NEW: Michel Barnier has told EU member states there has been some movement on the level playing field, and on dispute resolution, but that fisheries talks remain "very difficult" @rtenews understands. Sources say this could go through this week and beyond...
2/ Acc to one senior source, Barnier said there was acceptance that the EU could take retaliatory measures against the UK if it diverged from EU standards but that it would not be "autonomous", in other words, before taking action there wd need to be some dialogue with the UK
3/ "It's the operationalisation of that principle that is now under discussion," acc to source. The EU see this is progress as for a long time the UK refused to accept that if they diverged the EU had a right to do something, says the source
4/ "That principle has now been accepted, but how it is implemented is the nub of the dicussion."
5/ From the EU perspective the concern is the UK might change its rules to make it more competitive, says the source. "Barnier seemed positive that the principle of couter-measures had been agreed."
6/ It seems there has been movement on both sides, therefore, as originally the EU wanted the autonomous right to react without reference to the UK. Now there has to be some sort of dialogue, acc to the source
7/ On governance, the principle of cross-sectoral retaliation appears to have been agreed, acc to source. ie, either side could retaliate in another sphere if it felt there was a trade distorting divergence
8/ Michel Barnier said there had been no real developments on fisheries and talks have been "very difficult".
9/ The latest stumbling block is a UK proposal on ownership of UK vessels. UK is proposing tighter restrictions on where fish are landed and the nationality of crews, ie the UK wants the right to regulate where fish caught in their waters would be landed
10/ Currently a lot of fish caught in UK waters are landed in Spain or France for processing - London proposing to repatriate that practice. UK also wanting tougher regulations on who crews the fishing boats.
11/ Barnier said these discussions were "extremely difficult". Spain and the Netherlands said to be very unhappy about these latest measures.
12/ Following Mr Barnier's briefing of EU ambassadors, a number of member states brought up the issue of the provisional application of the treaty if negotiators run out of time.
13/ Barnier said there could be a short period in January of No Deal and this was countered by a number of capitals who suggested that Provisional Application of the treaty could get around this problem
14/ This will antagonise the European Parliament however. It's understood the European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has given a political commitment to the EP that this would not happen.
15/ It's understood that the Council legal service intervened this morning to say that the Lisbon Treaty makes it clear that the sole right of deciding whether or not to provisionally apply a treaty belongs to the Council (ie member states) at the moment of signature.
16/ "All hell might break loose in the parliament, but you could legally do it," says source.
17/ Mr Barnier did not spell out when the talks would conclude. However, I understand member states are assuming that this process could go on till the end of this week. "Through this week, then we'll see where we are," acc to source
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NEW: European Commission president @vonderleyen: As things stand I cannot tell you whether there will be a deal or not, but I can tell you there is a path to an agreement now. The path may be very narrow but it is there.
2/ VDL - it is therefore our responsibility to continue trying.
3/ Commission president says the "good news" is we have found a way forward on most issues, but this is now a case of being "so close and yet being so far away from each other."
NEW: re the previous thread and potential Provisional Application of the treaty:
Important to note that opting for Provisional Application is *not* a silver bullet to avoid a No Deal on Jan 1 if the negotiations run out of time
2/ A source has said there is a "very high risk" of a No Deal interregnum in the first part of January simply because even deciding on Provisional Application takes quite a bit of time.
3/ "If you have a deal just before Christmas there isn't enough time to have the deal rolled out, even provisionally, before Jan 1."
BREAKING: The UK will make a unilateral declaration promising to remain fully aligned to EU food safety and animal health rules for the production of agrifood products destined for Northern Ireland after January 1, @rtenews News has learned.
2/ The EU will also issue its own declaration recognising that British food meets European safety standards during two separate grace periods, one for three months and another for six months.
3/ The declarations will form part of a final sequence of agreements allowing the NI Protocol to take effect.The overall package will be signed off by the Cabinet Office minister Michael Gove and European Commission vice president Maros Sefcovic no later than next week
The Taoiseach @MichealMartinTD has said there will be no winners or losers in the final stages of the EU UK trade negotiations. Speaking in Brussels he said it was positive that both sets of negotiators would keep talking
2/ “There can be no winners or losers in these negotiations from now on. There has to be a common purpose in terms of getting a deal over the line, because it makes sense to get a trading deal.
3/ “I didn’t expect a breakthrough last evening. I think the fact that they met for quite a lengthy period of time and had that frank exchange of views is a good thing, and the fact that negotiators are mandated to go back in again and try and break the logjam is positive.
NEW: @CBeaune French Europe minister has told @RTE news “the negotiations still have a chance to lead to a deal”. But on fish, LPF “we will defend our core interests” The negotiating mandate will stay the same, he said
2/ “We can find compromises, we can make efforts - both sides - but the key interests of the EU must be respected by the UK”
3/ “We want to have stable access to U.K. waters but then we can discuss parameters, but this is absolutely fundamental.”