Only Britain could stock up on chocolate,
cheese and sausages and call it 'food'
Brexit:
government to stockpile processed food in case of ‘no deal’
Ministers
working on contingency plan for breakdown of £22bn EU food import
industry
Jul
11, 2018
Brexit
ministers are to build up reserves of processed food like chocolate,
cheese and sausages in the event that talks with the EU collapse
before a trading deal can be agreed.
Dominic
Raab named new Brexit secretary: what are his credentials?
The
government’s plan to cope with a no-deal Brexit scenario, and
ensuing chaos at ports, “includes emergency measures to keep
Britain’s massive food and drinks industry afloat - including
stockpiling ahead of exit day on 29 March next year”, says The Sun,
which broke the story.
The
EU is responsible for 97% of the £22 billion worth of processed food
and drinks imported to the UK, a sector which employees around
400,000 British workers, the newspaper reports.
The
plan is one of around 300 contingency measures which the government
plans to start revealing in the coming weeks as the Department for
Exiting the EU ramps up preparations for a no-deal Brexit under new
chief Dominic Raab.
Other
measures include stockpiling of medicines, 37 million of which are
imported from the EU every month.
Simon
Stevens, chief executive of NHS England, has confirmed that
“significant planning” is going on to ensure that patients do not
go without treatment if drugs are held up by new border checks.
Ministers
are also said to be looking at making more use of alternative import
routes via Spain or the Netherlands to ease the expected pressure on
Calais if the free movement of goods between the UK and Europe is
suspended without alternative arrangements.
The
UK’s complex network of food deals with the EU is the “forgotten
bread and butter issues of Brexit”, Julian Baggini wrote in The
Guardian last month.
Building
Britain’s future food landscape will involve a host of economic,
social and ethical choices about how and where we get our food, he
writes, citing International Trade Secretary Liam Fox’s refusal to
rule out importing chlorine-washed chicken from the US.
Bereft
of (or liberated from) EU regulations, the UK can either “lead a
race to the top by improving standards, or a race to the bottom in
which we light a bonfire of regulations in a shortsighted attempt to
undercut our competitors”, he writes. “It’s anyone’s guess
which route we’ll take.”
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