Tag: 2022

  • Trades Union Congress – 2022 Comments on the Australia Trade Bill

    Trades Union Congress – 2022 Comments on the Australia Trade Bill

    The comments made by the Trades Union Congress on 10 March 2022.

    Written evidence from Trades Union Congress (TUC)

    Introduction

    The TUC exists to make the working world a better place for everyone. We bring together more than 5.5 million working people who make up our 48 member unions.

    1. The TUC welcomed the opportunity to provide oral evidence to the International Trade Committee’s enquiry into the UK-Australia Free Trade Agreement (FTA) on 2 March 2022.
    2. This submission supplements the oral evidence the TUC provided to the Committee, providing more detail on issues that were highlighted in the session.

    Involvement of trade unions

    1. When negotiations started between Australia and the UK, the TUC released a joint position with our Australian counterpart the Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU). [1]  This statement called for UK and Australian governments to involve trade unions in negotiations to ensure that the agreement contained the key protections working people needed, including:
    • enforceable commitments to ratify and respect International Labour Organisation core conventions on labour rights, including for migrant workers
    • protections for all public services through a complete exclusion of all public services including such as health, education and transport; opening public services – using the ‘positive list’ approach
    • protections for personal data
    • exclusion of all kinds of special courts for foreign investors such as Investor-State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) or the Investment Court System (ICS), which allow foreign investors to sue governments for actions that are perceived to threaten their profits
    1. In June 2021, the TUC and ACTU released a follow up statement expressing concern that trade unions had been excluded from negotiations and the Agreement in Principle between the UK and Australia did not suggest the final agreement would have the protections unions were calling for. [2] These fears were confirmed when the final agreement was published.
    2. The TUC issued a statement on the publication of the final agreement in December 2021. [3] This stated that the deal posed a threat to workers, due to the fact it:
    • contained no effective mechanism to enforce respect for fundamental International Labour Organisation (ILO) conventions – the agreement follows a similar approach to the Comprehensive and Progressive Transpacific Partnership (CPTPP) which has been condemned by trade union internationally for being ineffective to use in practice [4]
    • contained no protections for migrant workers’ rights in the mobility provisions
    • contained commitments to liberalise cross-border flows of data which could mean regulations to protect personal data from abuse and being used in a discriminatory way would have to be removed
    • contained inadequate exemptions for public services – using the ‘negative list’ approach – which could lock part-privatised services into privatisation
    1. The TUC calls on the government to meaningfully consult trade unions on all its ongoing trade negotiations to ensure that they contain the protections working people need.

    Gender

    1. The TUC believes it is crucial for trade agreements to prevent gender discrimination, promote decent jobs for women and protect quality public services.  It is crucial for trade unions to be involved in negotiations to ensure these outcomes.
    2. The TUC is concerned that the commitments to gender equality in the UK-Australia trade deal will not be effective in promoting gender equality as they are not accompanied by effective enforcement mechanisms.  Furthermore, the fact the Labour chapter of the agreement does not require Parties to ratify and respect all the fundamental ILO conventions means that Parties are not required to ratify and uphold convention 111 on non-discrimination which is central to addressing gender inequalities.   As noted above, the TUC is also concerned the UK-Australia FTA does not contain adequate exemptions for public services as it takes a negative list approach.  This means part-privatised services could be locked into privatisation.  This will particularly negatively impact on women as they are disproportionately likely to be caregivers relying on public services.
    3. The failure to involve trade unions in UK-Australia negotiations meant that trade unions were not able to advise the government on how the tariff offers and other provisions in the agreement would affect women workers.
    4. The TUC is concerned that a number of trade agreements and trade arrangements negotiated without trade union involvement have increased gender inequalities.  For example, the North America Free Trade Agreement signed in 1993 displaced women from stable jobs with good conditions in the manufacturing sector in the US.  The agreement also displaced women from stable jobs in agriculture in Mexico.  The European Parliament reports that poverty increased in female headed households by 50 per cent between 1992 – 2000. [5]
    5. Furthermore, it is well documented that tariff-free areas that have been established in a number of countries to process exports (Export Processing Zones) are sites where mostly women are employed on exploitative terms. [6] Workers have less protections in these zones with trade unions are frequently banned, as in Export Processing Zones in Bangladesh. [7]

    ISDS

    1. While the UK-Australia agreement does not contain an Investor-State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) mechanism, the TUC is concerned that the UK government intends to join CPTPP which contains ISDS.  Unless the UK government asks for an opt-out from the ISDS provisions with all CPTPP members, the UK would be subject to this ISDS system.  The TUC is concerned the government has not indicated to date that it will ask for such an opt-out.
    2. If the UK is bound by ISDS provisions in CPTPP, it would mean investors based in all CPTPP countries, including Australia, would be able to sue the government for actions that they perceive threaten their profits. In the past, ISDS cases have been brought against governments that attempted to increase the national minimum wage or renationalise water supplies. [8]

    March 2022


    [1] https://www.tuc.org.uk/sites/default/files/2020-09/ACTU_NZCTU_TUC_Statement_UK_Trade_Talks_p3.pdf

    [2] https://www.tuc.org.uk/australian-and-uk-unions-statement-uk-australia-trade-deal

    [3] https://www.tuc.org.uk/news/tuc-uk-aus-deal-poses-threat-working-people-while-contributing-almost-nothing-our-economy

    [4] https://www.ituc-csi.org/IMG/pdf/trans_pacific.pdf

    [5] https://www.europarl.europa.eu/RegData/etudes/STUD/2016/571388/IPOL_STU(2016)571388_EN.pdf

    [6] https://www.business-humanrights.org/en/latest-news/export-processing-zones-symbols-of-exploitation-and-a-development-dead-end/

    [7] https://www.globalrightsindex.org/en/2021

    [8] https://www.theguardian.com/business/2015/jun/10/obscure-legal-system-lets-corportations-sue-states-ttip-icsid

  • UK Centre for Animal Law – 2022 Comments on the Australia Trade Bill

    UK Centre for Animal Law – 2022 Comments on the Australia Trade Bill

    The comments made by UK Centre for Animal Law on 15 January 2022.

    Written evidence submission from UK Centre for Animal Law

    1. Thank you for the opportunity to provide our comments on the UK Australia Free Trade Agreement. Having carefully studied this text, overall, from an animal welfare perspective, we find it to be a disappointment. For although the government has plainly heard from many sources including MPs, campaigning organisations, and members of the public, about the importance of strong animal welfare provisions, it has chosen to implement this in a half-hearted manner.
    2. We understand the importance that the government has attached to joining the Comprehensive and Progressive Trans-Pacific Partnership but are particularly concerned that sticking closely to that text means not pursuing our own interests. While our comments are specific to the UK-Australia, many of them are also likely to apply to the impending agreement with New Zealand, others to come in the future, and the CPTPP.
    3. The following are the areas of greatest concern to us:

    Lack of animal welfare conditionality for tariff removal

    1. It has been widely reported that the complete removal of tariffs for beef and sheepmeat products was Australia’s top priority during negotiations with the UK. It is our view that this should only have been granted in return for meeting UK core standards on animal welfare, in particular that meat exported to the UK did not come from animals which had been subject to hot-iron branding or mulesing. Hot-iron branding is still permitted in all States and Territories of Australia but is banned in the UK. Mulesing is a painful procedure that involves cutting crescent-shaped flaps of skin from around the lamb’s breech and tail using sharp shears. The resulting wound, when healed creates an area of bare, stretched scar tissues which diminishes the attraction of blowflies thereby reducing the risk of fly strikes.
    2. Such conditionality, based around consistent core standards, would have been the single most significant measure that the UK government could have taken to support the global welfare of animals. We are further concerned that this FTA will create legal impediment to the UK taking future steps to ban meat products entering the UK which have resulted from cruel practices.

    Animal testing language within the cosmetics annex to the TBT chapter

    1. Paragraph 22 of Annex 7A on Cosmetics states that “Neither Party shall require that a cosmetic product be tested on animals to determine the safety of that cosmetic product, unless there is no validated alternative method available to assess safety. A Party may, however, consider the results of animal testing to determine the safety of a cosmetic product.” We are disappointed that this language does not recognise the rights of both parties to fully ban the production, import or sale of cosmetics tested on animals. Indeed, the testing of cosmetic products and ingredients used exclusively for cosmetics is banned in the UK and this includes a ban on the marketing and sale of such products. We are aware that the language adopted is consistent with language used in CPTPP, and as that negotiation proceeds would ask as a minimum, that the UK government make a clear statement that nothing within these trade agreements prevents the UK from maintaining and extending current policies.

    Reference to science in the SPS chapter

    1. We note that the Sanitary and Phytosanitary (SPS) chapter makes a direct reference to the need for regulations to be based on science, but not explicitly to the rights of the parties to set the appropriate levels of protection to them, or the use of precaution where the scientific evidence can be considered unclear. Given that the UK currently has rules pertaining to food sales that are based on a precautionary principle, which the government has stated will not be changed, this appears to be in contradiction to that commitment.
    2. Dispute settlement provisions do not apply to this chapter, thus any UK decisions that Australia considers not to be based on science cannot be challenged in this way. However, we can expect that Australia will raise issues such as hormone-treated cattle in the SPS Committee, arguing that under the terms of the SPS text this should be allowed for sale in the UK.
    3. It is important that the UK government explains the contradiction between the SPS text and their stated position on not changing UK food rules. This is particularly the case given similar text applies in the CPTPP. Further, as indicated above, the UK should be ensuring the future policy space exists to restrict products for sale based on their production methods, and we are concerned this will be affected by this text.

    Animal welfare considered less important than similar issues such as marine environment

    1. We welcome the agreement between the parties that animals are sentient beings, and the connection between improved welfare of farmed animals and sustainable food production systems, in paragraph 1 of Article 25.1 on Animal Welfare. The presence of text on Animal Welfare on Antimicrobial Resistance is welcome. Nonetheless, it is clear that the UK Government consider these issues less important than those included in Chapter 22 on Environment such as biodiversity, the marine environment, and sustainable forest management. This is because that chapter includes cooperation, public participation, a working group, consultations, and the potential use of dispute settlement. The Animal Welfare chapter by contrast only includes cooperation and a working group.
    2. Without wishing to establish a hierarchy of different issues, the approach of the UK Government seems not to reflect UK public opinion. We would therefore call for a consistent approach to be taken, in this and future UK FTAs.

    Weak language on CITES, and banned trade included in tariff schedules

    1. We welcome much of the content of Chapter 22 Environment, but find some of the commitments to be surprisingly loose. For example, we would expect stronger language on the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) than the parties merely endeavouring to implement this, as in paragraph 3c of Article 22.16.
    2. The CITES article could also have been expanded to other endangered species, particularly whales. Both the UK and Australia outlawed the practice of whaling in the seventies. Given the strong focus of the environmental chapter on marine conservation and ecosystems, the opportunity to include specific language on whaling was missed.
    3. We also note the presence in the tariff schedules for products whose trade is referenced in the text as requiring of particular conservation, such as “ivory, unworked or simply prepared, its powder and waste”, and sharks, marine turtles, seabirds, and marine mammals. These items should have been left out of tariff considerations.

    Conclusion:

    1. The UK-Australia could and should have gone further on a number of issues, including making tariff commitments conditional on core standards, providing greater protection to the UK’s rights to set our own SPS standards including through the use of precaution, and putting animal welfare alongside other similar issues in the Environment chapter. We would like to see specific government reassurance on these issues, as well as on animal testing on cosmetics. We would further wish to see further progress made in future UK FTAs, including consideration of all of these issues within the talks for accession to CPTPP.
    2. On the basis of this UK-Australia FTA text, we believe the UK cannot yet be considered to be a leader in animal welfare.
  • Federation of Small Businesses – 2022 Comments on the Australia Trade Bill

    Federation of Small Businesses – 2022 Comments on the Australia Trade Bill

    The comments made by the Federation of Small Businesses on 14 January 2022.

    Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) written evidence

    1. FSB is a non-profit making, grassroots and non-party political business organisation that represents 160,000 members in every community across the UK. Set up in 1974, we are the authoritative voice on policy issues affecting the UK’s 5.5 million small businesses, micro businesses and the self-employed.
    2. FSB welcomes the opportunity to respond to the International Trade Committee’s call for evidence on the UK-Australia Free Trade Agreement. We would be happy to provide further detail on any of the issues raised in this response.

    How good a deal is the UK-Australia FTA for the UK?

    1. Australia is an important market for FSB members – according to FSB research around 40 per cent of UK small firms who trade internationally do so already with Australia and around a third (31 per cent) of FSB members engaged in international trade indicated that Australia is important for their exporting ambitions.
    2. FSB believes that the FTA will deliver significant benefits for small businesses that are currently or considering trading with Australia and welcomed the signature of the FTA in December 2021.
    3. Free Trade Agreements are a powerful means of removing barriers to international trade for small businesses, and FSB has long championed the inclusion of provisions that will help small firms understand and take advantage of the opportunities that FTAs create. In particular, FSB supports the inclusion of SME-specific provisions, as well as trade facilitation provisions and measures to promote digital trade.
    4. FSB is therefore pleased that the final UK-Australia includes a dedicated SME chapter, as well as commitments on mobility, digital trade, and measures to tackle non-tariff barriers for goods.
    5. The success of the FTA will ultimately depend on its implementation and enforcement. FSB would have liked to see included in the FTA provision for an SME committee, which would ensure adequate representation of SME interests in the implementation of the deal.
    6. However, overall the FTA has the potential to make an important difference to UK SMEs that trade or are considering trading with Australia. FSB would encourage both the UK and Australia governments to move forward quickly with the implementation of arrangements that will facilitate bilateral trade in areas such as the mutual recognition of professional qualifications or conformity assessment.

    How are the terms of the FTA between the UK and Australia likely to affect you, your business or organisation, or those that you represent?

    1. Tariff and non-tariff barriers are both important factors considered by small businesses when deciding where to export to or import from. Previous FSB research has found that nearly one in three small businesses (29%) say that tariffs play a major role in where small business exporters trade while more than half of small firms stated that non-tariff barriers play a role in where they choose to export (53%) or import (59%).
    2. FSB therefore welcomes the commitments made in the FTA that will tackle these barriers, particularly with regard to trade facilitation, digital trade, technical barriers to trade and mobility.

    Trade facilitation

    1. Small businesses often do not have the necessary resources or expertise to comply with complicated customs procedures. However, they are highly dependent on moving goods across borders quickly, especially those who are part of a ‘just in time’ supply chain or business model.
    2. The FTA contains several welcome trade facilitation provisions, such as Article 5.15 which states that each party shall endeavour to develop or maintain a single window arrangement that will allow businesses to submit customs information through a single electronic entry point.
    3. FSB supports the work currently being undertaken by the Government to explore possible design choices for a UK Single Trade Window and has engaged with the Cabinet Office Border Protocol Delivery Group to provide a small business perspective.

    Digital trade

    1. FSB welcomes commitments in the FTA to promote the acceptance of electronic trade documents, electronic contracts and e-signatures and to ensure the interoperability of electronic invoicing systems.
    2. Facilitating paperless trade will generate enormous benefits for smaller firms trading internationally. According to research from the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC), moving to a fully digital system at a global level could generate £25 billion in new economic growth by 2024 and significantly increase business efficiency for SMEs. [1]
    3. Data localisation requirements can generate significant costs associated with setting up servers or storing data, and can limit small firms’ access to cost effective cloud computing systems. FSB therefore welcomed commitments to remove unjustified data localisation requirements.

    Technical barriers to trade

    1. The FTA commits both parties to working cooperatively to increase acceptance of equivalent technical regulations. FSB welcomes the inclusion of provisions on the exchanging of information and increasing the harmonisation of technical regulations, standards and conformity assessment procedures.
    2. FSB would encourage both parties to identify suitable technical regulations and processes and to agree mutual recognition agreements quickly, as Mutual Recognition Agreements can remove significant costs and barriers for smaller firms.

    Mobility

    1. As with the UK-EU Trade and Cooperation Agreement, the UK-Australia FTA encourages professional bodies and regulators to establish and maintain sectoral Mutual Recognition Agreements. This model has the potential to deliver significant benefits to professional service providers – and particularly the self-employed – but it will rely on the ambition and speed of the respective professional organisations and regulators. FSB encourages the relevant bodies in both parties, with the support of the Professional Services Working Group established by the FTA, to work quickly to implement these provisions for maximum benefit.
    2. Many self-employed small business owners delivering Mode 4 services fall into the category of independent professionals or contractual service providers. While FSB welcomes the inclusion of commitments around the temporary entry for business persons, we are concerned that in some cases these provisions are restrictive – for example, those wishing to make use of the market access granted to contractual service supplies, must in some cases possess at least six years’ professional experiences in addition to a university degree or equivalent qualification, as well as the relevant professional qualifications required under Australian law.
    3. FSB welcomes the parties’ commitments in relation to their Youth Mobility Schemes (YMS), which will be made available to nationals no older than 35 for a total stay of up to 3 years, without having to undertake specified work including agricultural labour. FSB has identified YMS youth mobility schemes with selected other countries, including Australia, as an important part of our future immigration system. FSB welcomes extending the upper age limit of the YMS to 35, as called for in the 2020 report A World of Talent.[2] More widely, the Youth Mobility Scheme should be extended to EU countries and should not include annual quotas.

    January 2022


    [1] Creating a Modern Digital Trade Ecosystem: The economic case to reform UK law and align to the UNCITRAL Model Law on Electronic Transferable Records; United Kingdom International Chamber of Commerce; 2021.

    [2] FSB, A World of Talent (2020), p. 12 (available at https://www.fsb.org.uk/resource-report/a-world-of-talent.html)

  • Friends of the Earth – 2022 Comments on the Australia Trade Bill

    Friends of the Earth – 2022 Comments on the Australia Trade Bill

    The comments made by the Friends of the Earth on 14 January 2022.

    Friends of the Earth written evidence

    About us

    1.       Friends of the Earth England, Wales and Northern Ireland was established in 1971. We have local groups in around 130 neighbourhoods, and support more than 260 Climate Action groups. We are part of an international network of 75 national groups, counting over 2 million members and supporters globally. Friends of the Earth supports strong environmental standards and alternative approaches to trade, which put the needs of local communities and our environment at the forefront.

    Summary

    2.       The Free Trade Agreement (FTA) signed between the UK and Australia on 16 December 2021 is the first entirely new deal to be agreed since the UKs exit from the EU, and the most recent expression of UK trade policy. It is disappointing that the final text of the FTA confirms that the UK has rewarded Australia’s lower environmental protections and slow, unambitious climate action with tariff- and quota-free market access. In summary:

    1. Coherence: We remain concerned that the UK does not have an overarching, public trade strategy. Negotiating objectives for this deal were unambitious, narrowly interpreted, and could have been bolstered if supported by a wider strategy developed over time with civil society engagement.
    2. Evidence: Assessment of potential environmental impacts lacks range and depth. The low level of detail makes it hard to determine true environmental and social impacts of the deal. Impact assessments do not take account of the cumulative impacts of trade deals on the environment, nor the precedent-setting nature of the Australia trade deal.
    3. Impact: This deal undermines high UK standards on the environment and animal welfare by forcing UK farmers to compete with outdated, unsustainable, and industrialised models of agricultural production. It has the potential to increase the UKs global footprint and complicity in environmental harms including deforestation.
    4. Precedent: The UK-Australia FTA sets a precedent for all future bilateral trading agreements. The low level of environmental ambition combined with unprecedented levels of market access will make it more difficult for the UK to secure commitments from other potential trading partners in the years to come. Yet government appears unconcerned by this.
    5. Ambition: This deal does not lay down ambitious norms for international trade which promote sustainable development, prevent the exporting of environmental harms or ensure action on the climate and biodiversity. Key features of modern trade deals have not been developed upon – for example, derogation from or non-enforcement of existing environmental laws, or inaction in relation to Paris Climate goals, are unlikely to result in action under the FTA, unless conducted in ways impacting trade. The opportunity to require real delivery on these commitments was missed.
    6. Engagement: Civil society engagement has been piecemeal and transparency lacking. Limited improvements to parliamentary scrutiny are not enough to ensure that there is proper engagement with MPs and relevant committees.

