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EU Leaders Urged to Step Up Preparations for No-Deal Brexit

Macron called on European Union leaders to step-up their plans to deal with the fallout if Brexit talks falter at the last moment.

EU Leaders Urged to Step Up Preparations for No-Deal Brexit
Emmanuel Macron, France’s president, center, speaks with Angela Merkel, Germany’s chancellor, center left, and Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, ahead of roundtable talks at a European Union leaders summit in Brussels, Belgium. (Photographer: Geert Vanden Wijngaert/Bloomberg)

The leaders of France, Belgium and the Netherlands urged the European Union to step up preparations for a no-deal Brexit at the end of the year in case negotiations with the U.K. fail to yield a last-minute breakthrough.

At a virtual summit of EU leaders Thursday, French President Emmanuel Macron, Belgian Prime Minister Alexander De Croo and his Dutch counterpart Mark Rutte all called on the bloc to make contingency plans in case talks to sign a trade and security agreement fail.

De Croo pointed out that the negotiations have already run long past their initial deadline and said the bloc can’t go on hoping that the disagreements with Britain will resolve themselves, according to two people with knowledge of the discussion.

The warning came as the negotiations between the U.K. and EU were roiled by the disclosure that a member of the EU team had tested positive for coronavirus. Face-to-face negotiations have been now suspended, and Michel Barnier, the bloc’s chief negotiator, is to go into quarantine, adding an additional complication to the discussions as time to reach a deal runs out.

If one isn’t reached by year-end, businesses and consumers will face disruption and cost as tariffs and quotas return. In recent days, though, officials on both sides had privately voiced cautious optimism that a deal could be concluded as soon as next week, suggesting the comments by the two leaders may be an attempt to pressure the U.K. government to compromise.

Sticking Points

After eight months of negotiations, the two sides still have work to do to get past long standing sticking points -- access to U.K. fishing waters, a level playing field for business, and how any agreement is enforced -- and the time required for any deal to be ratified is running short. The post-Brexit transition period expires Dec. 31.

Members of the British negotiating team, who haven’t gone into quarantine, will return to London shortly, according to a person familiar with the talks. A government spokesperson said discussions with the EU will continue remotely until it is judged safe to resume them in person.

This isn’t the first time the coronavirus has disrupted the negotiations. In March, Barnier, Frost and several members of their teams were forced into isolation after either testing positive for, or showing symptoms of, Covid. The two sides were also forced to suspend face-to-face discussions as Europe went into a continent-wide lockdown.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.