UK sees goodwill for Brexit trade deal
Tuesday, 10 November 2020
LONDON, Nov 09 (Reuters): Britain said on Monday it was open to a "sensible" compromise on fishing and that there was goodwill on both sides to progress towards a Brexit trade deal as a new round of talks began in London.
The United Kingdom (UK) left the European Union (EU) in January but the sides are trying to clinch a deal that would govern nearly 1.0 trillion dollars in annual trade before informal membership - known as the transition period - ends on Dec. 31.
"There are still differences, there are still some obstacles to overcome," British Environment Secretary George Eustice told Sky. "But I think there is now some goodwill on both sides to progress things."
After congratulating Joe Biden on his US presidential election win, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on Sunday an EU trade deal was "there to be done" and that the broad outlines were clear.
EU chief Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier told Reuters he was "very happy to be back in London (for talks) and work continues."
The talks have snagged over state aid rules and fisheries, a sector laden with symbolism for Brexit supporters in Britain.
"On fisheries we've always been open to doing a sensible approach, looking potentially at agreements that might span a couple, three years for instance," Eustice said.
"The issue will become what are the sharing arrangements, how much mutual access do we allow in one another's waters and that's obviously a discussion that will happen annually, but there may also be a partnership agreement that sets out the ground rules as to how we will work on that."