    3.       Overall, the FTA suggests little negligible economic benefit and a number of risks, that are not adequately compensated for in terms of progressive provisions and ambition within the deal.

    To what extent has the Government achieved its stated negotiating objectives?

    4.       The stated negotiating objectives for the UK-Australia trade agreement were published in June 2020.  The final deal does broadly meet many of these. However, objectives appear to have been set based on areas in which Australia was already willing to take action, while the opportunity to secure more ambition in exchange for market access has been missed. Therefore the final FTA does not represent a development or improvement of existing practice and does not significantly or urgently further broader UK objectives.

    5.       Ahead of negotiations with New Zealand, the UK government set a headline objective to “seek sustainability provisions, including on environment and climate change, that meet the shared high ambition of both parties on these issues”. The version of this objective published in regard of the Australia negotiations omits the word ‘high’ from this sentence, suggesting that Australia’s poor track record on environmental issues has not only remained unchallenged in this FTA but has actively shaped what the UK government sought to achieve within it.

    6.       Objectives to ‘reaffirm’ commitments to international climate, environment and labour standards are secured in the FTA. However, these are a feature of all modern trade agreements and are present in many of the UK’s historic ‘rollover’ trade agreements. A stronger objective would have been to build upon these with additional support or enforcement related to achieving these international commitments. Yet the government neither sought nor secured such improvements.

    7.       While much has been made of the mention of the Paris Agreement in article 22.5, the clause does not reference limiting warming to 1.5 degrees nor make action which frustrates the agreement grounds to impose remedies under the FTA. The non-derogation clauses are also limited to actions taken ‘in order to encourage trade and investment’. Negotiators could have been set an objective to remove this caveat and more directly link trade benefits to ongoing compliance with domestic environmental law, but they were not, and therefore the FTA does not set the precedent it might have in this area.

    8.       Positively, the objective to secure ‘appropriate mechanisms for the implementation, monitoring and dispute resolution of environmental and labour provisions’ has been met through replicating the CPTPP approach, in which environmental disputes have access to the overarching dispute settlement mechanism of the agreement. This could offer valuable enforceability to these provisions. However, the animal welfare chapter remains unenforceable.

    9.       A number of objectives set by government pertained to the protection of environmental and food safety standards. Yet while the FTA itself does not require the removal of protections, it is questionable how far the objective of achieving “meaningful protection, of the UK’s world-leading environmental and labour standards” (emphasis added) has been secured.

    10.   In relation to the UK’s SPS objective to “uphold the UK’s high levels of public, animal, and plant health, including food safety”, the FTA permits bilateral SPS recognition. This means the agreement would pose no direct threat to UK import bans relating to hormone-treated beef or chlorine chicken. This is welcome and supports the stated objective.

    11.   However, in relation to wider standards related objectives, it is debatable if the FTA guarantees the “meaningful protection” promised. Australia has many lower environmental standards than the UK, and only a handful of these are covered by import bans. The rest are UK standards prohibiting procedures such as like mulesing (a painful process condemned by the RSPCA [1] where skin is stripped from the hindquarters of sheep to control pests), branding cows with hot irons, and using particular antibiotics and pesticides.  This FTA provides Australian products associated with the practices with far greater access to UK markets, with a phased introduction intended to cushion the economic impact of competition rather than address the longer-term potential for downward pressure from imports produced to lower environmental standards in Australia.

    12.   We welcome the inclusion of an animal welfare and antimicrobial resistance chapter, which recognises the worries organisations like the RSPCA, CWIF and Alliance to Save our Antibiotics have raised about welfare standards in Australia. However, we note that a focus on animal welfare was not initially highlighted as a key objective for the UK government, and the chapter stops short of including any concrete requirements for Australian goods to meet specific welfare standards, instead reaffirming the right of each party to establish its own policies and priorities for the protection of animal welfare.

    13.   In the Commons debate [2] on this FTA on January 5th, the Secretary of State repeatedly made reference to the fact that this deal marks the first time Australia had committed to either an animal welfare or an environment chapter. However, this is incorrect. A number of Australian FTAs contain environmental provisions, and some, including Australia -US and the Comprehensive and Progressive Trans-Pacific Partnerships (CPTPP), contain full environment chapters, albeit of varying quality.

    What is likely to be the impact of the agreement?

    14.   The UK-Australia FTA as proposed would not impact upon existing import standards. However, as outlined above, provide tariff-free, quota-free access for goods produced to lower standards presents the potential for the undermining of existing standards in future. If UK producers are unable to compete while maintaining high standards, government will face pressure to downgrade these standards in response. This would present a huge concern for UK consumers, who consistently report a desire for high animal welfare, environmental and food health standards in trade deals. Which? Consumer Priorities survey 2021 found that maintaining food standards in trade deals is a top concern for 91% of people. 87% of respondents were also concerned about animal welfare standards, and 84% about environmental protection [3].

    15.   However, this agreement has the potential to increase the UKs global footprint and the environmental damage associated with supply chains, even if this does not come in the form of lower UK standards. The government’s impact assessment suggests overall greenhouse gas emissions “associated with UK-based production” are likely to be largely unchanged by this FTA, while emissions associated with transport are expected to increase by up to 0.3MtCO2eq a year. No mention is made of changes to the UKs consumption footprint, either in terms of emissions or ecological impacts, which means that opportunities to prevent or mitigate impacts may have been missed, and may be inadequately monitored in future.

    16.   The impact assessment suggests that the UK will import an additional £4.2bn worth of goods from Australia [4]. That means UK consumers will be made increasingly responsible for negative environmental impacts in Australia – where farmers used 16x times more antibiotics in chicken production (in the last year figures were available) than the UK [5], sediment from beef production has been linked to declines in the great barrier reef, and deforestation increased by 34% between 2016 and 2018 [6]. In Queensland alone, more than a hectare of bushland is cleared every two minutes, for beef and sheep production [7]. Australian agriculture also uses 71 highly hazardous substances, and thousands of other pesticides, that are banned in the UK [8], including neonicotinoids.

    17.   Australia operates a patchwork of state-level biodiversity offset schemes, applicable to various forms of development and extraction. A number of Australian mining companies have also opted to work towards carbon neutrality commitments reliant on the use of emissions offsetting. However, these offsetting approaches have been criticised for both failing to address the root causes of climate change and biodiversity loss and for ongoing inadequacy and mismanagement. [9], [10] It will be impossible to fully quantify the extra-territorial impacts of UK imports without a clear understanding of the functioning and efficiency of the Australian offsetting market.

    18.   Even where this FTA has the potential to increase the supply of goods and services necessary for a 1.5-compliant future, the potential consequences for nature are currently ill-understood. The impact assessment concludes that as the largest global producer of lithium, and third largest of cobalt, Australia could provide the resources to support “emerging UK industries”. However, it does not provide any further detail on the environmental impacts which might be associated with increasing UK imports of resources mined in Australia. These could be significant, particularly if production continues to expand as anticipated.

    19.   Mining concerns in Australia include failures to respect Indigenous rights, polluted waterways, land clearing and the legacy issues of abandoned mining sites and communities. Cobalt production is heavily dependent on fossil fuels, while high concentrations of cobalt have been linked to the death of crops and worms [11] vital for soil fertility. Lithium mining and processing are associated with the seepage of metals into groundwater. The Greenbushes lithium mine in Western Australia is located within an area defined by UNEP WCMC data as containing global critical habitat [12], and adjacent to a river considered a sacred site by the First Nations Noongar people, yet there is limited data available on existing and current impacts from the mine or measures taken to mitigate these.

    20.   Other minerals used in renewables technology, including iron and copper, are also linked to violations of environmental protections and free, prior and informed consent of indigenous peoples.  In 2020 Rio Tinto destroyed sacred Aboriginal rock shelters at Jukan Gorge and prevented local communities from mounting a defence through a gagging clause, highlighting the ongoing nature of abuses and provoking a standing committee inquiry [13]. Furthermore, Native Title law does not allow First Nations people to say no to mining or exploration [14].

    21.   Australian mining companies are already moving to take advantage of increasing global demand and rising prices by expanding production – and a number of new companies have been granted licenses for exploration in recent years. The combined impacts of this expansion on Indigenous peoples and the environment are currently unclear.  While some Australian mining companies have made sustainability claims, these are voluntary, and compliance is complex to substantiate.

    22.   If the sustainable extraction of resources necessary for ending UK reliance on fossil fuels is to be identified as an area of potential future trade growth, further data should be sought on the potential for increased and cumulative impacts, and assurances sought on the progress made by Australian regulators in preventing abuses. The UK should focus on limiting consumption, assuring the highest possible standards for imports to support a green transition, and ensuring full respect for the rights of local communities, rather than rushing to secure access to resources linked with further detriment.

    23.   This agreement is likely to negatively impact UK farming.  The lower production costs of agri-food products in Australia will increase competition, in addition to presenting challenges to standards as outlined above. DIT’s own Impact Assessment of the UK-Australia FTA suggests that “part of the gains [from the deal] results from a reallocation of resources away from agriculture, forestry, and fishing (around -£94 million) and semi-processed foods (around -£225 million). This is in favour of growth in manufacturing sectors, in particular manufacture of motor vehicles and manufacture of machinery and equipment.”

    24.   The UK Agricultural and Horticultural Development Board’s November 2021 modelling confirm this pessimistic view: “With Australian producers enjoying considerable cost of production advantages, the implications of lower priced material coming into the UK at some point (possibly quite soon) is very real and potentially substantial. When we include the change to farm support payments in the years ahead, the opening of trade represents a real risk to domestic farm supply chains. [15]”

    25.   It is unclear what impact the animal welfare and antimicrobial resistance chapter might have in practice, given its lack of enforceability and focus on cooperation over commitments to raise standards. The UK impact assessment does not consider the issue in detail, beyond noting the potential for collaboration. Given the lower baseline from which Australia begins and the tariff liberalisations discussed above, it appears likely that the overall impact of the deal will be to increase the complicity of UK supply chains in low welfare practices and those linked with growth in treatment-resistant disease unless further action is taken to guarantee import standards.

    26.   The first incarnation of the Trade and Agriculture Commission (TAC) recommended that government consider setting out core UK standards prior to further trade negotiations [16]. Such action could mitigate the potential for this FTA to negatively impact upon UK farming, standards or global footprint.  However, thus far the government has made extremely limited progress in progressing TAC recommendations. Government has also thus far failed to clearly set out to what extent and how the recommendations of the newly formed, permanent TAC will be applied to the FTA, if further possible negative agri-food impacts are identified. When questioned directly as to whether government would follow recommendations of the TAC in relation to the Australia deal in the Commons on January 5, the Secretary of State was able only to say that government would await the report and is ‘hopeful we will pass its examination well [17]’.

    27.   Neither the Government’s impact assessment, nor the brief of the TAC, allow for the consideration of the cumulative impact of trade deals the UK is planning to negotiate. This could be particularly significant in some areas given the precedents set by this FTA. The zero-tariff, zero-quota offer extended to Australian agriculture now represents a goal for US and Mercosur negotiators to aim for and could lead to significantly higher cumulative effects, which would not be caught by any single impact assessment.

    How well has the Government communicated its progress in negotiations – and how much has it listening to stakeholders during those negotiations?

    28.   Levels of transparency and meaningful engagement have been disappointing across the board, including in relation to negotiations with Australia. The lack of an overarching trade strategy or meaningful action to lay out UK core standards and guiding principles has also hampered efforts to consider or debate the cumulative impacts of and precedents set by new FTAs. Updates within parliament and via stakeholder forums have been extremely high level, indicating only subjects under discussion, rather than whether UK negotiators were taking an ambitious or a regressive approach on them.

    29.   There are some signs that the government is listening to civil society concerns – since the initial consultation on this FTA, the Department for International Trade (DIT) has set up further stakeholder advisory mechanisms and offered quarterly updates on progress. However, these have been marred by confidentiality requirements and a lack of clear feedback. Equally, while the establishment of a Trade and Agriculture Commission (TAC) to provide recommendations on maintaining standards, and the placement of the TAC on a statutory footing to provide future scrutiny were both welcome, progress on responding to recommendations and establishing the permanent body have been slow.

    30.   The extent to which civil society concerns have actively informed negotiations is also unclear. There is no clear feedback loop between concerns fed in during the consultation or stakeholder engagement sessions and the positions taken by the UK government, nor the outcomes of negotiations.

    31.   For example, Friends of the Earth was pleased to see that this deal will not contain an ISDS mechanism. Many NGOs raised concerns about the potential impacts of such a mechanism during the consultation and negotiation process, and in meetings with government departments. However, there was little transparency or discussion on the issue and public concerns were regularly dismissed by government. On May 27 2021 Trade Minister Greg Hands was asked to rule ISDS out of the Australia deal but did sot, saying “It is a live negotiation, and there will be a chapter on investment. We are huge investors in each other’s markets, and I remind him that the UK has never lost an ISDS case. [18]“ Weeks later, in June 2021, the Agreement in Principle was published without an ISDS mechanism, alongside Australian government FAQs clearly stating that Australian negotiators had no interest in pursuing ISDS [19].  It is therefore unclear whether ISDS was omitted to any degree due to public concern, or simply ruled out by Australian negotiators. It has proven difficult to engage with government to determine how ISDS may be approached in future negotiations, or to get clear feedback on the level to which stakeholder concerns and evidence are informing the government’s position.

    32.   The exact nature and timings of remaining parliamentary scrutiny is still unclear, as is the extent to which existing and new stakeholders will be engaged in scrutiny, impact assessment and the monitoring and oversight of the deal.

    How well has the Government communicated the possible impact of the FTA, to enable you or other stakeholders to prepare for its implementation?

    33.   Thus far, communications on the possible impact of the agreement have been extremely high level, with many possible impacts ill-explored. While the Impact Assessment recognises that agricultural activities, especially beef and dairy production, contribute to deforestation in Australia, it does not take into account emissions due to deforestation and land use change (p. 46), and limits consideration of impacts to a predominantly economic assessment within the borders of the UK.

    34.   The relationship between potential issues identified and planned mitigations or changes made over the course of negotiations is also unclear. For example, while the preliminary scoping assessment published in July 2020 suggested that a “resulting shift in sectoral output will marginally move the composition of UK output from sectors that are relatively less CO2-intensive towards sectors which are, on the whole, more CO2-intensive”[20] it is not clear if or how the government has used this information to reduce the impact of the deal, or what steps stakeholders might take to mitigate impacts.

    35.   Finally, impact assessments have not been published to a schedule which allows their findings to be considered by stakeholders before and during negotiations. This means that civil society has been unable to engage with potential impact or propose modifications to the deal which could mitigate concerns. UK trade policy should require environmental impact assessments (EIAs) are provided before negotiations commence and regularly updated during the negotiating process. These assessments must inform the development of trade policy at all stages and should affect how trade agreements are agreed, and how environmental impacts are understood and mitigated. EIAs should also be conducted periodically once deals are ratified to determine any modifications to existing deals or implications for future deals.

    What lessons and inferences for other current and future negotiations can be drawn from how the Government approached, and what it secured in, the FTA with Australia?

    36.   The UK-Australia trade deal highlights a number of inadequacies in the way the UK government is approaching trade policy, and a range of ways in which this could be addressed in future:

    1. The lack of a clear, published trade policy to inform consideration of negotiating partners, priorities and cumulative impacts means that the UK government risks undermining climate policy and international development objectives via trade deals. The UK should urgently set out such a policy to ensure a joined-up approach across departments, avoid friction and maintain credibility on the international stage.[21]
    2. The lack of early, detailed assessment of impacts, both within the UK and via the UKs global footprint, or consideration of the cumulative impacts of the multiple FTAs currently under negotiation, means it is difficult to fully comprehend and mitigate potential negative effects. This should be addressed in any future negotiations, with a full sustainability impact assessment and monitoring process embedded in the negotiation and implementation of all FTAs. Further consideration of under-explored impacts should take place before this FTA is considered for ratification.
    3. In removing tariffs and quotas on Australian agri-food products, without setting in place UK standards or mechanisms to prevent the import of goods produced to lower standards this FTA also sets a worrying precedent for future negotiations. It suggests that the UK will disregard the climate record of potential trade partners and the environmental impacts of their imports, while simultaneously allowing the undermining of domestic standards. The government should set in place clear UK environmental standards prior to any further negotiations, and make clear that no further market liberalisation will be agreed until protections are in place.
    4. The FTA text does not currently suggest a high level of ambition. Much of the text replicates existing trade agreements – particularly CPTPP – and achievements on animal welfare and climate have been marred by a lack of enforceability and reports of a rollback in the UK commitment to a 1.5 degree target within the text. If the UK government wishes to signal international leadership on trade and climate, it should look to build upon existing best practice and innovate new measures to ensure trade better supports climate objective in future deals.
    5. Transparency and scrutiny around this FTA have been extremely limited. Stakeholders and parliamentarians had no opportunity to review the details of the deal after prior to its signing, and parliament will have only limited opportunity to practically influence outcomes over the coming months of scrutiny. Greater parliamentary scrutiny in the formation of trade policy, alongside improved transparency in stakeholder engagements, would ensure FTAs can be developed in a way that supports rather than hinders measures to address the climate and nature crisis.

    [1] https://kb.rspca.org.au/knowledge-base/what-is-the-rspcas-view-on-mulesing-and-flystrike-prevention-in-sheep/

    [2] https://hansard.parliament.uk/Commons/2022-01-05/debates/0D922D6F-9A97-455D-90DE-275AA45D1AEB/UK-AustraliaFreeTradeAgreement

    [3] https://www.which.co.uk/policy/euexit/8502/consumer-priorities

    [4] https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/1041629/impact-assessment-of-the-free-trade-agreement-between-the-united-kingdom-of-great-britain-and-northern-ireland-and-australia.pdf

    [5] https://committees.parliament.uk/writtenevidence/12245/pdf/

    [6] https://www.wwf.org.uk/sites/default/files/2020-07/RiskierBusiness_July2020_V7_0.pdf

    [7] https://www.beef.org.au/report

    [8] https://www.pan-uk.org/toxic-trade/

    [9] https://www.fauna-flora.org/app/uploads/2017/12/FFI_2015_Biodiversity-Offsets-Australia.pdf

    [10] https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2021/sep/08/coal-companies-allowed-to-delay-environmental-offsets-on-nsw-mines-for-up-to-10-years

    [11] https://www.researchgate.net/publication/303871730_Biological_activity_of_soil_contaminated_with_cobalt_tin_and_molybdenum

    [12] https://www.researchgate.net/figure/4-Location-of-Australian-lithium-mines-in-areas-of-critical-habiat_fig5_354253801

    [13] https://theconversation.com/juukan-gorge-inquiry-puts-rio-tinto-on-notice-but-without-drastic-reforms-it-could-happen-again-151377

    [14] https://www.creativespirits.info/aboriginalculture/land/native-title-issues-problems

    [15] https://projectblue.blob.core.windows.net/media/Default/Market%20Insight/HorizonImpactofUK-AustraliaTrade_211019_WEB.pdf

    [16] https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/969045/Trade-and-Agriculture-Commission-final-report.pdf

    [17] https://hansard.parliament.uk/Commons/2022-01-05/debates/0D922D6F-9A97-455D-90DE-275AA45D1AEB/UK-AustraliaFreeTradeAgreement?highlight=australia#:~:text=I%20am%20very-,hopeful,-that%20we%20will

    [18] https://hansard.parliament.uk/commons/2021-05-27/debates/759585C3-375D-4EBA-BB6A-08B217C75017/AgriculturalExportsFromAustraliaTariffs#:~:text=Gentleman%20asked%20about-,ISDS,-.%20It%20is%20a

    [19] https://www.dfat.gov.au/trade/agreements/negotiations/aukfta/australia-uk-free-trade-agreement-negotiations-frequently-asked-questions-june-2021#isds

    [20] https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/uks-approach-to-negotiating-a-free-trade-agreement-with-australia/uk-australia-free-trade-agreement-the-uks-strategic-approach#chapter-4-scoping-assessment-for-a-bilateral-free-trade-agreement-between-the-united-kingdom-and-australia

    [21] https://greenallianceblog.org.uk/2021/06/10/how-can-the-uk-be-a-credible-trading-nation-without-a-trade-policy/

  • City of London Corporation – 2022 Comments on the Australia Trade Bill

    City of London Corporation – 2022 Comments on the Australia Trade Bill

    The comments made by the City of London Corporation on 15 January 2022.

