NFU Scotland has called on the UK Government and the EU Commission to build on the Trade and Cooperation Agreement (TCA) in order to reduce the impact of the customs requirements on exporters.
The Union states that both sides must now look at how other trade frictions can be reduced to benefit businesses, namely exporters of meat and seafood products.
It adds that a priority must be to digitise and simplify the sanitary and phytosanitary (SPS) border controls that require specialist paperwork and frequent physical inspections on products of animal or plant origin.
According to NFU Scotland, the cost and time currently levied by these compliance requirements present a severe hindrance to trade.
NFU Scotland has now provided written evidence to the EFRA select committee on its inquiry on ‘Seafood and Meat Exports to the EU’ and it has also given oral evidence to Scottish Parliament’s Culture, Tourism, Europe and External Affairs Committee where it highlighted trade problems encountered since the TAC was put in place.
"If both sides would recognise this we could simplify processes and reduce the cost and time levied by the checks and controls that have been put in place at the borders.”
Martin Kennedy, NFU Scotland president, said: “Throughout the whole Brexit process, we’ve consistently pressed for an agreement that is as close to friction-free as possible. The TCA may be tariff and quota free, but it’s far from friction free.
“That said, the end of transition did not mark the end of existing standards on either side of the Channel nor any erosion of them.
“It is abundantly clear that it is not in the interest of businesses in the UK nor the EU to allow current trade friction to continue and steps must be taken to build on the TCA to simplify and minimise the requirements needed through the likes of export health certificates and customs declarations.
“SPS border controls should be proportionate to the risks identified and able to recognise that while the UK and the EU now have separate regulatory regimes, the objectives and the way in which they operate to regulate plant and animal health are the same.
“Agri-food products in the EU and the UK rightly meet high standards which are in the interest of consumer protection, animal health and welfare and the environment. If both sides would recognise this we could simplify processes and reduce the cost and time levied by the checks and controls that have been put in place at the borders.”
This story was originally published on a previous version of the Meat Management website and so there may be some missing images and formatting issues.