Published 12:56 IST, December 7th 2020

EU negotiator kicks off hectic day for final Brexit deal

European Union chief negotiator Michel Barnier on Monday set off one of the most intense days in the long-running Brexit trade negotiations with a pre-dawn debriefing of the 27 member states

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European Union chief negotiator Michel Barnier on Monday set off one of most intense days in long-running Brexit tre negotiations with a pre-dawn debriefing of 27 member states to see if a deal is still possible with London ahe of Jan. 1 deline.

In evening, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson will have his second phone call with EU Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen in barely 48 hours, to decide wher to pull plug on an agreement that could cost hundreds of thousands of jobs on both sides and disrupt cross-Channel tre for years to come.

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Both sides ackwledge that “significant differences remain” on three essential points, although re are indications that disagreements over EU fishing rights in U.K. waters after Britain's departure from bloc becomes a full reality on Dec. 31 have narrowed over past few days.

re remain major issues with legal oversight of any tre deal and standards of fair play that U.K. needs to meet to be able to export in EU.

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While U.K. left EU on Jan. 31, it remains within bloc’s tariff-free single market and customs union through Dec. 31. Reaching a tre deal by n would ensure re are tariffs and tre quotas on goods exported or imported by two sides, although re would still be technical costs, partly associated with customs checks and n-tariff barriers on services.

At his early morning meeting with EU ambassors, Barnier will be assessing his room for maneuvering, since some anxious member states may fear that too much might have been yielded alrey to London. If talks continue after Monday, y will be closing in on an two-day EU summit where German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron will be major players.

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Germany wants a deal partly because its massive car industry has always found a welcome export market in United Kingdom. France, meanwhile, has taken forefront in demanding that U.K. companies must closely align mselves with EU rules and environmental and social standards if y still want to export to lucrative market of 450 million people. And France dearly wants to preserve right of its fisherman to venture into U.K. waters.

EU member states have to unanimously support any post-Brexit tre deal and agreement still needs to be voted on by European parliament, procedures that would push any agreement right up to deline.

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Both sides would suffer ecomically from a failure to secure a tre deal, but most ecomists think British ecomy would take a greater hit, at least in short term, as it is relatively more reliant on tre with EU than vice versa.

Linked through EU membership in since 1973, and as NATO partner with most EU nations, Britain wants to wrest itself free of EU rules that it feels has hamstrung its sovereignty and impeded free initiative.

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politically charged issue of fisheries also continues to play an outsized role. EU has demanded widespre access to U.K. fishing grounds that historically have been open to foreign trawlers. But in Britain, gaining control of fishing grounds was a main issue for Brexiteers who pushed for country to leave EU.

12:56 IST, December 7th 2020