WORLD / EUROPE
UK, EU resume crucial crunch Brexit talks in London
Published: Nov 10, 2020 04:53 PM

European Union Chief Negotiator Michel Barnier walks to a meeting in London on Wednesday. Barnier is in London to resume talks over post Brexit trade agreements. The talks are expected to continue in Brussels after Thursday, with hopes to have them wrapped up by mid-November the latest. Photo: AP

Britain and the European Union resumed crucial negotiations in London on Monday over a post-Brexit free trade deal, with time running short and both sides saying major obstacles remain.

EU chief negotiator Michel Barnier arrived in the British capital late Sunday before another week of talks with his UK counterpart David Frost, as they scramble to find an agreement within weeks.

Britain formally left the bloc in January but remains bound by most of its rules and regulations until the end of 2020 under the terms of its divorce.

Parliaments on both sides of the Channel need time to ratify any deal struck, leaving scant time for London and Brussels to find a compromise on key outstanding issues. These include agreeing rules for competition between British and European companies and fishing rights and access.

Observers have said they will be cutting it very fine if agreement is not reached by mid-November.

In a weekend phone call, UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson and European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen agreed big differences still need to be bridged after two weeks of "intense" meetings ended on November 4.

Von der Leyen vowed both negotiating teams would "continue working hard" while Johnson said they would "redouble efforts to reach a deal."

However, neither side has indicated yet that they are willing to make the compromises needed for a breakthrough.

Britons voted to end decades of economic and political integration in 2016 but Brexit has implemented that outcome has proved immensely difficult since.

After finally agreeing initial divorce terms in 2019, the two sides began fraught negotiations over a future free trade deal. 

AFP