    Memorandum from the City of London Corporation

    Submitted by the Office of the City Remembrancer

    Introduction

    1. The City of London Corporation welcomes the opportunity to respond to the International Trade Committee’s inquiry into the UK-Australia trade deal. The UK financial and professional services (FPS) industry contributes over 10% of the UK’s total economic output and employs more than 2.3 million people, with two thirds of these jobs outside London. It is the largest taxpayer, the biggest exporting industry and generates a trade surplus almost equivalent to all other net exporting industries combined.
    2. The City Corporation works closely with a wide range of stakeholders to promote the UK-based FPS sector. These include Department for International Trade, the Treasury, the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office and London and Partners.  The common goal is to sustain prosperity and stimulate economic growth in London and across the UK through global trade and investment.
    3. The UK and Australia enjoy a strong trading relationship with growing opportunities for financial and professional services firms in both markets. UK businesses traded £18.1 billion worth of goods and services with Australia in 2019. The UK is Australia’s seventh largest trading partner and second largest outside the Asia-Pacific region. The UK was the second largest direct investor in Australia and the second largest recipient of Australian foreign direct investment (FDI) in 2019. The stock of UK FDI in Australia was £35.6 billion in 2018, while Australia invested £15.9 billion in the UK.

    How good a deal is the UK-Australia FTA for the UK?

    1. The UK-Australia Free Trade Agreement (FTA) is strategically important for the UK. Australia is a ‘like-minded’ ally in the UK’s pursuit to establish global standards of openness. Due to these shared values, the FTA contains modern and forward-looking provisions in crucial services trade areas such as digital trade and innovation. This will enable the UK to set a high benchmark for subsequent trade deals and future international trade discussions.
    2. The Australian market also presents a gateway to further trade with the Asia-Pacific region. UK-based firms with operations in Australia will now be able to leverage existing agreements and mechanisms such as the Asia Region Funds Passport and the Trans-Tasman Closer Economic Relations Agreement to supply their services to a much broader range of clients. These agreements also provide further examples of potential mutually beneficial additions to the formalised FTA.

    To what extent has the Government achieved its stated negotiating objectives?

    1. For financial services trade the UK negotiating objectives committed to the expansion of opportunities, the reduction of friction to trade and investment, the removal of barriers and to build on the precedents of cooperation particularly on regulatory issues.
    2. Like many previous agreements, this FTA serves to lock in market openness and reduces certain frictions such as those surrounding the movement of financial data. The Corporation also welcomes these provisions and the emphasis on continued regulatory dialogue.
    3. As highlighted in the report, ‘UK Cross Border Trade in Services with Australia’ market access barriers in FPS are more usefully addressed through enhanced regulatory cooperation which fall outside FTA provisions.[1] Enshrining a framework for regulatory cooperation dialogues in trade agreements provides greater regulatory and market certainty for ongoing regulatory cooperation. It also signals a firm commitment to continued collaboration between the UK and Australia. Furthermore, the embedding of principles of such as deference is valuable in setting the tone for both parties and establishing an overarching goal for these discussions.
    4. Ensuring the success of the dialogue will require both continual government to government engagement at all levels and ongoing industry input. Accordingly, the City of London Corporation stands ready to facilitate industry input into the UK-Australia financial regulatory dialogue. This engagement and input should seek to emulate the mechanisms established surrounding the UK-US Financial Regulatory Working Group, the acting UK-US regulatory dialogue, which features the inclusion of financial and professional services industry input through the British American Finance Alliance.

    To what extent does the FTA deliver on the UK-Australia Agreement in Principle?

    1. The Agreement in Principle (AIP) contained limited detail on the provisions being agreed for services trade in the FTA. It is therefore not possible to critically assess the FTA against the AIP. In future trade negotiations, a greater level of detail in AIPs on services trade would be welcome.

    How are the terms of the FTA between the UK and Australia likely to affect you, your business or organisation, or those that you represent?

    1. The FTA serves to lock in market openness for financial services firms which is welcome from the perspective of business continuity. Having these provisions enshrined in law provides a degree of certainty for firms. This not only lays the groundwork for both countries to build upon in future discussions, but also allows for firms to make business decisions along a longer time horizon than would be possible otherwise.
    2. FPS firms have highlighted the challenges around business mobility and temporary visas. The movement of highly skilled professionals enables the transfer of knowledge and expertise which is often crucial for firms. Complicated mechanisms and immigration structures can create unwieldy administrative burdens for firms and hamper this movement. The relaxation of labour market testing as well as doubling the length of stay for intra corporate transferees from 2 years to 4 years should help alleviate some of the uncertainty and bureaucracy around the movement of people.
    3. The Corporation welcomes the emphasis on digital trade. The innovation chapter and accompanying commitment to establish a dialogue which plays a role in the development of international standards and facilitating trade in emerging technologies is very welcome. With the increase in digitalisation of trade, many firms are concerned that the patchwork of differing regulations will make cross border trade more challenging. The UK should aspire to play a leading role in developing international consensus around technology and trade policy approaches particularly in newer areas.
    4. On data, the UK and Australia make commitments to allow the free flow of data and ban data localisation. However, Australia does not have a data adequacy ruling meaning the respective data protection regimes of both countries are not interoperable. This is perhaps an area where greater cooperation between regulators through the mechanisms established in the FTA can lead to valuable changes for firms.
    5. For professional services, the FTA incorporates many of the legal services sector’s key asks for greater recognition of qualifications and mobility options. The accounting sector have also welcomed the included plans to give UK accountants guaranteed access to work visa and to mutually recognise qualifications. The commitment to establish dialogues in both legal services and professional services more broadly will help to assist in the realisation of these goals. As recognition of professional qualifications are determined at the sub-federal level and by domestic professional bodies, the practical success of these provisions will hinge on their collaboration. That being said, the FTA provides the framework for this increased cooperation.

    What lessons and inferences for other current and future negotiations can be drawn from how the Government approached, and what it secured in, the FTA with Australia?

    1. Engagement with industry is invaluable when approaching trade agreements and understanding the intricacies of business. The City of London Corporation has established a sustained programme of in-market activity which seeks to identify key market access issues to address, opportunities for alignment, and build the inter-institutional trust needed to underpin bilateral FPS relationships.
    2. For the FPS sector, where quite often the issues are regulatory in nature, market access barriers are by default quite technical. As highlighted in the report, ‘UK Cross Border Trade in Services with Australia’, these issues include sub-sector specific and wider cross-cutting considerations. [2] Although many FPS barriers may not be addressed though FTA negotiations it is important they are recognised as a basis for discussion in regulatory dialogues.
    3. The inclusion of regulatory cooperation dialogues within FTAs are a welcome development for the FPS sector. The City of London Corporation would welcome the inclusion and replication of these provisions within FTAs. Though discussions are often already occurring between regulators, the formalisation of the process with important markets for the FPS sector enables further certainty and potential gains.

    January 2022


    [1] City of London Corporation, UK cross-border trade in services with Australia, available at: https://www.cityoflondon.gov.uk/supporting-businesses/economic-research/research-publications/uk-cross-border-trade-in-services-with-australia

    [2] Ibid

  • Accolade Wines – 2022 Comments on the Australia Trade Bill

    Accolade Wines – 2022 Comments on the Australia Trade Bill

    The comments made by Accolade Wines on 15 January 2022.

    Dear Chair,

    Re: Response to International Trade Committee Inquiry – United Kingdom-Australia Free Trade Agreement [UK-AU FTA]

    I write in reference to the Committee’s inquiry on the Government’s FTA with Australia as part of the parliamentary scrutiny process.

    As you know from our engagement in recent years, Accolade Wines is a leading global wine company and proudly one of the largest wine and perry companies in the UK. Our portfolio includes some of the world’s most recognised and cherished wine brands, such as Hardys, the largest wine brand in the UK off-trade, and many others.

    While Australian products contribute significantly to Accolade Wines’ portfolio, our products extend beyond New World wines to include iconic non-wine brands such as Stone’s Ginger Wine and Lambrini. The company’s capabilities span a complex and international supply chain from wine supply and production, to sales, marketing and distribution, with an emphasis on quality, innovation and sustainability.

    Over the last three years, Accolade Wines has been heavily engaged in various consultations and discussions on the UK-AU FTA, including with your office, the Secretary of State for International Trade and President of the Board of Trade, the Minister of State for Trade Policy, and officials across Whitehall. We also continue to be engaged with officials on various trade-related matters following the UK’s withdrawal from the EU.

    As a globally integrated alcohol company, Accolade Wines maintains its position on the benefits of the European Single Market, and the UK’s withdrawal from the EU continues to cause the industry challenges. I recognise these issues have been discussed by the Committee at various points. Notwithstanding the obstacles posed by Brexit, we support the Government’s agenda to secure FTAs with other countries, and the company will continue to encourage the wine sector to contribute its voice to consultations on other bilateral and multilateral trade negotiations in the future.

    Accolade Wines in the UK

    While remaining rooted in its Australian heritage, the UK is a key strategic market for the company, its largest by value and a significant source of revenue. Accolade Wines has invested heavily in establishing its presence in the UK over many decades, creating jobs directly and across the supply chain.

    As you are aware, our UK facilities provide an important base from which the company can supply customers across Scotland, England, Wales, Northern Ireland, the Republic of Ireland and mainland Europe. Accolade Wines also has a significant presence across the UK supply chain and through our European headquarters in Weybridge.

    Accolade Wines’ UK footprint includes:

    The Park, our award-winning bottling plant, able to process 1,200 bottles per minute or over 1 million per day. The Park is carbon neutral, powered in part by its own source of renewable energy; 500 employees and a further 2,400 indirect jobs across the supply chain.

    Accolade Wines’ Response to the Call for Evidence

    Accolade Wines is a member of the Wine and Spirit Trade Association [WSTA], which represents over 300 companies producing, importing, exporting, transporting and selling wine and spirits in the United Kingdom. Members range from major retailers, brand owners, importers and wholesalers to fine wine and spirit specialists, logistics and bottling companies.

    Accolade Wines has consulted with the WSTA and provided feedback on the association’s submission to the Committee. The submission is reflective of the company’s position and we are pleased to offer it our full support. I encourage the Committee to give the association’s response consideration.

    There are a number of issues, however, worthy of re-emphasising in this correspondence for their importance to the UK-AU FTA, Accolade Wines and the wine sector more broadly, including:

    The potential to negate the tariff benefits secured in the UK-AU FTA if the proposals for the treatment of wine in the ongoing UK Alcohol Duty Review are not reconsidered;

    That non-tariff barriers, such as the inability to significantly ‘transform’ an imported wine product in- market in Great Britain remain and that this is to the detriment of attracting increased Foreign Direct Investment from the wine industry.

    UK Alcohol Duty Review

    While Accolade Wines welcomes HM Government’s commitment to modernise alcohol duty through a simpler taxation system and we were also pleased to see the abolition of a separate rate for sparkling wine, there are a number of issues that the wine industry has identified with the proposed reforms. Among these, Accolade Wines is concerned about the unintended consequences for the wine sector of the proposed reforms, which, if implemented in February 2023, will introduce challenges for consumers and the wine trade alike.

    On all Australian wine exported to the UK annually, the proposed reforms, if they are ultimately implemented, would increase duty by at least £81 million per year. This increase, which would be disproportionately borne by wine-producing nations such as Australia with their naturally higher alcohol by volume [ABV] levels, would entirely negate the tariff-free benefit of the FTA, and has a very real likelihood of dampening trade in wine between Australia and the UK.

    In addition, Accolade Wines supports the government’s intention to introduce a single flat rate based on the pure alcohol content of the product. The proposed benchmark for the new duty on wine of 11.5% ABV, however, will see most wines attract a higher excise duty rate. In turn, it is likely that consumers will opt for alternative alcoholic beverages that fare more favourably under the proposals, undermining two-way trade as part of this bilateral agreement.

    While I recognise the Committee is focussed on the FTA, it is appropriate that consideration be given the domestic duty framework that may unintentionally discourage investment in Britain.

    Winemaking practices

    In addition to the FTA and as you know from the Committee’s work in this area, the UK and Australia continue to have a separate bilateral wine agreement which is likely to be updated over time via a Joint Management Committee [JMC] process. At multiple points in the FTA consultations, Accolade Wines and other producers raised the importance of securing liberalising winemaking practices as part of the FTA.

    At present, winemaking practices, such as blending, sweetening, carbonation/aeration, are not permitted to be undertaken in the UK on imported wine products under retained EU Regulation 1308/2008. These winemaking practices are commonly undertaken in Australia and at source in multiple other wine-producing countries as part of the ordinary winemaking process.

    These components comprise an important part of a favourable business operating environment which can attract investment from Australia and other countries. In the short term, these considerations should be addressed in the ongoing review of the wine regulations to encourage reformulation, investment, and innovation.

    Thank you for considering this correspondence and for your ongoing support for the wine sector to provide British consumers with greater choice of quality Australian wines in the years ahead. I would be delighted to provide additional information to the Committee or appear before an upcoming hearing. I would also welcome the opportunity to meet with you again to discuss the matters raised in this letter. Ms Brigitte Xelot, Government Relations Advisor, can assist in organising a meeting with your office and to provide any information on behalf of the company.

    Yours sincerely,

    Managing Director.

  • House of Commons International Trade Committee – First Report on Trade Deal with Australia

    House of Commons International Trade Committee – First Report on Trade Deal with Australia

    The text of the House of Commons International Trade Committee’s first report published on 22 June 2022.

    Text of report (in .pdf format)

  • Anne-Marie Trevelyan and Crawford Falconer – 2022 Evidence to International Trade Committee on UK/Australia Trade Deal

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan and Crawford Falconer – 2022 Evidence to International Trade Committee on UK/Australia Trade Deal

    The evidence given by Anne-Marie Trevelyan, the then Secretary of State for International Trade, and Crawford Falconer, the Second Permanent Secretary at the Department for International Trade, on 6 July 2022.

    Members present:

    Angus Brendan MacNeil (Chair); Mark Garnier; Paul Girvan; Sir Mark Hendrick; Tony Lloyd; Lloyd Russell-Moyle; Mick Whitley.

    Questions 251 – 345

    Witnesses:

    Rt Hon Anne-Marie Trevelyan MP, Secretary of State for International Trade; and Crawford Falconer, Second Permanent Secretary and Chief Trade Negotiation Adviser at the Department for International Trade.

    Examination of witnesses:

    Witnesses: Rt Hon Anne-Marie Trevelyan MP and Crawford Falconer.

    Q251       Chair: Welcome to this International Trade Committee evidence session on the “UK trade negotiations: agreement with Australia” inquiry. The Secretary of State for International Trade is giving evidence again—we saw you this morning. Thank you for coming to this final session. We have had words about this in the New Zealand session, so maybe we will skip over that. I just want to ask you a number of things about this. Following our report last week and what has happened, and the subsequent correspondence, can you tell us whether the Government will consider extending the CRaG period to allow the House meaningful time to consider the report?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: We will not be extending the CRaG period for this year, I am afraid. We want to crack on. We have followed the framework. I apologise for not having been able to read your report last night—circumstances overtook me. I look forward to doing so, and I will be reading it this evening and working with the team to give you a full and thorough response to it as quickly as we can. I have had a chance to have a quick look through some of the suggestions, and it looks like you have indeed pulled out some interesting and important questions: it being the first from scratch, there was a really important review to do. Thank you for what looks to me to be a very thorough review, testing some of those broader issues around trade deals, which we are very keen to accept.

    Chair: We accept flattery at any time.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: No, it is just an honest assessment.

    Q252       Chair: So you have said no to my first question. Will the Government then table a substantive motion on the agreement for consideration and debate between 13 and 19 July, so that the House can decide to delay ratification for the same purpose?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: I know that we have exchanged letters on this already. We have been clear that we will seek a scheduled debate and continue to discuss that with business managers, obviously subject to available parliamentary time, and I hope that we will be able to have a general debate on that. We will continue to press the business managers, as I am sure that you and your Clerks will do too.

    Q253       Chair: That is somewhat unclear. Given that CRaG is due to expire in two weeks, when will you be clear and when will you be able to say?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: As I say, Chair, I am afraid that it is not within my gift to set a date, but we continue to ask business managers if available Government time can be found for that.

    Q254       Chair: You see the kind of difficulty that we have as a Committee.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: I do, but sadly I am not all-powerful in matters of parliamentary time.

    Q255       Chair: Should you not be cracking the whip at the Whips inside Government? It is really the tail wagging the dog here—wagging a number of dogs.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: As I said, we continue, and we have set it out— you have raised it and we continue to raise it—with the business managers that we think it would be a good general debate to have and many colleagues would be interested in discussing what is a really interesting new part of Government policy and a new FTA. We continue to press, and we can work together. We can do it in a number of ways. We continue to do so, but we are always at the mercy of the available Government parliamentary time set by those other than departmental authorities.

    Q256       Chair: Would it help scrutiny of this agreement if the Chamber of the House of Commons were to decide to delay CRaG, given that the Australians would not have ratified it by the first or the second date anyway?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: The Australians are progressing. I had the pleasure of meeting my new counterpart, Don Farrell, in Geneva just a couple of weeks ago and was pleased to hear that they were very keen to crack on; they had no desire to reopen any parts of it; they were very comfortable with the treaty as it stands; and they would kick off with their parliamentary process—

    Q257       Chair: When do you expect Australia to ratify?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: He was unable to be fully precise but they hope to ratify through the course of the autumn. I think they will be ahead of us in that process. Obviously, we have to bring in the enabling legislation, and while we presented the Bill on 11 May, it is quite a small piece of legislation, as you know, but we need to push that all the way through the process, so that will be completed, with Royal Assent, probably after they have approved theirs. I hope that we will land as quickly as possible.

    Q258       Chair: It will probably be about 22 November that they would conclude. Why is this rush going on in the UK to do this without proper scrutiny? What is driving you? Are you driving the Whips or are the Whips telling you that scrutiny doesn’t matter, just get it through the sausage factory of Parliament and that’s it?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: No, quite the opposite.

    Chair: So you are telling the Whips to get it through the sausage factory of Parliament.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: No, I think that scrutiny is very thorough and intense. As I say, we have asked if they can find available parliamentary time for a debate, and we will continue to do so, but, sadly, I am not in charge of what is no doubt quite a complex juggling act. Not having been in the Whips Office, I have not experienced it personally, but it is an issue. We continue to do that and we hope that they will hear our request.

