Dublin, Ireland: The Irish government has urged exporters to Great Britain to be ready for new post-Brexit border controls which apply from the end of January as part of long-delayed UK plan sto apply more controls and checks on EU imports. Irish Agriculture Minister Charlie McConalogue said it meant a “significant change in the trading environment” for Irish agri-food exporters to Great Britain. The changes do not apply to goods going to Northern Ireland whcih are covered by the Windsor Framework.
When the UK left the EU in 2021 goods from Great Britain were immediately subject to the customs and regulatory processes applied to the imports from any non-member state but the UK government was not ready to apply controls on EU goods and the introduction of those controls has been delayed on five occasions in the subsequent years. The changes will now start from 31 January with customs processes and the notification and official certification of some agri-food products. This will add a significant administrative burden to EU to Great Britain agri-food exports and Ireland will be particularly affected as the UK remains its single biggest market for food exports.
McConalogue said: “All businesses in the agri-food supply chain to GB must continue to engage with their UK customers, their local supervisory competent authority team and logistics providers to confirm the processes are in place to meet the new UK requirements in the most effective and efficient manner.”
Most large exporters in Ireland are prepared and UK authorities are expected to take an initial approach of ‘education not enforcement.’ It is still unclear when Irish agri-food products will start to be physically inspected at British ports. Goods from the rest of the EU will start to face physical checks from April but goods from Ireland will not be subject to checks any earlier than October. The government is yet to clarify how it will discriminate between Irish and Northern Irish goods arriving from Northern Ireland ports without imposing any new bureaucracy on Northern Ireland businesses.