland, said: “This is not the time for plastering. It is time for serious negotiations dealing with the fundamental problem.”
There remain significant political hurdles to striking a major deal given the entrenched positions of opponents of the protocol, not least of which is the European Court of Justice’s role in overseeing trade arrangements on UK soil.
The EU said it could ease implementation of the agreement but not rewrite the agreement.
EU officials say that while it has been agreed on the principle that the UK will share customs data on goods entering and leaving Northern Ireland in due course, there are still some points to be ironed out.
One said the two sides had not yet agreed on how detailed the data should be. “There is still some improvement but we agree on the general approach.”
DUB leader Sir Geoffrey Donaldson said on Monday there was now acceptance in London, Dublin and Brussels that the Northern Ireland Protocol was “a problem for trade unionists”.
An Irish government spokesperson had to make it clear last week that the new Taoiseach, Leo Varadkar – who helped seal the protocol deal with Johnson in 2019 – was not advocating a sweeping renegotiation of the protocol when described it as “very strict” newly.