    Q259       Chair: Secretary of State, this is all being done against the background of Brexit. Page 124 of our report sets out how this agreement will bring about a 0.08% increase in GDP. That has changed. It is a fourfold increase on your first estimate of 0.02% increase in GDP. That is against a 5% loss as a result of Brexit. I put this to you, Secretary of State. If you went to the Stock Exchange, the bookies or horse racing, or whatever you do with £500, and you came back with £8 or £2, which is equivalent to the 5% loss resulting from Brexit, would you think that a good day?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: Fortunately, our amazing British exporters are not gambling when they look to find new export markets; they are looking to grow—

    Q260       Chair: But they need the frameworks that you have replaced, and the frameworks that are in place mean that they have had a 5% hit and we know that trade with the European Union is down. So if you are given £500 and come back with £8 or £2—

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: I am afraid that isn’t true. Exports to the EU are up—

    Chair: The trade gap is there.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan:—and continuing to go up, and we are seeing real growth—

    Q261       Chair: Since when?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: Since before covid, and we are seeing real growth again, which is exciting, and as I mentioned earlier today, in the export support service that we provide we have seen both a drop in some of the practical problems that we saw at the turnover point, and also—

    Q262       Chair: We are going down a rabbit hole, Secretary of State. The reason I ask this question is that the Government are selling these trade deals as being something wonderful and there is bluster going out to the public about these trade deals, and about this first trade deal, because you do not have anything yet. You have committed yourselves in Brexit to losing 5% of GDP. You are coming back with the original figure of 0.02% of GDP and now you have 0.08%. This is equivalent to throwing away £500 and coming back with £8 or £2 and saying that you have had a good day. Does that strike you as being a good day?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: As I say, Chair, the question of EU trade continues to grow again, which is really good news. These FTAs are opening up new markets, making it easier for our businesses either to export more in those markets or to discover new markets. That is one of the charges that the DIT is given.

    Q263       Chair: People watching this will be amazed that the simple sum of losing 5% and gaining 0.08% does not strike you as a problem. Does this not strike you—

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: If you would be kind enough to let me complete the sentence, the EU trade continues, and is continuing, to grow now that we are past covid, and that is great news.

    Chair: So there is GDP growth from Brexit.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: However, when we look at the FTA programme that we are now able to roll out, as part of our freedom now that we have left the European Union, the Australia deal was our first and New Zealand the second, and we will be continuing to add to that. CPTPP will be, we hope, one that we will accede to this year where we open up enormous new markets where we see the growth for the years and decades ahead. We are building, and we have the opportunity with the freedom to own our own trade policy, to set in train vast new markets, stripping away market access barriers and tariffs, so that our UK exporters can find new economic opportunities so that we can see that growth in GDP across the board. Australia and New Zealand are just the first two in what will be a broad set of new tools to help businesses trade more easily across the world.

    We will continue to have, as our EU neighbours—our European neighbours—the opportunity to trade there, and we have, under the TCA, a framework under which businesses can continue to do that. As the opportunities and the growth in young people and in middle-class consumers across the rest of the world continues, I want to make sure that our UK businesses have as easy an access as possible to those markets so that we can extend our opportunities, and not only to our European neighbours but to the rest of the world too. That is what the FTAs are for, and Australia and the New Zealand are just the first two of what will be, we hope in relatively short order, a really broad range of access to those markets that we have not reached into before.

    Q264       Chair: I have heard a lot of words there, and heaven forfend that I use the phrase “Enid Blyton prose”, but let us go back to the numbers, Secretary of State. If you lose—and we accept the figures, as I think we must, given that these are Government figures—5% of GDP, and we equate that going to the Stock Exchange or wagering £500 and you come back holding 0.08% of GDP or £8, is it a good or a bad day for the UK that you have done that? This is what Brexit is equivalent to. When we strip away the words and we strip away the prose, you are losing £500, and for every £500 you lose for the UK you are coming back with £8 of this trade deal, at best, and maybe £2 at your other estimation. Is this good process or is there a better way of this being done?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: With these new trade deals that we are negotiating, we are opening up new markets. Australia is the first and New Zealand is the second, and there will be many more to come. These will be creating new opportunities to add to UK export growth and that is really exciting, and we will be there—

    Chair: Do they add up to 5% of GDP?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: The DIT will be there to support businesses in a number of ways as they look to expand into those new markets. The relationship with our European partners continues to be robust and solid. As I said, the export figures post covid are back beyond those, and that is really good news as markets start to stabilise. The reality is, however, that the economic growth opportunities for the long term do not sit with our European partners, where we see that growth in—

    Q265       Chair: Will you match 5% in GDP with all the trade deals that you can possibly imagine?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: No, I hope that it will be more than that in the medium to long term, of course—

    Chair: It can’t possibly be.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan:—because there are whole new markets to come. That is exactly why, in having this trade policy, we are working at pace to ensure that we free up those market access barriers—

    Q266       Chair: America is a quarter of the world’s GDP. What is your GDP gain from a trade deal with America?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: We do not have the details of it—

    Q267       Chair: It is 0.02%.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: When we come, we hope, to pick up and continue the negotiations that we started a number of years ago, we look forward to looking at what that offers, but the important thing is that those will all be tools to help businesses to export, more easily, fantastic British goods and services. That is DIT’s role, and the opportunity that we now have with the freedom of our own trade policy, to build that. What we will then be doing, of course, is supporting businesses to find and discover new export markets, to work in those growing markets in the Indo-Pacific, across Africa and growing mature markets like the one we have with America, to make sure that our exporters can reach everywhere where they want to export, with as few market access barriers as possible.

    Q268       Chair: If the DIT crunches the numbers and knows the numbers, can you come back to me? It appears that even if you got trade deals with every country in the world, you will not make up for the Brexit damage, and that is a matter of fact.

    Before I bring in Sir Mark, I have one other question, Secretary of State. You might think that Brexit is a done deal, and it may well be, but if it is not, where will this deal leave the Australians if the UK were to re-join the European Union? Has Australia been notified about that, or has that been any part of a warning, perhaps, given to Australia?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: No.

    Chair: No. Okay, thank you.

    Q269       Sir Mark Hendrick: Two very quick points. First of all, yes, I think that, no doubt about it, exports to the EU are up, but a lot of it is liquefied natural gas. I am looking at an article here that says, “The UK energy system is drowning in natural gas. There is so much of the stuff in this country that for the time being at least, no one is quite sure what to do with it.” We know what is happening. The Germans are moving away, obviously, from energy supplies from Russia and it is being topped up by the rest of Europe. It is a very unusual situation, given Brexit, that there is actually that increase there. This accounts for £0.5 billion of it, just in the months to April.

    The second point goes back to CRaG, and I wanted to intervene earlier before we moved on to exports. As someone who has served in the Whips Office, I know that there would be a good reason why you couldn’t move that date. Secretary of State, what reason have you been given as to why they cannot move the date so that we can get more time for scrutiny and the CRaG can be extended?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: We have set the process in motion, and that is the choice that we have made, but in terms of having the opportunity for debate we will continue to see whether we can afford that.

    Q270       Sir Mark Hendrick: But, you see, it is a meaningless debate, because nothing can be done. It is just discussion.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: I hope that the debate would, as all our debates do, afford the opportunity to those who have particular constituency interests, or indeed sectoral interests, to discuss and share on the Floor of the House exactly what those are.

    As we move through—obviously, we will have the enabling legislation on the procurement side, which will come through, I imagine, in September and October—we will have the opportunity to look into that in detail. We will be having opportunities to look at the issues around the Australian FTA in particular, but also, on the point that you have demonstrated, there is a really effective Committee. This is the first one, so the importance of thinking across the piece about what we have in it and the breadth of areas of co-operation that we are bringing together set the marker for the rest of the world to understand what doing an FTA with the UK means.

    Q271       Sir Mark Hendrick: You understand as well that it sets a precedent for you to be able to do this again in the future because you have already made it such that you cannot do this the way that it should be done.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: We have set this out, and there has been plenty of time with those various steps all the way through, and we continue to do that. We will look forward to getting back to you on your report, for which I thank you. We are, as with all these things, working to progress—

    Q272       Sir Mark Hendrick: What reason have the Whips Office given you for not being able to extend the CRaG?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: We have had discussions with them about the opportunities for debate. Having been in the Whips Office, Sir Mark, you will perhaps know that the outward-facing messaging does not come very often; it is very much a question for Departments. We continue to press for what we hope will be a useful debate.

    Q273       Tony Lloyd: The agreement in principle noted that “neither side will seek additional access or faster tariff reduction through the UK’s accession to the CPTPP.” Why does the commitment not feature on the face of the agreement?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: This is a question to which I do not have an answer.

    Chair: We are hoping that you do, Crawford.

    Crawford Falconer: In theory, it could have, but in actual fact it seemed a bit of a heavy way in which to have what is effectively a bilateral understanding about something else. It is a category thing. It would not have been stronger if it had been in the agreement. It is not an enduring feature of the agreement. It is a bilateral understanding between Australia and New Zealand that, in respect of another agreement, this is how we will behave. It seemed more appropriate that it belonged in a technically different environment.

    Q274       Tony Lloyd: The agreement in principle looks particularly at additional access or fast tariff reduction. Are there any other areas where Australia could seek further concessions under the UK’s plans to accede to the CPTPP?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: No, because that is the way that we negotiated. Is that right?

    Crawford Falconer: It is very clear, not on goods and tariffs, but there are other things in CPTPP, like services market access, where, in fact, that would be an option, if the Australians wanted to try for that—and not only them; the New Zealanders as well, in theory. Theoretically, it could happen on services, but given that we have a pretty good balance on services, I would not expect it would be very significant.

    Q275       Tony Lloyd: You did not think it was necessary to have that placed in the agreement in principle for services.

    Crawford Falconer: No. The one that was most important to us and was a priority, and was worth paying for in the balance of the negotiation, was on goods. On services, the Australians might have services, but we are the services exporter par excellence. That is not to say that the Australians do not have services interests, but our view was that, on that, we can manage it, whereas on the goods there was no room for ambiguity because it was the most sensitive issue for us.

    Tony Lloyd: Thank you.

    Q276       Chair: Just picking up Tony Lloyd’s point and not getting things in the agreement that you might have wanted, you say it was not important enough. You said this morning that New Zealand was determined and dug in, and then we find out that it rolled over for the European Union on the same issue.

    On trade deals, you talk about winners and losers, and we know that there are losers in the United Kingdom, particularly in the agricultural sector; they have been vociferous about that. With that in mind, I wrote to the High Commissioner of Australia on 5 April to help us to find some of the losers in Australia and received a response on 8 April from the then High Commissioner, George Brandis, telling us, “I am not aware of significant opposition to the UK-Australia free trade agreement within Australia.” We couldn’t get anywhere on the search for losers in Australia. Is it concerning, as Tony has mentioned, that the UK has perhaps been signing free trade agreements in haste, with an eye to CPTPP, and losing areas against New Zealand and Australia due to that haste? Does that give you pause for concern at all, Secretary of State?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: No. I disagree with the premise, I am afraid, Chair. The frameworks around our agriculture are good. There are huge opportunities for export in a number of areas, but also, as Crawford said, in those most sensitive areas where we know that we wanted to provide protections, we have this triple-lock safeguard system which provides assurance and time—

    Q277       Chair: You are saying that there are no known losers in the UK.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: I do not disagree that there has been some anxiety and, as someone with a rural constituency, I have spent a long time talking to—

    Q278       Chair: It is only anxiety; it is not a loss.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: I genuinely believe that the safeguards that we have built in, which are extremely robust and can kick in should there be any kind of surge while the issues are resolved, are going to provide protection, should there be—

    Q279       Chair: Can you think of any sectors in the UK that wish you had not signed this trade agreement?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: None that have shared that thought with me.

    Chair: Okay, excellent; thank you for that answer.

    Q280       Mick Whitley: The agreement in principle referred to “best endeavours” commitments by Australia to tighten up its definition of whisky; and by the UK to implementing Australian proposals on technical barriers regarding wine imports, but these aren’t in the final agreement. Why is that, and what will you do to address these issues?

    Crawford Falconer: Again, this is another one of those categories. On the whisky one with Australia, we reached the conclusion that they were going to change their system anyway and they were resistant to putting it in at this stage. We figure that it is something that we will actually obtain afterwards anyway, once they have their legislative changes in place, and it was not worth squandering our negotiating capital on something that was most likely to happen anyway. Therefore, in reciprocity, we did not give them something that they wanted, on the wine. So we have a balance there, which is one of those things that didn’t quite get to an agreement. It happens sometimes in a negotiation, and that was it.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: That is a really interesting point. In every bilateral agreement—and we obviously now have a number running in different parts of the world—it is about the relationship and where you can land at this point in time with your bilateral partner. They will never all look the same, by definition. They will never all be as big or as small in different chapters because they are with the particular country with the political and legislative point that it is at, at the time. That is why I talk about the flexibility that we want in our trade policy. There is a really important framework that says we will set it out, and we are given a mandate from across Whitehall with the breadth of what we would like to achieve, knowing that the likelihood of achieving all of it is probably not realistic because we are going to be working with a bilateral partner for whom their own limitations or areas of sensitivity will require them to focus in on that.

    A really important lesson that we all have to continue to think about is why we build in those next stages. A really good starting point is the FTA as it stands. We build in the Joint Committees and the dialogues. In those areas there will no doubt be glitches on the way through and issues that need resolving, but also as each country develops its own economy there is the opportunity to grow those roots. It is really important to remember that each one is genuinely bilateral, and that means that it will be where both countries can comfortably land at the point that we sign them.

    Chair: It is a great privilege and pleasure to ask Mr Mark Garnier to take the stage.

    Q281       Mark Garnier: I turn to food production standards. The original Trade and Agricultural Commission and Henry Dimbleby’s national food strategy review had a look at agrifood standards and proposed that tariffs should only be liberalised for imports that meet UK standards. But in this Australian trade agreement that is not the case, and it is not the case in the Government’s new food strategy. Why is that the case? Why have you ignored or not taken the advice of Henry Dimbleby and the original TAC?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: We have been very clear that foods cannot be imported that do not meet our safety standards, so you have to meet the safety standards. That is very clear and unambiguous. Hormone-injected beef cannot be sold in the UK.

    Q282       Mark Garnier: That is the run-of-the-mill sanitary and phytosanitary agreement run by DEFRA, but this is a slightly different thing.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: In that overarching picture, the challenge is that we do not want to be importing foods that do not meet our standards. They will not, because foods must meet our food safety standards. That is very clear, and everyone is entirely unconfused by that. It is really important to bear in mind that it is not only Crawford and his team doing the negotiations. We also have experts from every part of the Government, including a number from DEFRA, the Food Standards Agency, and the veterinary and medicines groups, who are there to help us to ensure that what we are setting out in the complexity of the trade deal is very clear on that. I genuinely do not think that we are in a different place. I think the language sometimes suggests otherwise.

    Q283       Mark Garnier: In that case, just for clarity, because this is an important point and a lot of people do not necessarily understand the relationship between our SPS regulations and our trade deals, what you are essentially saying is that it does not matter, on this particular point, that you do not specify what the standards are because everything is overridden by the SPS standards, which can update at any given time anyway.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: Yes, we may indeed change ours at a domestic level. That is always a possibility. What we embed in the FTA is that our food safety standards are the ones that importers would have to meet.

    Q284       Mark Garnier: Whatever those standards are.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: Whatever those standards are. Crawford, do you want to expand on that?

    Crawford Falconer: The only thing I would add is to draw attention to the fact that that is the one message that comes through very clearly from the independent Trade and Agriculture Commission in its report, which makes it very clear that there is nothing in the agreement that in any way undermines the capacity of the UK regulators—the food safety experts if it is the food safety experts, the vets if it is the vets, or anybody else who regulates—to do so, provided that we abide by our international obligations, which we take as read.

    Q285       Mark Garnier: Moving on from that, the food and farming group Sustain says that UK farmers have voluntarily halved their use of antibiotics in the past five years, but that this progress could be undermined by liberalising imports produced to lower standards, forcing UK producers “to return to more intensive systems.” We were talking about this, I think, with Professor Bartels before, but it is this concept that if you have different environmental requirements on pesticides, for example, that is an environmental thing rather than a food standards thing. You could then have a different level. The idea is that they can produce more cheaply in New Zealand or Australia by having different standards set by environmental measures rather than food standards measures, and they then undercut UK producers. The implication from Sustain is that UK producers would then have to lower their voluntary standards in order to compete against imports from Australia or New Zealand or, in this particular case, Australia.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: This is a really important area, and one that is always worthy of discussion. Every trade relationship that we have within an FTA or otherwise is our exporters choosing to sell to another country and, within the limits that we have set very clearly of our food safety standards, imports coming in. We have made very clear statements with Australia about best endeavours to continue to improve those environmental standards. Also—this is really important—have you been to Australia, Mark? Have you eaten their meat, and was it delicious?

    Mark Garnier: Yes.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: Precisely. You didn’t worry that, because—

    Mark Garnier: New Zealand food is very good too.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: I am just trying to be nice to you now. Did you, for a moment, consider that their standards were so poor that you would not choose to eat there? The challenge is that, while the environmental standards might be different, because the environment is different and they use different pesticides because they have different pests, the way they farm is not the way we farm in the UK. The argument is valid. We farm in small farms because of our land, so the marginal costs are different. There is a perfectly fair discussion about the size of farms and how business models look different, but the important thing is to ensure that what we have sold to our consumers, from our shelves, is good and fit for them to eat. The food and safety standards ensure that.

    Q286       Mark Garnier: Anne-Marie, you have brilliantly avoided the question—

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: I didn’t mean to. I am so sorry.

    Mark Garnier: So I am going to come back to the point. Let us use a neutral example. Let us talk about this wretched chlorinated chicken, where Kentucky Fried Chicken, if we do a free trade deal with America, might possibly actually come from Kentucky. The point there is that, in America, they have more intensive chicken-rearing methods than is acceptable in the UK because of our animal welfare standards. The result is that they chlorine-wash their chickens before they sell them. We find that offensive, for two different reasons. One is the animal welfare standards and the other is that we just do not want the chlorine, despite the fact that we wash ourselves with chlorine every time we go for a swim.

    The important point is that, were we to reduce those standards, then chicken producers in the UK would be undermined because they would not be able to meet those economic standards, which we abide by. This is the point with this question. There are methods of farming in Australia, because of different factors—huge farms, less productivity per headcount and all the rest of it—which mean that, for one reason or another, they adopt certain standards of welfare that we would not have here.

    But, on top of that, because of consumer pressure in the UK—because of the Waitrose brigade almost—our farmers have voluntarily increased their standards. You have a double-edged problem. One is a commercial challenge between our producers and their producers because of this, notwithstanding the food miles, and the other is what we as a society have driven through—Waitrose and other supermarkets chains with a conscience are also available—higher voluntary standards. That is the point. Are we now putting our voluntarily good, high-standard producers in jeopardy because of an economic imbalance in this trade deal?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: I do not believe that we are, and we discussed this earlier. Some 81% of beef bought by your constituents and mine is British produced, and the consumer will have the choice, as they have now, and they tend to choose British beef. That is fantastic. They also buy other meat that is put on the shelf that already comes in through import methods. They all have to meet British food safety standards because the assurance that we as a Government provide is to ensure that they are healthy.

    On your point about chlorinated chicken, it is different if you swim in the pool or you ingest the chlorine. It is two different things. Our standards say no ingestion of chlorine, and that will continue to be the case. If, in due course, a US chicken producer wished to export to the UK, they would need to produce chicken that was not chlorinated.

