EU-UK talks on Brexit process postponed due to coronavirus

Sides examining possibility of negotiating via video-conferencing or conference calls

A coronavirus  warning notice  at the European Council, in Brussels, Belgium. Photograph: Stephanie Lecocq/EPA
A coronavirus warning notice at the European Council, in Brussels, Belgium. Photograph: Stephanie Lecocq/EPA

Brexit talks scheduled this week between European Union and United Kingdom negotiators will not go ahead to to the Covid-19 pandemic, a UK government spokesman said on Tuesday.

“In light of the latest guidance on coronavirus, we will not formally be convening negotiating work strands tomorrow in the same way we did in the previous round,” the spokesman said.

Both sides are examining the possibility of negotiating via video-conferencing or conference calls “in the coming weeks”, the spokesman added.

Britain has until July to request an extension to its current transition period, under which it is continuing to observe pre-Brexit norms pending the agreement of a deal for future trade.

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If the two sides fail to reach an agreement by the end of the year, the UK will automatically begin trading with the EU on World Trade Organization terms from January 1st, 2021, a shift that is forecast to damage the Irish economy, particularly exports. Britain left the EU in January.

The two sides had been scheduled to hold rotating rounds of talks between London and Brussels until May. On Tuesday, a spokesman for the European Commissions said the possibility of extending the transition period was a question for the UK, and that remote alternatives to the talks like video-conferencing were being explored.

‘Very dynamic environment’

“We definitely will do our best to ensure we have the capacity to do so,” the spokesman said. “Obviously we are in a very dynamic environment.”

Meanwhile, EU leaders are set to hold their second summit in two weeks in a fresh attempt to forge a joint response to the coronavirus pandemic as Europe takes over from China as the frontline in the fight against the disease. They will meet in a virtual online video-conference from their offices in the bloc's 27 capitals.

The virus case count in Europe has climbed to more than 50,000 and more than 2,000 people have died of it in the region. The inexorable spread of the disease has hit markets and sown public fear, but nervous governments have introduced quick-fix measures – partial border closures or quarantine – with little consultation.

After Italy, ground zero in Europe's battle with Covid-19, Spain and now France have imposed lockdowns, confining citizens to their homes except for urgent business such as buying food or heading to any hospital that might still have the capacity to treat them.

ID checks

Seven countries have informed the European Commission, the EU's executive body, that they have reintroduced ID checks inside Europe's passport-free Schengen Area. Among them are Austria, Hungary, the Czech Republic and Poland, which all took unilateral action to halt the influx of migrants in 2015.

A homeless man is given a cup of coffee at the social organization “Gast-Haus” for people in need on Tuesday in Dortmund, Germany. Photograph: Getty Images
A homeless man is given a cup of coffee at the social organization “Gast-Haus” for people in need on Tuesday in Dortmund, Germany. Photograph: Getty Images

Indeed, it is a similar challenge that leaders are grappling with as they confront the coronavirus – how to ensure that the fraying solidarity among partners in the same European club does not completely unravel as the crisis deepens.

Asked on Monday whether Europe can ever return to real ID-check free travel after this, German chancellor Angela Merkel said: "I hope so. But it's been shown that co-ordination didn't work well everywhere the way one would have hoped."

The main problem confronting the leaders is to halt the arrival of more virus cases, co-ordinate any border closures and guarantee that vital medical equipment and food can reach those in need.

They are expected to endorse a 30-day travel ban on people wanting to come to Europe for tourism or non-essential business. Long-term EU residents, diplomats and members of European families would be exempt. Health care and transport workers could escape the ban too.

Separately, so-called “green lanes” would be set up at the internal borders of the Schengen countries, allowing fast-track access for trucks ferrying essential supplies to defy the traffic jams that have begun forming at some crossing points.

Single market

The aim, according to European Council president Charles Michel, who will chair the summit, is "to reduce unnecessary movement but at the same time to ensure the movement of merchandise, of goods, so that we can guarantee as much as possible the integrity of the single market, guarantee the deliveries that are needed".

The proposals are relatively modest, but Europe’s powers in this crisis are limited. While it may be a union, the world’s biggest trading bloc remains an accumulation of 27 individual countries, some with populist and far-right governments that reject orders from Brussels.

"In recent days, European countries failed to co-ordinate their approach," Czech prime minister Andrej Babis said on Saturday as he announced the closure of retail businesses in his country. "We didn't need to wait for Brussels to give us any advice." – additional reporting: PA

Naomi O’Leary

Naomi O’Leary

Naomi O’Leary is Europe Correspondent of The Irish Times