Peter Ungphakorn (also @coppetainpu.bsky.social) Profile picture
Mainly trade stuff. Journalist. WTO Secretariat 1996-2015. Usual disclaimers on RT etc. Member: https://t.co/rT8p25bU4a https://t.co/uEajzJ5YfZ @coppetainpu.bsky.social

Jun 6, 2021, 6 tweets

OK, Jim. I've found why “WTO”

Details aren’t in the 🇬🇧UK-NOR🇳🇴 text, but in NOR’s revised schedule of WTO commitments on goods, submitted in Sep 2020, certified in Jan 2021, as shared by @SimenS

Cheese🧀 only

The doc is here, part 2 of WT/LET/1505: docs.wto.org/dol2fe/Pages/S…

1/6

The original is still in the WTO’s Tariff Analysis Online, not yet updated

So, the total tariff quota of 2,494 tonnes is unchanged.

The original allocation to the EU28 (EEC) was 2360 tonnes.

This is now split 2,181 t for EU27 + 299 t for the UK

tao.wto.org/report/TariffQ…

2/6

Why Wensleydale?

It’s mentioned in the note on the tariff quota.

Does this mean only these four cheeses qualify for the quota, @SimenS? Otherwise why name them?

regjeringen.no/contentassets/… (page 659)

3/6

The 299-tonne quota was already in the agreement with Norway, Iceland and Liechtenstein that would have applied with no UK-EU deal.

This agreement replaces that since the UK and EU do have a deal.

4/6

I can’t find data on UK cheese trade with Norway.

The UK imports more cheese than it exports. It exports about 190K tonnes. The 299-tonne Norway quota is less than 0.2% of that.

ahdb.org.uk/dairy/uk-dairy…

5/6

When the UK govt says a 277% tariff “cut”

1. 277% = maximum out-of-quota duty (277% or NOK27.15/kg “whichever is higher”)

2. Duty-free limit is 299 tonnes

3. The UK had access to this quota as an EU member, but had to compete with other EU cheeses

gov.uk/government/new…

6/6

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