    There are a whole series of things there, but the issue about how we choose to do our own standards is one for the UK, and we do that because we know that that makes our products the best in the world. That is why, as we create more, new export opportunities for our amazing British products, we will know that they will be wanted by those who want to have those higher-standard, fantastic products.

    Mark Garnier: We could go on about this for hours. The Chair is channelling his inner John Bercow and trying to get short questions and short answers.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: Very politely, if I may say so.

    Chair: Yes, and the antibiotic resistance. Lloyd Russell-Moyle, you wanted to come in on this.

    Q287       Lloyd Russell-Moyle: I wanted to challenge your response, which I found slightly offensive, about, “Have you been to Australia and eaten their food?” It is a response that does not enhance the debate. I have been to Uganda and eaten their food and not got ill. Would I want Ugandan standards? That is a discussion about standards; that is not a discussion about going on holiday somewhere and eating their food. Those kinds of answers do not help us move the debate on.

    The second part of your answer was much better, so I did want to come in on that. Let us have the debate on some standards and how we import them into the UK. Sometimes, and what I wonder about this arrangement, is how the consumer can be—

    Chair: I am flagging this because it seemed to be only a statement. Now it has moved to a question.

    Lloyd Russell-Moyle: Sorry.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: There is always a question at the end.

    Lloyd Russell-Moyle: How can the consumer be reassured that products in produced goods—I do not mean if you are buying meat; that is very easy—pies, restaurants and so on, meet those high standards? You say the consumer will have choice. How do we ensure that the consumer has choice in restaurants and in produced goods?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: No restaurant can legally use produce that has not met its safety standards. Our food standards authorities visit and check restaurant suppliers just as much as the supermarkets are required to do the same.

    Chair: Thank you. Tony Lloyd, do you want to come in very briefly?

    Q288       Tony Lloyd: Yes, please. Were we, for example, to move from voluntary use of antibiotics to compulsion, which is quite a reasonable demand given the concerns about the overuse of antibiotics on a global basis, how would you protect the consumer? You are saying the consumer has choice. How will you protect the consumer under this FTA against the importation of antibiotic-laden Australian meat?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: The answer would be that if we changed to a legal framework and it is set for food safety standard reasons, which it would be, that would be the reason for doing it.

    Tony Lloyd: We would be entitled to under the FTA.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: That is the point. We would be altering our existing food safety standards in favour of different ones for food safety reasons, which are that we do not consider that ingesting that much antibiotic is good for us any more, and therefore changing that also. Those who wish to import would have to match our food safety requirements. Crawford, you might want to pick up on that one, in particular.

    Crawford Falconer: That is absolutely correct. Again, I refer you back to the Trade and Agriculture Commission. It is really important to get this clear. If anything comes into us that has something in it that is contrary to our standards, then we are entirely free to regulate it and we are entitled to. There is nothing that can detract from that.

    Q289       Tony Lloyd: We must have mechanics by which you can regulate it, Mr Falconer. It is not enough to say we are entirely free to do it, because clearly we are under the agreement. However, there have to be mechanics by which that freedom becomes operable.

    Crawford Falconer: That is correct. Those mechanisms exist in the UK; they are not part of our free trade agreement, per se. The free trade agreement makes allowance for them to operate. They are operated by our experts, which is our food safety authorities and our veterinary scientists, who apply that. There is a domestic regime that enforces the regime from domestic production as well as from foreign suppliers.

    Q290       Tony Lloyd: You are confident that it would.

    Crawford Falconer: I am certainly confident of it because that is the basis upon which I shop myself. I have that confidence the same as any British consumer, but it is not a trade agreement that affects that. The trade agreement cannot get in the way of that; it cannot override that. I am confident that this agreement does not do that.

    Chair: Paul Girvan, do you want to come in quickly?

    Q291       Paul Girvan: It is on the back of exactly what Tony has just said. Trade agreements should be used as a tool to drive up standards, to ensure that our product, the product that we have, meets that standard and that we become probably a world leader in setting those standards as opposed to what is going on. I know that in Northern Ireland we have a very strong agrifood industry; it is a major part of our economy. In doing so, it is vitally important that we do sell our product with the quality that we have.

    I will use the chicken industry. We have a major chicken producer that processes as well. Previously, chicken farmers were having to feed antibiotics. I mean that it was part of the feeding regime; it was added to the feed and chickens were fed it. As a consequence, we were consuming it. Whether or not you believe that that is going on, I believe it is going on throughout the world, but we made a conscious decision, “No antibiotics,” and changing our whole practice about density—all that process.

    How can we have confidence in Australia, which will have food produced to one standard for export on to the Chinese market, one of their big markets, and that food making its way to our market? It has happened where pallets have been processed and shipped halfway around the world. I cannot work out this carbon footprint issue that we had earlier; it just does not make any sense, but that is beside the point.

    It is frozen, put on to a refrigerated ship container and taken across the world, and a pallet of food that has made its way on to our market can well have been treated with all the antibiotics of the day. It might well meet our food safety standard, because you are not going to end up getting E. coli or whatever else from it, but potentially you are consuming drugs that we do not license. We have reduced the licensed numbers of antibiotics that can be administered; other countries have not reduced the numbers. There is now total resistance to various antibiotics because they have been so widely used.

    How can we have confidence that our trade deal with Australia is going to protect our industry to the degree that the standard that we are setting becomes a world standard? I want to increase the standards.

    Chair: And not cause pressures to push up the use of antibiotics.

    Paul Girvan: Absolutely.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: I would suggest that you would want to get the Food Standards Agency experts in and ask them.

    Chair: You are the one who signed the trade agreement with a country that was—

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: Let us be clear: we have signed the agreement and we set out very clearly where the food safety standards are. We are, as we are now, as Crawford says, for the food that we—

    Q292       Chair: The root of the question here is this: are we creating a situation that puts pressures on UK farmers to use more antibiotics? Do you think you are?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: No, I do not believe so.

    Chair: Okay.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: Our farmers work to our UK standards and they are proud to do so. As Paul says, we want to continue to be world leaders and to help drive the change that provides sustainability.

    Chair: There are plenty of fact-checkers around to check the veracity of the answer. I am sorry, but I am going to have to move on to Mick Whitley, who has been waiting as patiently as ever.

    Q293       Mick Whitley: Agrifood stakeholders have suggested that this agreement will reduce UK food security by undermining domestic production and replacing imports from nearby countries with products from over 9,000 miles away. How do you respond to that?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: I do not believe that it will. I also believe that consumers should have choice, as they do now. As you say, imports come from many countries. For instance, let us take beef. The vast proportion of the beef imported into the UK at the moment comes from Ireland. To your point that Australian beef might displace Irish beef, that is of course a possibility.

    The UK consumer is very clear on what they want to buy and they do so. We like to ensure that we can provide them with choice. In taking away things like tariffs, we ensure that that brings the cost down as best we can to assist with what we see now in the cost of living crisis.

    Importantly, we set the framework to ensure that there cannot be, from a producer’s perspective, the risk of a surge in an import for any particular reason. We have the safeguards in place so that there could not be an attack that would cause real harm to a particular sector in a short-term process. We have protected for that.

    More importantly, we continue to want to have around the FTA a great relationship formulated around reducing tariffs and barriers with a country with whom we want to build that bilateral trade relationship. Do not forget that we import all the time now from countries with which we may or may not have trade relationships.

    To your earlier point, the provision of protections that are available for our citizens, for yours and my constituents when they go to do their shopping, is that the Food Standards Agency, the customs people, do the checks that are set out to ensure that those things meet our standards. To protect any particular sector from any sudden surge in imports that might appear, we have built in a very robust set of safeguards to avoid that happening.

    Q294       Mick Whitley: How far will the cuts in food and drink tariffs from the agreement help to offset the cost of living crisis?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: That is a really good question. The reduction in tariffs is one of those key areas that can help do that. In the Australia case, it stripped away tariffs of about 5% on nearly everything. That will be a small contribution to the cost of living challenge for those imports coming now from Australia. The examples usually made to me are ones of wine, presumably for people who have quite a heavy shopping basket with bottles of wine. They are happy and excited at the prospect of buying slightly cheaper Australian wine.

    Q295       Mick Whitley: I accept the point, but fuel costs are going up and up with the cost of living. Obviously, that is going to make that product more expensive, is it not?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: Overall, the assessments are that transport costs, clearly on an individual basis, are relatively there. We have seen through covid, where all the shipping supply lines became so disrupted, that the costs of shipping have increased. That would, therefore, presumably increase the cost of the goods. It will be down to the consumer to make their decision on what they want to buy when they are in the shops. I always buy my meat from my butcher around the corner. That is the choice I make. Others who go to a supermarket might want a different choice.

    Mick Whitley: And can afford it.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: For those who enjoy restaurant food, which, from a wholesale market, you might buy from different areas, those will continue to be consumer choices. The impacts of the fuel costs at the moment are being fed across the board, absolutely; I do not disagree with you.

    Q296       Mick Whitley: We spoke about this a couple of months ago when you were last here. The price of containers has gone up tenfold.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: Absolutely—tenfold. It is terrifying.

    Mick Whitley: You have fuel and you have the price of containers. That is going to make that product much more expensive.

    Chair: Without a doubt.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: That will be a cost borne by the Australian exporter.

    Mick Whitley: Thank you, Chair.

    Q297       Chair: Before I move to Tony Lloyd, Secretary of State, you said the Australian trade agreement would offset the cost of living a little bit and might be offset elsewhere. If it offsets the cost of living and it is a couple of hundred times less than Brexit in GDP, the damage caused by Brexit must be harming the cost of living. By the logic you have just employed to say that the Australia trade agreement will help the cost of living, Brexit is surely damaging people’s cost of living.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: If you look at our basket of spending, there are costs that are putting us all under pressure. To Mick’s point, fuel is a very, very important one.

    Q298       Chair: Can I stick with your logic? We can go through several places. If an Australian trade agreement, as you have told us, will help the cost of living because it is helping GDP by between 0.2% and 0.08%, if something is damaging the cost of living between 250 and 67 times more, will that not also be damaging to the cost of living? If the logic says this little bit of help is good for the cost of living, then that lot of damage from Brexit surely has to be damaging to the cost of living and detrimental.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: Chair, we are looking at the Australia deal. In looking at that, and we challenge ourselves how it can help in the cost-of-living crisis—

    Chair: You are the Secretary for International Trade.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: —the reason why—

    Chair: I would expect you to be across the brief on this.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: The reason why Australia will help is, because in the reduction and stripping away of tariffs, those goods that we import now or might choose to import that we do not at the moment, and indeed those exports, are tariff-free. Therefore, those costs have come down. We have a tariff-free environment with our European neighbours through the TCA. In that sense, there is no change to that situation in the goods that our constituents will buy.

    Q299       Chair: Although its leaders will be amazed that as Secretary of State for International Trade, you do not think there is a change in the trading regime.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: There is no tariff. The differential we are talking about is around what the FTA does. It strips away some of the cost that would have been tariff. The wider questions about transport costs and others, which are affecting every part of the import and export trade groups, are ones that we are all trying to work to solve at a macro level.

    Chair: Thank you.

    Q300       Tony Lloyd: The Committee has been told that, because you have negotiated relatively low local origin thresholds in the agreement, this risks Australia becoming, in effect, a route through which others can circumvent UK tariffs. How will you monitor this?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: That is a very technical question.

    Crawford Falconer: The best way to describe this is that everybody has rules of origin, apart from agriculture, on which we have followed this model. It is basically wholly produced, so therefore the rule of origin is UK or Australian wholly produced. It is not an issue for agriculture, by and large, because you do not have to worry about what the rest of the componentry is; it has to be 100%. That is very unusual in international trade. People do not make things in one country and sell them whole in another. International trade is now such that everybody uses inputs from everywhere. So you cannot have 100% rule of origin across the board, because otherwise nobody would trade according to normal patterns. You would be back to the 1940s.

    Everybody has a rule of origin. With that rule of origin, you pitch it at a level that you determine—and there is no abstract rule—makes the most sense for your industry to make sure they get the value-added component of the product, which will always be a percentage, in order to get the preference.

    We are a manufacturing superpower still; Australia is not. The balance of manufacturing on rules of origin and having a relatively low rule of origin is massively in the United Kingdom’s favour.

    Q301       Tony Lloyd: The problem with this, Mr Falconer, is precisely what you said: Australia is not a major manufacturer, but if Australia becomes a route through which a third party chooses to use the local origin thresholds, then they can avoid the bilateral tax by routeing through Australia. That has to be a consideration, and if it is a consideration, how do we monitor it? If it becomes excessive, what is the remedy? You have not really told us anything about that.

    Crawford Falconer: Every country has this across the board. In your report there are concrete examples of a hypothetical situation, which I think is, “The Chinese might set up a factory in Australia and they might put parts of their shoes into Australia. The Australians will assemble these shoes and export them to the United Kingdom. In that way, they would have a proportion of Chinese content.”

    For a start, there is a risk of that with everybody; you just carry that risk. It is not excessive. Frankly, China has no trouble trading over our MFN tariff for shoes. It would be an extraordinarily exaggerated situation to imagine that China would go to the trouble of setting up a manufacturing facility in Australia to get over a relatively low MFN tariff in the UK for its shoes. As always, I cannot rule out the theoretical possibility of it, but it is extremely unlikely. The Chinese would be perfectly happy to sell them as they are now over the MFN tariff into the UK.

    It is not getting around your question. It is saying that you have to look at it in context. In context, it is very unlikely that that is the case given that, for instance, we are selling mostly into Australia’s manufactured goods and they are not selling them to us. They are not likely to sell them in significant amounts. As in everything, it is a balance. You accept that there is always going to be some third country content in the process. The other trading partner has to accept the same, and that is just the price you pay.

    There is not a remedy for that except that, if it becomes intolerable, you have an unbalanced negotiation, but I do not think that is likely to be the case with Australia.

    Q302       Tony Lloyd: There are no mechanics for monitoring and no mechanics in the agreement for remedy other than to abrogate the agreement.

    Crawford Falconer: If there are false declarations of origin, which is a different matter, and people are mis-stating what the origin amount is, which is the real-world consideration, then you have recourse for that.

    Tony Lloyd: I am not talking about false declarations.

    Crawford Falconer: The only way you could eliminate what you described as a possibility is if you had 100% rule of origin, which nobody would have; otherwise you would not have trade.

    Q303       Tony Lloyd: For the record, there is no system of monitoring under the agreement and no remedy other than to abrogate the agreement.

    Crawford Falconer: For Australia, no, there is not. We are confident that there is not going to be anything grosso modo that would be disadvantageous in that, given the tariffs that are at stake. If there was a big tariff, you would be a bit more cautious about it. In a situation where the MFN tariff was not high, it is just not worth the trouble, frankly.

    Tony Lloyd: Thank you.

    Q304       Chair: I am going to move on to a couple of areas, Secretary of State. Our report, which of course I will praise, and I know you said you did not have enough time to look at it—

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: I will do, of course.

    Chair: If you have a quick look at page 22, from some of the evidence we have there is an interesting sentence here, “Most tariffs will be removed on entry into force of the Agreement with phased liberalisation occurring only in respect of UK exports of steel to Australia.” Why has the UK not been so bothered about steel?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: Do you want to pick that one up? You have been in deep in this recently.

    Crawford Falconer: It is just one of those things. As in any negotiation, it is a balance. As you are undoubtedly aware, we are applying bilateral safeguards to steel across the world.

    Chair: It is against that background that this jumps out.

    Crawford Falconer: That is why the Australians say, “Because you’re applying bilateral safeguards on steel, it is a bit steep if you are actually expecting us to liberalise our steel on year zero when we are not applying any restrictions to you.” There is nothing wrong with that.

    Q305       Chair: We had Australian diplomats appear in front of us telling us and assuring us that Australia was a very open economy with no tariffs here, there and everywhere, and it was all very easy to make a trade agreement with Australia. When it comes to UK steel, they seem to have a problem or the UK was unable to negotiate a solution.

    Crawford Falconer: I am not here to defend the Australians’ negotiating position, but I can describe it to you again, which is for that one product for five years there is a phase-in. I pointed out that for our sensitive products there was a quite lengthy phase-in. From their point of view, when they are facing market restrictions in the UK, they had a domestic political interest to manage so they got one exception. You can draw your own judgment about whether that is excessive or not.

    Q306       Chair: We will see what the EU manage when they come to their agreements with Australia.

    On the mobility of persons, Secretary of State, the UK and Australia do not give identical commitments on the mobility of persons. For those who want to know, it turns up at page 74 of the excellent report into the agreement, just to help you. Why is that? What does it mean that these provisions do not give the same economic benefits to both sides? There is a pattern developing. I hope I am just being paranoid here, Secretary of State. I would like some fleshing out. We have tried, as a Committee and as a staff, to find out what exactly is going on in this; it is quite opaque. We are looking for light and some explanation.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: There are two separate trade deals and, therefore, the negotiations were for two separate countries with different perspectives on mobility. What we have agreed with Australia is a really ambitious business mobility agreement.

    Q307       Chair: I am talking about UK and Australia only.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: Absolutely. You said they were not the same. They are not the same for—

    Chair: No, between New Zealand and Australia, they do not seem to be reciprocal.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: Between New Zealand and Australia?

    Chair: They do not seem to fully mirror or give identical commitments on the mobility of persons in the agreement. The commitments on the mobility of persons are not identical.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: No. One set we have negotiated with Australia and one with New Zealand. I am confused as to what you mean.

    Q308       Chair: The UK list and the Australia list are different. There are not identical commitments in this.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: I am not quite sure what you mean.

    Chair: It is important.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: We have negotiated some really good new terms—particularly around business—with Australia.

    Chair: We know it will be good; we know its history.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: Exactly.

    Chair: What we want to know is the list. Can you come back to us with answers, if not today—

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: I am not sure I understand the question.

    Q309       Chair: But from what we understand as a Committee, the commitments on the movement of people between the UK and Australia are not identical.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: Right.

    Chair: We do not know why that is; you seem unclear that that has been negotiated. We would like some clarity from the Government. This is one of the reasons why we want you here before we do reports, so we can clarify these things and before we go to Parliament with things. However, we do not know what this is; it is opaque. I would be grateful to you for clarity.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: We will come back to you and set out—

    Chair: Thank you. It may help us for time this afternoon. We are going to Mick Whitley.

    Q310       Mick Whitley: This is on digital data. If this agreement enters into force, what guarantees will UK consumers have that their data will be protected to the same high standard in Australia as it is in the UK?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: This is an area where the relationship is good and we have a very similar view. Obviously, we have secured the free flows of data that are necessary for those British services to be able to provide all those products and services to consumers. We have obviously locked in within the legal requirement that personal data protection in both countries. We have been very clear; it is very positive. We are not dealing with a country that has a very different perspective. We will be able to set that out and I can talk you through a number of ways that that works in practice. It is fair access for telecoms companies.

    Interestingly, as I talk about those next layers of how this will work, we are working in great co-operation on 5G on cyber-security. So, within that digital space, we are working together to try to solve those challenges of the future.

    What is really good and something that you will know, which is something that I believe is very important, is ensuring that businesses can benefit from the use of modern, digitised trading systems, which strip away costs. For SMEs, in particular, that is a really important set of tools to help them grow their businesses, saving time and money. We have both committed to promoting paperless trading and electronic transferable records. Again, all this is setting what we want to be those new international standards, something that we, the UK, led when we had the G7 presidency last year, setting out those digital trade principles that we believe are so important and that we want the rest of the world to set out.

    We have embedded in the Australia deal some of those really key elements which you also see in the Singapore digital economy agreement. As we come forward and start new trade deals, we are very clear that we think this is important for other countries beyond Australia. It was a very easy conversation with Australia. In that sense, we were on the same page in this space. We look to think about how we use both those flows of data and the digital tools to enable businesses to thrive and achieve their economic growth as quickly as possible.

