The British Meat Processors Association (BMPA) has revealed that the first invoices for the new Common User Charge have started to land, as it called for a veterinary agreement to “remove trade barriers and added costs”.

Peter Hardwick Headshot

Source: BMPA

Peter Hardwick, BMPA trade policy advisor.

While most businesses should be aware of how much they’ll be charged, said the BMPA, some will be in for a shock because “the previous Government mislead them about what the charges could amount to.”

It highlighted that the maximum of “£145 per truck” claimed by ministers at the time could end up costing up to £870 depending on the product lines and consignments contained on the truck.

The BMPA said the whole concept of a Common User Charge is now just “another added cost of Brexit with no added benefit”. Peter Hardwick, BMPA’s trade policy advisor said: “The fact is that this is a tax, as it is charged on every consignment passing through Dover and Eurotunnel.

“It is levied to pay for the previous Government’s over-engineered project to inspect 15-30% of consignments, when another department was already under instruction to come up with a Border Operating Model based on checks of around 2% of consignments. Checks at this lower level could have easily been managed at Dover and Eurotunnel, without the need for the Sevington facility or a Common User Charge”.

The Association said that there was an additional charge to consider, as Border Control Posts also impose a Port Health Authority fee. This means that at Government-operated BCPs (Dover and Eurotunnel), users will face a double charge on every IPAFF entry for medium and high-risk goods, with none of these fees directed back to the Dover port.

Hardwick explained: “This charge is levied overwhelmingly for goods that never go to Sevington and, for the most part, for documentary checks that are carried out automatically and with little or no human intervention. This Port Health Authority charge is intended for actual documentary and physical checks and again reflect a much higher level of checking than is currently taking place.”

BMPA is pushing for a fairer system of charging that is proportionate to the work being carried out. The Port Health Charge for an automated, digital check of documents should be a small, standard charge, it said, not based on the tonnage of the consignment as it is currently.

It is understood by the Association that while “money spent on the Sevington white elephant has to be recouped”, Dover remains the “most expensive entry point” to bring goods into the UK as the added costs are passed on to British consumers. It said that a veterinary agreement would “remove all these trade barriers and added costs”.