    Crawford wants to add something else.

    Crawford Falconer: Can I just add, because it might lie behind your question, a concern about personal data rather than data generally? To be absolutely clear so there is no ambiguity about it—often this arises because data covers such a huge range—on personal data, in this negotiation we are not changing anything on personal data restrictions between the United Kingdom and Australia. That remains a matter that will be resolved and is a decision by DCMS based on our own data protection policy. This agreement does not affect that or take away from it in any way whatsoever. That is a separate, distinct judgment that was made by our authorities.

    In the meantime, or at the present time, they apply as they have applied yesterday, and they will apply, unless there is a decision that we could have a more liberal approach with Australia. But that will be made by our data protection authorities on the basis of their assessment of personal data protection. It is important that there is no misunderstanding around that personal stuff, because it has arisen in the past.

    Mick Whitley: Thank you.

    Chair: Thank you for that. I am sure that many people who are watching will be pleased with that answer.

    Q311       Paul Girvan: I apologise if I jump in on Lloyd’s question here. All politics is really local, even though it is an international trade agreement.

    Chair: That is the quote of the afternoon.

    Paul Girvan: I am going to use an example: diversion of trade. We are suffering from that within Northern Ireland at present because of another so-called agreement that has caused us severe angst.

    I am going to use the example where the DIT says it will monitor whether liberalisation of trade with Australia will cause harm to developing countries, where we have had preferential trading terms on goods such as sugar in the past. What threshold will the Department look at and will trigger that if there is a diversion of trade? What measures will be taken to address that to ensure that those developing countries are not left behind? Let’s be honest: we are a country that prides ourselves on being one of the leading economies of the world. We should be out there trying to help some of the more needy to climb the ladder. If we can use a trade agreement properly and set in place such tariffs and protections, it might help us in some way.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: It is a really important question. Paul, you are quite right. We are a country with a strong economy, but we also want to make sure that we use our trade as a force for good. I made a speech earlier this morning about how the UK wants to use its trade rules to help Africa’s economies grow and build trusted relationships with UK businesses and UK technical assistance to help their economies to get the real value out of their assets and human capital. It is a fair challenge. Crawford, I do not know whether in technical terms there is a risk that we should ponder.

    Crawford Falconer: We would not have entered into the agreement in an area where we knew that it would cause significant damage, and we do not believe it does. Therefore, this is for a trading partner which has pretty much the same outlook as we do on these matters. We have said, “Even though we have done best endeavours to make sure that it doesn’t have any unfortunate knock-on consequences, we want to make monitoring it a serious task,” and we will monitor it.

    Speaking for the UK, it will always be an item on the agenda of the Joint Committee. We have our people in post in those economies who will be keeping an eye on that. We also have people working in the FCDO who do the developmental work. We keep a very close eye on this and will now add this to the issues that they look after. Indeed, I have no doubt we will hear from the Governments concerned and the businesses involved if there is an issue, so we will be tuned up to deal with that. It is not a hollow commitment; it is something we will follow up.

    Q312       Paul Girvan: I appreciate that. I take on board what you are saying in relation to monitoring it, but with monitoring there needs to be some course of action to address. The key point is: what action can we take? I have used only one example of a potential area. For argument’s sake, let us say the Congo comes back to us and says, “You are no longer buying certain items from us.” It is a very wealthy country in terms of its minerals. Unfortunately, maybe the people are not getting much benefit of that mineral wealth, but Australia also has plenty of minerals. If we find that we are shipping more from one region of the world to another and putting people into starvation in the Democratic Republic of Congo, how can we ensure that we protect that? We need to have some mechanism to do that. If you are saying we are just monitoring it and waiting for somebody to raise it, we need to identify what action we are taking to address that.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: You see that through things like the Joint Committee and the sub-committees that will meet regularly. That is exactly where an issue like that, if it was picked up by one of our trade teams in Congo—

    Q313       Paul Girvan: Do we have one?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: Not in the Congo as far as I know, but we have a large number across Africa; we have an amazing team. Those sorts of things will be highlighted. Those are the wider tools that we have and the conversations we would have with our businesses. The DIT is uniquely well placed to do that.

    When we look at the work we are doing on supply chain resilience, we are thinking about how we can help British companies to step away from some things. Let us take those areas where the Chinese are taking all the value in terms of the minerals. We want to be working with like-minded countries in those countries where that investment needs to be in their own countries so they see the value.

    In the round, this is the work that the UK does through the tools it has to support through things like UK export finance, where businesses want to work in those areas where the financial risk is higher. We can support them in that way. We work in the round. In a specific way, if there was something uniquely Australian-UK where the balance shifted dramatically, we would absolutely pick that up with the Joint Committee, but, more widely, it would be a conversation on which many other parts of government would want to weigh in.

    Q314       Lloyd Russell-Moyle: The environment chapter contains provisions about the parties’ environmental laws. Whereas for the UK this covers all levels, including our devolved jurisdictions, in Australia it only covers federal laws. We have already heard this morning that, while you feel you have had a lot of consultation with them, they challenge that narrative; I am not arbitrating on who is right or wrong. So the states are completely exempt from any of the environmental provisions in this. What action will the UK take if there is any weakening of environmental laws that are decided at state level?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: As you say, this is a UK Government to Australian federal state FTA.

    Q315       Lloyd Russell-Moyle: No; it is an all-UK state to an Australian federal Government.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: The UK is a country which has four separate parts to it. The DAs are clearly important in how they work to it, but the reserved power to make trade agreements sits with the UK Government.

    Q316       Lloyd Russell-Moyle: The powers to make trade agreements in Australia sit with the federal Government.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: Yes.

    Lloyd Russell-Moyle: But this affects only federal Government laws, whereas this affects all laws at all levels in the UK. How will the UK Government take action if the environmental standards are weakened at a state level, which is actually where they are applied?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: We have agreed in what was the first environmental chapter for Australia the embedding of the commitment to the Paris agreement and, therefore, the route to net zero. It has been interesting to see, since the change in Government and since we agreed this, that there has been an uptick—if that is the right way to describe it—in the new Australian Government’s commitment to what that net zero path will look like and they have raised their ambitions.

    Q317       Lloyd Russell-Moyle: If a federal state or territory of Australia weakens its environmental rules and does not have to abide by the ratchet clauses in this, what action will we take?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: My point is that they are going in the right direction, and I think we are all committed—

    Q318       Lloyd Russell-Moyle: The federal Government are going in the right direction, but the states are of many different political hues. What do we do if and when states go in the wrong direction?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: Because the commitment is to work together with best endeavours and continue to try to meet the Paris agreement, we would clearly be able to raise it through our Joint Committee discussions, if there was real anxiety. But also we are working together; as part of the FTA, that is a real commitment to work together. It will be UK businesses going to work in south Australia, for instance, to help put up offshore wind, or whatever those relationships are. Those bonds of business help to drive the commitment to the Paris agreement to keep 1.5 alive, alongside which we have our net zero path and Australia has theirs. As I say, theirs is going in a more ambitious direction than it was even when we negotiated this.

    I am confident that we will be working together. We have reduced tariffs on things like wind turbine blades and electric vehicles. Those relationships are strong. As we know, so much of meeting our net-zero challenge will be driven by both the businesses that produce the new and clean energy sources and the consumer, and we will continue to see that.

    Q319       Lloyd Russell-Moyle: In the negotiations did we seek a clause that would allow us to take action if federal states undermined that? It might not happen.

    Chair: It is a political agreement.

    Lloyd Russell-Moyle: A Labour Government is now in at federal level and a Labour Government is in most states. So things are probably turning around in Australia and are going in the right direction, because you have a decent party there, but the wrong thing may happen; it can happen anywhere. I buy your argument, Secretary of State, that things are going in a better direction now. I totally agree. I stood outside the Australian embassy numerous times during the elections canvassing for the Australian Labour party, but if things go in the wrong direction in a federal state, did we seek in the negotiations to put in clauses by which we would be able to protect ourselves?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: What we sought was to have an environment chapter where we had that commitment to the Paris agreement.

    On your point about political colours, I hope that pretty much all political colours are now on the journey to the net zero challenge, mostly because voters are very keen that their Governments meet it. The previous Government of a different political colour was the one that negotiated this. It is the first time that any Australian FTA has had any kind of environment chapter where these issues are highlighted and tariff reductions are made in order to facilitate and grow those relationships.

    Q320       Lloyd Russell-Moyle: We did not ask for any provisions that would allow us to take action if states were regressing on environmental clauses.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: I look to Crawford on state-level discussion.

    Crawford Falconer: I do not think we were trying to negotiate with the states. That would be pretty bizarre.

    Q321       Lloyd Russell-Moyle: I am not asking whether we were trying to negotiate with the states.

    Crawford Falconer: Why do you take the view that the federal Government do not have an obligation to discharge towards the United Kingdom if one of the states does not act in accordance with what the Australian Government have committed to in the agreement with the UK? It is not clear to me why you take the view that somehow there is an exemption clause for the states.

    Q322       Lloyd Russell-Moyle: Tell me if I have got this wrong and then hands up, but my advice and what I am reading here is that this binds the federal Government. In a federal state, the Government have clear powers as to where they can and cannot intervene, so they have no ability to restrict states in a federal system on what they can do. This is a trade deal only with the federal Government, but some provisions on environmental matters are reserved to the state level in Australia.

    I was not asking whether we had entered into negotiation with the states; I was asking whether we had sought clauses to allow us to take protective action here in the UK if the state level was undermining the principles of some of the environmental agreements, even if the federal level was fulfilling its federal duties.

    Crawford Falconer: The answer is that we did not.

    Q323       Lloyd Russell-Moyle: Why not?

    Crawford Falconer: The reason we did not is that we think it is quite appropriate that in a sovereign state to sovereign state agreement, the emphasis and responsibility is on the Australian Government. You may well be right that in terms of the separation of powers in Australia—it has certainly been the case in the past, even with multilateral law—Australia is unable for a time to enforce a finding at multilateral level on one of its states, but we felt it was appropriate that the way to do this, which was achievable, was to put it as a responsibility of the Australian Government.

    That does not mean that if something was happening in New South Wales or Victoria we would not say, “We think this is inconsistent with your undertakings. What are you doing about it?” I do not for a minute think they would do nothing; as is the case with their multilateral obligations, undoubtedly they would need to go to the state and say, “Listen, this is in breach of our treaty obligations. You need to act accordingly.” That is a desirable and more practical way to get an agreement out of Australia; otherwise you probably would have got no agreement out of Australia. That was our judgment.

    Lloyd Russell-Moyle: I am sure that your analysis has a point. I do wonder why we do not ask for a reciprocal element that is not binding on all our levels, and why in the US, where we have done some state to state negotiations that have been agreed recently, we do not consider that. I will leave those questions for a future day when we can explore the utility of the UK as a whole negotiating with parts of states.

    Q324       Tony Lloyd: It would be worth adding that, in the event of negotiations with the US, where the states are very powerful, that consideration would have to be taken on board.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: These are issues that any bilateral FTA considers. As Crawford says, Canada is another example where we are now in discussions. We are making a federal to UK Government relationship, but there are issues. In the case of the US MOUs that we are negotiating at the moment at state level, they tend to be about mutual recognition of qualifications. That is an area where, if you like, we are able to unlock a series of market access barriers at a state to UK level. That is great, if we are able to do so, but it is an interesting question to consider. The Paris agreement challenge that the world has set itself is for countries, and countries then work out how to try to make that happen within whatever is the framework of their nations. It is an interesting question and I would be very happy to pick that up.

    Q325       Chair: When you look at page 90 of our report—

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: Which I will.

    Chair: Unfortunately, you cannot respond to it because of the time, but it does say that it is applied at all levels of Government in the UK, but only at federal level in Australia. The point being made is a very good one; it is about reciprocity. The feeling—we have seen this—is that New Zealand gets one over the UK that the EU goes and sorts out. Again, it is a feeling that Australia has a different and perhaps more advantageous position. I am reminded of the old joke that I was told at the beginning of this—people are laughing less and less as this goes on—that if the UK was not in the room, would this agreement look much different? With stuff like that coming out, you get the feeling that maybe it wouldn’t.

    The UK would be best to reflect that, but where we could have reflected this a lot better is in the scrutiny time to do this. I am not going to open that wound again because my blood pressure will rise. To bring my blood pressure down, I turn to the great Mr Mark Garnier.

    Q326       Mark Garnier: On Government procurement, Australia and the UK are both part of the GPA of the WTO, but the FTA delivers access for UK suppliers to contracts of several other Australian public bodies, which I think comes under the Australian Financial Securities Authority opportunities. That opportunity is estimated in the impact assessment to be worth $10 billion a year, but Professor Sanchez-Graells has noted that it is very difficult to quantify that.

    The first question is: can you talk a bit more about how you quantify that? The second question, which is probably more important, is: how did you decide which areas of extra-Government procurement you wanted to go for? How did you select the other areas?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: On the technical question of the $10 billion, I will defer to Crawford because I cannot answer that question for you. You may need technical people to help.

    Crawford Falconer: That was my understanding, and I confess that I cannot give you a complete answer.

    Mark Garnier: It is a bit of a techie question.

    Crawford Falconer: Where the economists are involved I would hesitate to say there is a single, unanimous view, but they made their estimates based on what they thought, talking to business, the scope of these markets was essentially and the competitiveness that the UK had in those sectors. That is the general answer, but we can go into more detail for you.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: We will get you a better answer, if you like.

    Q327       Mark Garnier: That would be fantastic. How did you come to the conclusion that you wanted specific sectors? How did you choose those sectors?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: It covers procurement. Physically, all procurements are electronically covered. That is a very broad range; it is anything that is conducted electronically. The key is that UK suppliers will have the same access as Australian ones, so it is very broad in that sense. That is the offer; that is exactly your point. Drilling down on how that has been assessed, the $10 billion is the assessment of the opportunities that will be coming up, on which we will try to get you a much clearer and more detailed picture.

    Q328       Mark Garnier: It is the decision-making process.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: In doing that, hopefully it will answer how we got to $10 billion. Is that all right?

    Mark Garnier: That would be fantastic.

    Chair: I appreciate that, Secretary of State.

    Q329       Lloyd Russell-Moyle: Secretary of State, the agreement established various committees, working groups and dialogues at all different levels: the Secretary of State, officials and other interested parties. Some of them are able to make equivalence decisions that will impact on regulation. How will you be able to measure their effectiveness, and how will we be able to scrutinise them?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: That is a really good question. It is quite a complex picture. There is a big oversight board, if you like. You have the Joint Committee, which has representatives of both parties. That is ongoing, checking that we are all doing what we should be doing. It is also to assure smooth operation. It will be as much technical as anxiety-driven by some worst scenario coming at it—the day-to-day stuff.

    We have six sub-committees, breaking down the Joint Committee from a practical perspective. To your point about environment, that sits under the co‑operation sub-committee that looks at those broader issues. There is an IP sub-committee. Clearly, that is a very important one. That will be extremely technical. Then you are looking at services and investments. That is cross-border trade and services, trade in goods, professional business services, the temporary movement of people, telecoms investment and digital trade. That is probably the meat of the day-to-day activity that this opens up. There is a specific SPS sub-committee and there is a technical barriers to trade sub-committee. Those will be formal sub-committees to hone down in those particular areas.

    Then you have the dialogues, which are not formalised in any sense but there is the opportunity. You can look at dialogues that we have with other countries which may become a next-stage economic partnership. They are an opportunity to harness thinking, pick up anxieties and, importantly, bring new ideas to the fore.

    As I keep saying, this is the starting point. It is a really good platform and we want it to live and breathe and develop together as new technologies come through and businesses want to grow. The dialogues are there.

    A really important question is: how can you scrutinise this and see what is going on? If there is a big decision and the Joint Committee say, “We have to turn a bit right here because we have found that we need to do something else,” we would update the Committee, as we do with any number of other issues as they crystallise, and then there is the opportunity to discuss this.

    Q330       Lloyd Russell-Moyle: Will minutes or notes of these sub-committees be made available to our Committee?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: That is a very good question. Do we know the answer to that, Crawford?

    Crawford Falconer: We have not decided that yet, but it is quite possible.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: That is a really viable option.

    Q331       Lloyd Russell-Moyle: Will they be made in public? We all understand that sometimes they are made in camera. That is understandable, but it would be good to know.

    Will you be setting review timetables for each of these sub-committees to make sure they have covered areas and looked at different areas of the agreement and that there is a review of progress, or is the plan just to meet and put on the agenda whatever seems to be the pressing issue of the day? Does that make sense?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: It will have to have clear direction because we have committed to a two-year and then five-year review. Clearly, we will want to make sure that we have assessed in the round.

    Q332       Lloyd Russell-Moyle: Will that systematic timetable be provided to us?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: That is a very good question. I think the answer is that we have not decided that yet, but these are useful thoughts as we go through. It might be something we want to pick up in the autumn as we move towards bringing it into force. We will talk to the STAGs and others to get a sense of where the relevant level of interest lies. I quite like the idea of the Joint Committee, at least in part, being in public. That would put them all under pressure to make sure they are pushing themselves. There are some very interesting ideas. Why don’t we pick that up in the autumn? We will do that and think about it. This is the first one. Let’s try to get transparency and the opportunity for those to know—

    Chair: We are more than keen to work with the Government on this.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: I think that would be an interesting discussion.

    Q333       Lloyd Russell-Moyle: If there is a two-year and then five-year review, I think that is something for us jointly to programme in when we are doing a two-year review hearing and what levels of officials we should be interacting with—of course, we will want to get your views—and what officials you will be making available to us to have either Committee discussions or more informal discussions. Maybe that would follow on from the discussion or agreement you had this morning where your senior officials and parliamentary team meet. Maybe that is one of the agenda points so that those things can be timetabled and trust can start to be rebuilt. That would be really appreciated.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: I think that is a good idea.

    Chair: We are happy to help when we are given the time to help.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: Noted.

    Chair: Before I turn to Tony Lloyd, I do not know whether there are any green bottles left, but, in the spirit of environmental awareness, a number of Ministers have resigned, with five resigning on one side of an A4 piece of paper this afternoon. They have been sitting on it. This is some sort of record. They are coming thick and fast.

    Tony Lloyd: Name names.

    Chair: I will after you have done your turn, but there are so many.

    Q334       Tony Lloyd: I want to turn to an area of very little controversy: our old friend the Northern Ireland protocol. Your deputy director of trade agreements analysis told us that your Department will “try to achieve” economic modelling for trade agreements to take into account the protocol. It is a fairly interesting question. How will you go about that given the uncertainty of where we go? Let us assume that there is certainty and that the protocol sticks in some way, shape or form.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: We hope that we will find a better landing zone.

    Q335       Tony Lloyd: It does matter because one of the concerns in the north of Ireland is that agriculture, on which Northern Ireland is massively dependent, will be impacted in a way that will not necessarily be seen in Great Britain, so that modelling will be absolutely fundamental in providing some kind of reassurance. Can you go about that at the moment given the uncertainty around the protocol anyway? Will this modelling take place at the earliest possible opportunity?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: That is a good question. I do not know the answer. Crawford, I do not know whether you have managed to speak to the team on that in the near term.

    Crawford Falconer: They can model on certain assumptions, but at the moment some of those assumptions will be a bit invidious to put out there as if they are serious assumptions. We have been able to model at the most general level—it is in the assessment that has been made of the agreement—the estimated overall impact on Northern Ireland as a region of the UK. Subtle variations of that, depending on how the protocol will be negotiated, revised or removed—however that ends up—are at a micro level which the modellers are just unable to deal with. They worked on the assumption that on that original model Northern Ireland was fully part of the overall impact of an FTA and it gave the kind of number that it does.

    If there is a variation to that, your computable general equilibrium modelling will not be able to give you that because it is too high a generality, so it is not even a matter of whether they can really fine-tune it. You would have to supplement it with a much more sector-specific model, which would not have the coherence of a comprehensive one. None of the models is a completely reliable prediction, but it seems to me that it would be very unlikely it will cast enormous light on this area that was not previously available. Experts can make a reasonable judgment about what the impact will be.

    Q336       Tony Lloyd: If I may make this obvious point, Northern Ireland is clearly a special case, whether one loves Northern Ireland or otherwise. It is a special case because its situation at the moment is different from the rest of the UK. Within that, given the sensitivities, can you give us some kind of modelling? I take Mr Falconer’s point that no model is perfect, but could we ask for your best endeavours to give us some early commentary along the lines that the deputy director undertook to give to the Committee, because at least it would be minimally helpful?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: It is a perfectly fair challenge. Let us take it away. I am not an expert in this space, but clearly given the position we hope to negotiate with the EU, or bring into the Bill, that clarity or landing zone might be one we could ask the team to look at from that perspective, as opposed to the situation as it is now. We will take that away and talk to them, if that is all right, and see what we can get them to tackle within the confines of what is at the moment a very moveable feast.

    Tony Lloyd: That is all I can ask at the moment.

    Chair: Just for information and in case we lose any viewers of the important Committee session we are having this afternoon because of the drama that might be unfolding elsewhere, for the benefit of Committee members the five latest resignations are: Kemi Badenoch, Alex Burghart, Neil O’Brien, Lee Rowley and Julia Lopez, who was once a very esteemed member of this Committee. We are sorry to hear that. We wish her especially well since she was on the Committee. We think we might have Julia back.

    Just for information, we have 23 resignations. Do not change to any other channel; keep watching the International Trade Committee. To keep us going and merrily entertained, Secretary of State, I will have to leave due to the nature of this reorganised afternoon. Hopefully, the Prime Minister is still in post, but I have to attend the Liaison Committee. No disrespect is intended to the Minister. I am sure you understand that I do not want anybody to think that I want to be outwith this room either.

    (Mark Garnier took the Chair.)

    Q337       Mick Whitley: Various stakeholders, particularly those within UK agriculture, have said that they would like to see an impact assessment for each UK trade agreement which estimates the cumulative impact of such agreements to date. What will you do to look into the feasibility of that?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: In the first instance, we have made an impact assessment of the Australian FTA framework as it stands now. They are a bit like balance sheet snapshots because you can make your assessment only on the basis of the picture. The New Zealand impact assessment has effectively incorporated the impact of Australia’s FTA into it. As we keep negotiating new FTAs, those that we have already brought in will be part of that overall assessment landscape, so they are by default, if you like, factored in as we add new FTAs to the UK business market opportunities and the impacts it will have and where it will impact. Therefore, we start to be able to see that patchwork of impacts, if that is the right way of describing it, layer upon layer as we do them. Each time we do a new FTA, we will be able to have a holistic perspective on the impact of the new one having incorporated those that we have already negotiated.

    Q338       Sir Mark Hendrick: Many of the agreement’s provisions entail parties aspiring to achieve things or committing themselves to co-operate in various ways, as opposed to having a binding commitment to do something. What will the Department do to monitor and evaluate those elements of the agreement to ensure that good intentions turn into action?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: That is a really important question. For Australia, a lot of these chapters are about co-operation and working together to try to help improve international standards and work in those international fora together. The dialogues, if you like the non-binding parts of the committee structure, will be there precisely to stimulate and bring in voices to try to drive those forward. We are not necessarily in exactly the same place as two countries by virtue of our own journey so far, but the commitment is that we want to work together in the wider international fora where trade has a strong voice for setting standards to do that together. The dialogue where we see that will probably go on in the near term.

    I have no doubt at all that, across civil society, the binding commitment we have made as two nations together will afford it the opportunity to use that as a challenge to both of us to push on and do better together. It will be a powerful element in that. It is a really good thing, because I always say that FTAs are the tool. It is about people, businesses and societies where the goods, services and commitments that we make land together. I think it is going to be really interesting.

    Quite a lot of it, particularly in the environment chapters, is completely new for Australia. This is a new way of building on the gritty trade relationship. Stripping away tariffs on turbine blades is a practical trading issue, but those commitments we have all made to Paris, what that means in practice and how we think about how to use our trade flows to help meet a different goal from one that is, if you like, a straightforward trading one, will be really powerful.

    I think the dialogue in the first instance will be where we see those opportunities for discussions on co-operation and that nudge in the right direction to make good on them. If in due course there is an opportunity where we might want to embed something else, obviously it would be through the Joint Committee. For additional perspectives on the FTA, we would have the opportunity to bring that through in due course.

    Q339       Sir Mark Hendrick: What you describe is a good co-operation process and good dialogue. The impression you are giving is that it is more of a qualitative assessment of how it might work rather than necessarily a quantitative assessment of how you might try to measure those achievements and turn those intentions into actions. Will you look maybe at logging certain actions or agreements and add tick-boxes, or some method of trying to measure the degree of co-operation you get, rather than just saying, “There is pretty good co‑operation and we are getting on very well”?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: That is a fair challenge to the point about how we publish minutes and think about how we push this forward, because the point of these FTAs is that we want them to be agile and have room for co‑operative development. That is an interesting challenge. How might the dialogue co-ordinators harness what are clearly particular issues that might be either a concern or an opportunity and find ways to push that forward?

    This is instinct really. You say, “We have talked about this and this is great. Actually we want to go to the Joint Committee and set a new challenge for ourselves.” All of this still needs to be set out in gritty terms, but that is a really interesting challenge. Do we try to formalise a flow which says where a co-operative decision is made which will generate a real trade outcome or new opportunity? We should be finding ways to measure it properly. I think that is an interesting challenge.

    Q340       Sir Mark Hendrick: Connected with that, the agreement allows the parties to amend the text of the agreement through the Joint Committee in some circumstances without engaging in formal parliamentary scrutiny here in the UK. Those changes that you can make obviously work in the direction of the approach you are talking about. One example you gave was regarding the amendment of tariff schedules. In that specific example, how will Parliament be involved? How will we be informed?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: In the same way that tariff schedule changes are ongoing—I look to Crawford—we update on a regular basis on weird and wonderful things that are going on outside the Committee, but in terms of tariff schedules is there a particular format?

    Crawford Falconer: They would still have to go through the same processes with any tariff change as we do at the moment. Usually, they are done by secondary statutory instruments, so those processes presumably will continue. They will be exactly the same. It is hard to predict. We are not going into this negotiation with a whole long list of things, once we have concluded this, that we want to change within a few months of actually having done it. Let us hope not.

    It is hard to imagine, but obviously there will be some things that come up after a period of time and we will make some changes. If there was amendment outside that rather straightforward example, it is something that we would have to consider and a judgment would have to be made on a case-by-case basis about what is required. If it was meaningful change that would normally pass through scrutiny, then it would need to pass through scrutiny; if they were just making minor drafting changes to the agreement, maybe not, but that is not something you can answer in the abstract in advance.

    We have quite a lot of existing agreements. Up to this point we have never had the need to make a change to them. I do not think there will be a lot of changes, but sooner or later it might well happen and we will just have to make a judgment as to the appropriate way to go about it. Clearly, if there is a significant change, it would be dealt with.

    Q341       Sir Mark Hendrick: If there was a sudden jump in tariff rates, we would want to know about it and we would want to know why. What sort of reporting mechanism would you have for that, other than just pushing through an SI?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: I guess it is an opportunity for you to discuss it with us at that point. I have not had any in my tenure so far, so I cannot speak from experience, but I guess that would be the logical process.

    Sir Mark Hendrick: It is a bit of a new ball game.

    Chair: Before we turn to Mick Whitley, there is breaking news: Mims Davies has resigned.

    Q342       Mick Whitley: The agreement does not contain language on the protection of human rights either in the preamble or the main text. The Government have told the Joint Committee on Human Rights that this has been tackled in other ways in the agreement. How did this come to be negotiated?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: Issues about human rights are, in an advocacy way, managed and run by the FCDO. That is something that our diplomats do when they are raising issues and continuing to promote those universal human rights that we as the UK believe are absolutely critical. That is not an area that sits within DIT’s competence at all; it is very much a Foreign Office activity.

    There are aspects of trade policy where there is an opportunity to address some of the issues in a bilateral trading relationship. With Australia, we do not have concerns around forced labour or some of the issues that one might otherwise have. We are working with a similar economy and like-minded Governments and citizens, so we are in a very good place. As a nation, we will always continue to set out through the FCDO our view of human rights and anxiety around human rights abuses, but from the trade agreement perspective we would not include something like that because in and of itself it is not an area of policy that is directly relevant to trade.

    Q343       Mick Whitley: In the New Zealand agreement there is a chapter on indigenous people. What about the indigenous people of Australia?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: As I have always said, these are bilateral agreements and each party comes to it with the mandate of what it wants. Australia was not looking for any kind of indigenous peoples chapter, so we have not done it. It was a particular request of New Zealand, which we were very happy to accommodate. It was something that for them, within their own communities, was really important. They were very keen that the Māori voice and those cultural roots should be embedded in the FTA, as they have done with other FTAs of their own, but Australia was not asking for that, so that was not an area we looked at.

    Q344       Chair: Can we turn to our Asia-Pacific tilt? Obviously, this helps us with CPTPP. How would you describe it in terms of the wider Asia-Pacific tilt and our exploiting, which is probably the wrong word, or taking advantage of the opportunities there?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: We are very focused on looking for those new export markets which can help our UK businesses to grow. Part of the challenge the Prime Minister set of taking us to £1 trillion is that that is growing our economy. There is only so much UK businesses can sell to domestic citizens, or to one or another country, so the opportunity to find those new markets has driven us to this, as set out in the integrated review on the Indo-Pacific market opportunities.

    There are others. Obviously, we will continue to work with Canada and the USA. Canada sits within the CPTPP family as well, which is why Canada and Mexico are in my early bird five stars this year, because they are important members of CPTPP. They wanted to be able to have an early upgrade of their FTAs which came through the EU roll-over programme.

    That is a huge market opportunity; it is a growing market of some 2.3 billion people. We want to make sure that UK businesses have as good and as easy access to it as possible, hence the important focus on CPTPP. Those figures are sitting on a market of £9 trillion. It is an enormous market with a young population and massive growth in middle-class consumers, with opportunities for the sorts of goods and services at which the UK is world-class. We want to make sure that they have as much access with as few market access barriers as possible. That is why there has been a huge focus there. We are hopeful—we are in the throes of negotiations with them now—that we will be invited to accede around the end of the year. Anything is possible, but we hope that will afford the opportunity for all sorts of new business expansion.

    We are already seeing businesses having interesting conversations with airports. They want to make sure that their routes match what will be offered when we have CPTPP accession hopefully, because those are the sorts of practical tools that help businesses to be able to reach new markets, which is where we can see that growth coming as quickly as possible.

    Chair: Fantastic. Last but not least, Tony Lloyd.

    Q345       Tony Lloyd: Secretary of State, the FTA has similarities with parts of the Australia and UK digital economy agreements with Singapore. Those digital economy agreements go a little bit further in some areas—for example, on online harm and so on—but where do you draw the line in negotiating what goes into a free trade agreement and what goes into a digital economy agreement? This is not meant as a philosophical question. Are there practical reasons for making that differentiation?

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: The digital chapter, which, as you say, is broad and extensive, is what we negotiated with them. The DEA with Singapore is, if you like, a new layer. We have an existing FTA with Singapore.

    Tony Lloyd: It is a stand-alone.

    Anne-Marie Trevelyan: It is a stand-alone. In the nicest possible way, it is not the most exciting FTA in the world, but under WTO rules you cannot do what I call extra agreements unless you have an FTA. The digital area is very important to Singapore and they are also world leaders on it too. We have created this agreement and what is in it is genuinely world-leading. This is effectively the UK’s poster child of what a digital economy would look like.

    I would be very content—Crawford probably would be too; it means less work—to put that into every FTA we ever negotiated. That would be fantastic. All of that digital economy thinking in an FTA would be great. The reality is that, when you are doing a bilateral agreement with a particular country, they will not always be in a place where you can have that sort of negotiated position which would cover all those areas. Every FTA will be negotiated within the limits of each country’s mandate and capacity to move towards that stage.

    Australia is pretty good and we have negotiated something that is great. It might lead to your point about doing more later, thinking, “There is some stuff in the UK-Singapore digital economy agreement that is good.” At the time, 2021, that seemed too far, but by the time we get to 2025—I do not know—in those areas that their businesses want to develop we would be open to doing that.

    In my ideal world, from an efficiency perspective, every UK FTA—name a country—could have as much as is in the DEA in their digital data chapter, but the realities are the limitations of negotiation that each country has at any point.

    At the moment we are talking to Ukraine, with which we have an FTA—it has a very digitally savvy environment, a very extensive, young population and it is very keen on digital development—on whether we can do a digital economy agreement of the type that we have with Singapore. It is very keen to leapfrog with a lot of these technologies and use those tools and work with the UK to help grow those economies. As you know, we are very keen to support them in every way we can, not only militarily but in helping them sustain and grow their economy.

    The DEA in its present form is there to use as a template for other countries that already have FTAs with us and that might want to take this step. For us as the UK, driving as we did the digital trade principles through the G7 last year, we are absolutely of the view that this is so important to helping businesses, particularly SMEs, to move forward, jump to that next generation and strip away cost by using those digital tools in their business activities. This is in a way our poster child. This is the ultimate that we have with Singapore. It came into force just last week, so we are excited to see how businesses make use of it and take those opportunities.

    Chair: Fantastic. Secretary of State and Crawford Falconer, thank you very much indeed. It has been a mammoth session combining one and a half hours this morning and two hours this afternoon. So it is quite something. Sadly, I suspect the Liaison Committee will probably occupy more space on the news wires tonight than this Committee. We appreciate your coming to see us. Such a long session is hard work; it certainly is for us and almost certainly for you as well. With that, we will draw this to a close.

  • Angus MacNeil – 2022 Statement on Anne-Marie Trevelyan Not Turning Up to Trade Committee Session

    Angus MacNeil – 2022 Statement on Anne-Marie Trevelyan Not Turning Up to Trade Committee Session

    The statement made by Angus Brendan MacNeil, the Chair of the International Trade Committee, on 29 June 2022.

    Welcome to the International Trade Committee’s session on Australia. We had called the Secretary of State, Anne-Marie Trevelyan, but we are told that she will not be coming this morning, to the unanimous disappointment of all members of the Committee. We feel that this shows disrespect to the Committee, and we are very disappointed. We also feel that the CRaG report should be delayed to allow proper time for scrutiny. We think, unanimously, that this sets a very worrying precedent for the way the Government are dealing with scrutiny of their free trade agreements.

  • NFU, Tate & Lyle, Wine and Spirit Trade – 2022 Evidence to International Trade Committee on UK/Australia Trade Deal

    NFU, Tate & Lyle, Wine and Spirit Trade – 2022 Evidence to International Trade Committee on UK/Australia Trade Deal

    The evidence given by Miles Beale, Chief Executive, Wine and Spirit Trade Association, Robert Hodgkins, Shepherd, Gerald Mason, Senior Vice President, Tate & Lyle Sugars, James Russell, Senior Vice President, British Veterinary Association, and Nick von Westenholz, Director of Trade and Business Strategy, National Farmers Union, to the International Trade Committee of the House of Commons on 26 April 2022.

    Members present:

    Angus Brendan MacNeil (Chair); Mark Garnier; Paul Girvan; Sir Mark Hendrick; Anthony Mangnall; Martin Vickers; Mick Whitley; Mike Wood.

    Questions 196-249

    Witnesses:

    Miles Beale, Chief Executive, Wine and Spirit Trade Association, Robert Hodgkins, Shepherd, Gerald Mason, Senior Vice President, Tate & Lyle Sugars, James Russell, Senior Vice President, British Veterinary Association, and Nick von Westenholz, Director of Trade and Business Strategy, National Farmers Union.

    Examination of witnesses

    Witnesses: Miles Beale, Robert Hodgkins, Gerald Mason, James Russell and Nick von Westenholz.

    Q196 Chair: Order. Welcome to the second panel of the UK trade negotiations with Australia inquiry. We have a big panel this time. I issue a memo to colleagues to pick up the pace: be brief and quick if you can. I know that it is a big ask and a lot of you have things you need to say. I ask you all to introduce yourselves—starting on my left—with name, rank and serial number.

    Robert Hodgkins: I am Rob Hodgkins. I am just a sheep farmer, I’m afraid, in Hertfordshire. We farm 2,500 New Zealand Romneys, 16,000 acres of arable and have a sheep milking enterprise, as well.

    Chair: I look at you with great envy.

    Nick von Westenholz: I am Nick von Westenholz. I am the director of trade and business strategy at the NFU.

    Gerald Mason: I am Gerald Mason from Tate & Lyle Sugars. We refine cane sugar and have been doing so for just over 140 years, in two factories in east London.

    Chair: I visited there one time, a number of moons ago.

    Miles Beale: Good morning. I am Miles Beale; I am chief executive of the Wine and Spirit Trade Association, which does what it says on the tin, I think.

    Chair: An excellent line of work.

    James Russell: I am James Russell, and I am senior vice president of the British Veterinary Association—serial number 6314811.

    Q197 Chair: That is name, rank and serial number done. That is the first time I have had that response—very good. I had asked for it.

    I look to you, Robert, with great envy, as I have 32 or 33 sheep myself. The numbers you gave are not quite as bad as the Australians or New Zealanders, who tell me they have, “26”—pause—”thousand sheep”. That puts things in perspective.

    The agreement includes provisions to liberalise market access for Australian sheepmeat producers. What do you expect the impact of those will be on the UK sheepmeat sector? I should be clear and declare that my interest is small, but it is there—it is not as large as yours.

    Robert Hodgkins: Absolutely. At present, they do not import very much, and I expect that to continue in the short to medium term. The biggest threat to us as UK sheep producers is that we cannot produce as cheaply as they are able to. Nick will have the figures to hand, but when I was last looking through, I think it was quoted that, per hundred kilos of meat, the Australian figure was about $180, the UK figure was $450—those are New Zealand dollars.

    We did some back-of-the-napkin maths yesterday. We have an imported New Zealand sheep base, and I have a kiwi farm manager and Scottish shepherds—we like to have the best—but even so we were down at $250. I’d like to think we are a very efficient operator. We constantly rank in the bottom 5% on the Tesco cost of production schemas. My argument would be that if I cannot compete, not many other people will be able to.

    Q198 Chair: What weight of sheep of this?

    Robert Hodgkins: We have New Zealand Romneys, which we imported.

    Chair: That is $180 per—

    Robert Hodgkins: Sorry; $180 per 100 kilos of lamb meat produced was the Australian cost of production figures.

    Q199 Chair: Do you have any concerns about food security in the future? Although we mentioned food security in the Committee a year ago, it was glazed over very quickly. However, with the advent of the Ukraine war, people are more aware of supply chains. We have seen news in the last 24 hours that there will be 20% less grain sown in Ukraine this year.

    Robert Hodgkins: Absolutely. You only have to look at the current price of things. We are now selling wheat for £270 per tonne; a year ago, before the war in Ukraine, it would have probably been £150 or maybe £160. We simply cannot sell enough of it. We have real issues that are becoming apparent in the new global paradigm that were not here a year ago, or were not considered relevant or fashionable.

    Q200 Chair: Do you feel that this agreement gives Australia an emergency market? If any shocks come their way, they can use that emergency market for a while to dump, or to sell—”dump” is a pejorative word that I should not use—into the UK market. That could then destroy a sector—the sheep sector in this case—and then they could sell somewhere else.

    Robert Hodgkins: Yes, absolutely. That was what I was trying to allude to. We do not have any short-term issues at the minute. Australia export massively to Indonesia, China and the middle east—that is not a problem. However, if they do start having an argument with China and they suddenly have millions of tonnes of sheepmeat to drop off somewhere, we are probably the target. If there is a true free trade agreement, with no limits at all, we are probably quite a natural choice. As I said before when I was trying to put some figures around it, we would not be able to compete at all.

    Q201 Chair: My final point relates to the point you have just raised. Australia have several markets, and they have a thing called carcase efficiency, which I think the British Poultry Council also uses within Europe and the UK. There is a preference for different types of meat cut. Is part of Australia’s efficiency—$180 per 100 kg, versus $450 per 100 kg—accessing different markets about sending a cut to certain places?

    Robert Hodgkins: Absolutely, it would be. Part of it is, to be honest, that we operate a slightly different system. If I have a lamb die in a field, I have to go and pick it up. In Australia, you don’t have to. Seemingly, that is not a big thing, but on our size of operation, on an outside lambing system, we typically have about 10% to 15% lamb losses, so I am looking at having 300 dead lambs across Hertfordshire. You put that up against 25 million lambs, and that is 2.5 million lamb carcases across the UK, which I am sure from a public moral point of view would definitely not be acceptable. Those are the things that we are fighting with one hand tied behind our back.

    Chair: Thank you. I am sitting on 4% lamb losses, I have just realised.

    Q202 Mick Whitley: This is to Nick and Rob. The Secretary of State said that the agreement offers British farmers three levels of protection—namely, tariff rate quotas, general bilateral safeguards and product-specific bilateral safeguards. How adequate are those protections?

    Nick von Westenholz: They are clearly better than nothing. The intention of the way they are structured is to allow time for UK farming to adapt to the new trading arrangements. As you just heard from Rob, there is a question mark over whether, in any period of time, it is possible to adapt when there are such significant cost of production differences. Clearly, those three small “s” safeguards are designed at least to allow some time to do so.

    The first that you mentioned—the tariff rate quotas—are in some products very large. In beef, the first year is 35,000 tonnes. We think that, even in year 1—particularly if Australia were to export high-value cuts, so would need to fill boats with smaller volumes—well below 35,000 tonnes could start having an impact on the UK beef sector. They are big, and of course they disappear after a period of time. The longest quotas are for beef and sheep, and after 10 years they go.

    Then just for those two products, we have the second safeguards—the product-specific safeguards. At that point, those are getting pretty large. Those safeguards kick in for lamb at 75,000 tonnes, and at a higher tonnage for beef. You are talking really big volumes at that point. It is worth saying that we don’t know the degree to which the Australians will utilise the trade deal to increase volumes. It is an unknown, but if they were to, those are significant volumes before any tariff would be applicable, so they would be likely to seriously cause downward pressure on the UK market before you could reimpose tariffs through either the TRQ mechanisms or the product-specific safeguards.

    The final element is the bilateral safeguards, which are applicable to anything. They last for a further five years after tariffs are liberalised. For example, on something that is liberalised on day 1, you can use those for five years and then they go. The point is that after 15 years there is no safeguard available for any products. After 15 years, which may seem like a long time but in trade policy is quite a short time, there are not any safeguards. None of those three things will be in play under this FTA. You can use certain safeguards under the WTO agreement.

    It is also worth saying, on the bilateral safeguards—the third lot—that you need to evidence serious harm or the threat of serious harm to be able to use them. That, in our analysis, is a pretty tricky test, not least because you have to demonstrate that that harm is specific to Australia. Given that we are about to do a trade deal with New Zealand as well—or we have signed one and that is to be ratified—the impact on, for example, beef and lamb in the UK is likely to come about because of the cumulative effects of a number of trade deals that we are currently doing. If that is the case, it is quite difficult to see how you could use those bilateral safeguards, because they are country-specific. The short answer is that they aren’t totally meaningless, but we don’t think any of the three safeguard mechanisms are particularly strong.

    Chair: Okay, thank you. Anthony Mangnall has a 10-second question with a 15-second answer.

    Q203 Anthony Mangnall: Very briefly, one of the defences about the uplift in the tariff rate quota over the 15 years is that Australia won’t look to the UK in a sizeable way when, on their doorstep, they have the fastest growing region in the world. Is that a good defence or a red herring?

    Nick von Westenholz: Nobody knows. If we did, that would be great—you could speculate on the markets—but nobody knows the extent to which Australia are going to look to fill their quotas. They seem to me to be so big that it seems unlikely that Australia would fill those quotas.

    Q204 Anthony Mangnall: What does your analysis say about the expected impact cost of shipping or transporting that product over to the UK, and what impact does that have on your farm in those circumstances?

    Nick von Westenholz: That will clearly be a factor. New Zealand already ship considerable volumes of sheepmeat to the UK and EU, so clearly, if the price is right, shipping costs won’t be a problem. But it clearly will depend on the movement of global prices.

    Q205 Martin Vickers: This question is for Nick and Rob. What will be the main economic opportunities for UK farmers within this agreement? Rob?

    Robert Hodgkins: As a primary producer, we are fairly limited, to be honest. They produce so much cattle—beef—and sheep that we are not really going to be exporting over there, not sensibly. We can’t compete with their cost of production, and we would have to try to send it the wrong way around the world compared with where all the shipping containers are heading currently—from China to here. So, possibly processed foods, but nothing, really, that is going to impact farmers per se—

    Nick von Westenholz: I think that’s right. The other thing worth noting is that Australia is already largely liberalised, so under this FTA, there isn’t, for many products, any movement in tariffs. If we are not already selling beef and sheepmeat into Australia where it’s already zero per cent. tariff, this FTA isn’t going to change that.

    What I will say quickly is that the NFU are launching our export campaign tomorrow. You have all been invited to that; I hope some of you will be able to turn up. We are setting out a whole load of building blocks that we need in order to improve our export performance in agrifood across the world and export more. Some of the key elements of that will be around identifying target markets, where you need key criteria. For example, you would like countries to be net importers of food—certainly net importers of the sort of food that the UK is good at producing. You want countries who are not necessarily themselves producing those sorts of foods and who have a high degree of favourability towards British branding, etc.

    Essentially, it’s highly unlikely that Australia or, indeed, New Zealand tick any boxes that fulfil those criteria. There are export opportunities for UK farmers in the future, but countries that have relatively small populations, that are on the other side of the world, and that are very, very effective and efficient at producing the sort of food we produce and are already liberalised, are not really going to be presenting opportunities.

    Q206 Martin Vickers: But in the medium to long term, with successful marketing and so on, there are opportunities, even though they may be limited.

    Nick von Westenholz: Yes. Rob is right—maybe in some processed foods, some manufactured goods. There may be some opportunities in, for example, dairy. There are tariffs into Australia on cheese—we produce delicious cheese, obviously. Those tariffs will come down, and there may be producers out there who can capitalise on those opportunities and start selling a little bit more into the Australian market. I absolutely wouldn’t say there’s zilch. There are some opportunities, but they are modest. They are not going to be the sorts of opportunities that we are really hoping for, which can benefit farming as a whole in the UK.

    Q207 Chair: Just before we move to Anthony Mangnall, let me ask this. It was quite well known, in the early parts of this agreement and these negotiations, that the farming, sheep and NFU sector had concerns about this agreement. Do you still have concerns, and would you go as far as to say that it would be a lot easier and better for your lives if you didn’t have this agreement at all?

    Nick von Westenholz: The Government’s own impact assessment suggests there will be a negative impact on primary producers and the semi-processed sector, and that there will be a reduction in output. As it sits, this deal discretely, on its own terms, does not contain many benefits for UK producers, but it contains some serious risks. More broadly, there are legitimate arguments about how this paves the way for CPTPP, for example, where there might be more opportunities. Clearly, we are just looking at it from a farming point of view. There may be wider benefits for the UK economy, but as the NFU has clearly said, we do not see very much in this deal at all to benefit UK farmers. I do not think that is controversial.

    Q208 Chair: From a farming point of view, is it thumbs up or thumbs down?

    Nick von Westenholz: We would say thumbs down. We do not see where the huge benefits in this deal for farming, which some have suggested there are, lie.

    Chair: Thank you for that clarification. I am just checking up on your position now versus your position earlier.

    Q209 Anthony Mangnall: On that, the NFU wrote a positively emphatic report about UK membership of the GCC and the opportunity for farmers, but if we can’t scale up—we have just been hearing about the potential for us to scale up in a significant and meaningful way to increase our exports—where is the benefit of any of our trade deals for any farming group in the UK?

    Nick von Westenholz: Over time, we may be able to scale up. It does not have to be around volume. This can be around finding high value markets for our goods, particularly with the direction of travel here being around sustainability and high welfare and so on. Those are the sorts of things we excel at. What we want to do, like any business sector, is to increase our market opportunities and penetration. We need to do better on exports, and that will focus on countries such as those in the GCC.

    Q210 Anthony Mangnall: I think the Government’s impact report on the Australia trade agreement was produced before we were in the situation that we are in with Ukraine and our move towards food security. Does that change your analysis in any way?

    Nick von Westenholz: It may do. I was referring to the Government’s own analysis. I think it would be good. We have encouraged the Government to do a more serious deep dive on food security issues. In the current environment, a lot has obviously changed, and a lot could change again. If the conflict in Ukraine is ended, we will see another significant change on some of those issues. It is difficult to model on the basis of a very volatile geopolitical situation, but, clearly, what has happened in the last couple of months will have had some impact on global agri-food trade flows.

    Q211 Anthony Mangnall: It might be helpful if ELMs included something along the lines of public money for public good being farmers actually producing food.

    Nick von Westenholz: We have said that for a long time.

    Chair: I am starting to get worried about the time.

    Q212 Anthony Mangnall: James, the agreement that has been signed has got chapters on SPS, animal welfare and antimicrobial resistance. How effective are they and will they improve food production standards in relation to animals?

    James Russell: We are pleased to see an FTA that contains a chapter on animal welfare and AMR, and that includes a recognition of animals as sentient, which is something that we have called for—for it to be put in place in a very ambitious way—in any of these discussions that the BVA have had input into. That is a really welcome point. It is worth noting that it is the first time that Australia has committed to that, but I think the aspiration of that chapter is somewhat limited. That would be especially true given the amount of leverage that the UK has already given away in terms of tariff-free market access.

    On AMR, there are some welcome points about co-operation on welfare and antimicrobial resistance. There is also a welcome comment that there is a non-regression commitment on animal welfare standards, but we would welcome that more if we had confidence in the starting point in Australia. I am very happy to expand later on some of the concerns that we have and to pick up on some of the points that Professor Bartels made earlier.

    On that, we have the Animal Welfare Act that covers all animal keeping across the UK. There is no equivalent in Australia. There is no national strategy for animal welfare in Australia. There are moves towards that, but, as we understand it, those moves are quite slow, and therefore we just cannot see how we can have confidence in the implementation of standards and the continual improvement of those standards. We recognise as well that where those standards are being drawn up in regionalised ways, there is a comment—I put it no more strongly than that—that those standards may have been very heavily influenced by industry, perhaps, rather than by a direct animal health and welfare perspective.

    Q213 Anthony Mangnall: Are you talking to your opposite numbers in Australia about this? How soon would you want to see that body set up, and how quickly is it likely that you will see that body set up? Does the fact that this is not included in the dispute settlement chapter mean that this is just tinsel and virtue signalling?

    James Russell: Let me take those in order. We have spoken with the Australian Veterinary Association as well. Like us, they are not a regulator. They can only advise and comment, and, certainly, they have been very vocal around commenting. To that other point, there are genuine moves towards improving health and welfare standards and towards improving their consistency, but, I do not have, I am afraid, any kind of knowledge base on which to say that it will be done by then, and also on what the standards will be at that point. We just do not have that confidence at the moment.

    I think we can compare that with where we are at with New Zealand. We are building there on a pre-existing New Zealand-EU FTA, which does go further than this Australian deal, and it does have a much fuller statement on animal health and welfare in that chapter. There is a real commitment in there to mutually work together to broaden and develop the OIE animal welfare standards. That is what we feel is not present when we then look at the Australian deal.

    Chair: Thank you. We have a brief question from Sir Mark Hendrick.

    Q214 Sir Mark Hendrick: This is to Mr Russell. Professor Bartels earlier made reference to animals being given painkillers and to the fact that high percentages of animals have this sort of treatment to try to reduce pain and increase animal welfare. I noticed that, in the background, you were shaking your head quite vigorously at some of the figures being given by Professor Bartels. Can you touch on how you feel about that situation?

    James Russell: Absolutely. Thank you for the opportunity to comment on that. It is really important to get it on the record that we are absolutely confident that the TAC has done a good-faith assessment, but what we recognise—we recognised this in our written evidence to you—is that they have done that within very narrow legal terms of reference. I do not believe that they have answered the question of whether this FTA will have a positive or negative effect on animal welfare. What they have answered, as Professor Bartels has alluded to, is this: does anything in this document limit the legal space for the Government to respond to animal health and welfare challenges? The answers to those have perhaps become a little bit conflated. There is perhaps a feeling among the broader public that the former question has been answered rather than the latter.

    The reason I was shaking my head is that there is probably some disagreement around those figures. Again, I am not going to call into question the figures that Professor Bartels was quoting, but let us look at figures from the Australian Wool Exchange. We are looking just at those merino animals that have undergone mulesing, and there has been a voluntary opportunity since 2008 to notify at the point of sale whether mulesing has occurred and whether pain relief was used in the animals from which that wool was harvested.

    In July 2021, the national percentage of bales with a declared mulesing status was 74%, and, of that, the percentage that declared “non-mulesed” or “ceased mulesing” was 15% and 4% respectively. The percentage that claimed that analgesia was used was 41%. If we broaden it out and look at the whole piece, perhaps we can see where Professor Bartels’s figures come from, but if we just look at that wool sector, which Professor Bartels said that we do not need to worry about, because that is something that we are not producing here and therefore it cannot be factored into this free trade agreement, we are talking about a maximum of 41% of these animals that are mulesed having any pain relief at all. Let us just be realistic about what that might mean. That might mean a shot of local anaesthetic at the point where someone cuts the skin off the back of your legs.

    Q215 Mark Garnier: Thank you for that. Sir Mark was crashing around in the exact question that I wanted to ask, but I might move it on to Nick. The TAC seemed to suggest that you have been crying wolf over this idea that Australian lamb is produced at a lower standard. How would you respond to that?

    Nick von Westenholz: I would say we have not. If you look at the evidence that we have supplied to you, the main point we have made is around the economic impact of the market liberalisation and the points that Rob was alluding to in our ability to compete on cost of production. Our primary concerns are about the economic impact on UK farming, particularly the beef and sheep sector. Certainly, there is nothing in the TAC report because it does not cover those issues. It is not looking at the economic issues. The concerns we have raised primarily about this deal are totally separate to the issues the TAC has reported to.

    There are issues we have raised around differences in standards. First, it has primarily been on the basis of a principle. Where there are differences in standards, is there anything in this deal that allows the UK Government to exercise any additional import controls, for example, compared with what they can already do under their WTO obligations? The TAC very clearly set out that, by and large, the answer was no. If they are already able to do so, they can continue to do so. If they already find it difficult to exercise those WTO obligations, there is very little in this deal that allows them to go above and beyond. It is a very simple deal, in that sense. On differences in standards, the point was raised, for example, about pesticides. At the moment, if Australian farmers use certain pesticides that are banned in the UK and there are no residues or the residues are minimal on imports, they can come in. There is nothing that the UK at the moment can do to prevent imports of food that are grown using pesticides that are banned in the UK.

    The question then arises about whether that would be changed by the FTA. No, the FTA does not change that at all. The same would be true, for example, if the UK were to lift the ban on hormone beef; there would be nothing in the FTA that allowed the UK to specifically ban hormone beef from Australia. Professor Bartels has set out why that might be a reasonable approach. It is just a fact. The deal does not do anything.

    The third point is that we did look, as Professor Bartels spelled out and as did Mr Russell just now, at those issues where it relates to specific trade with the UK. For example, if you take an issue such as live animal exports, which is due to be outlawed here in the UK, it is very much a part of Australian farming, although I should say there is a strong debate there as well about whether to continue with live animal exports. However, at the moment, it is considered to be a very important part of the Australian cattle industry. We do not, obviously, import any live animals for slaughter from Australia, so even though there may be a competitive issue there, that was not something that fell within the TAC’s focus.

    It is worth saying that the TAC’s focus was very specific and narrow. On the good side, it found that there is nothing to prevent the UK regulating around animal welfare and the environment as it wishes. Equally, where there are differences in standards, it does not provide anything over and above what the UK is already either able to do or not able to do.

    Q216 Mark Garnier: Rob, you have 2,500 sheep. You talked about the difference of cost. I think it was $180 per 100 kg for Australia, and $430—

    Nick von Westenholz: $450.

    Robert Hodgkins: It is $450, I think, for a UK lowland farmer.

    Q217 Mark Garnier: How much of that difference can you attribute to different standards?

    Robert Hodgkins: Quite a percentage. We farm, as UK farmers, under a certain amount of social licence. To give you an example, one of our fields, where we outside lamb, is a site called Youngsbury. I counted, and on a bank holiday weekend, we have 150 people walk through that field every day.

    Q218 Mark Garnier: Is that a good thing or a bad thing?

    Robert Hodgkins: It is a very good thing. I have spent some time on Australian farms. On my friend Mark’s farm, he probably had 150 people go through his front door a year.

    Mark Garnier: A popular sheep station, by the sound of it.

    Robert Hodgkins: They are able to farm in a way that is not necessarily under the same amount of public scrutiny. Not only do we have to comply legislatively; as a social conscience, we have to be seen to be doing the right things. I talked earlier about picking up sheep carcases. If I had 300 sheep carcases littered around my fields, I would be phoning the RSPCA every week.

    Q219 Mark Garnier: There are some very significant economic differences. The cost of land in Australia is so much cheaper than it is here, although I know it is less productive. Similarly, if they were to pick up all the dead lambs, tragic though it is, there is an awful lot of space—you would need a helicopter to go and pick them all up.

    Robert Hodgkins: Absolutely. Because we have to check sheep every day, I have to have a shepherd. Our sheep units per shepherd would be much lower, I think. In New Zealand, they can typically operate on 3,000 to 4,000 sheep to one shepherd. At the moment, we operate on 1,000 to 1,200. That is very good, but you still need to have a Hilux and a house. Go to Hertfordshire and try to buy a house where you can have a pick-up truck and sheepdogs. There is a level of cost that we just cannot compete with.

    Q220 Mark Garnier: To take the example of shepherds, we require a shepherd per 1,000 sheep, and they can get away with a shepherd per 3,000 sheep.

    Robert Hodgkins: Absolutely.

    Q221 Mark Garnier: It is because of our regulation. Is that right?

    Robert Hodgkins: Yes. By law, we have to check sheep every day. We have to go through and look at every sheep every day from an animal welfare point of view, and that requires trucks, diesel and so forth.

    Mark Garnier: James, do you want to come in?

    James Russell: Yes. I am jumping the gun on answering your question, but I will pick up on a couple of bits of it. I will pick up on the bit around what this FTA gives us in terms of prohibiting imports from Australia. Our understanding is that, potentially, it enhances our right to say that we do not want this procedure to be carried out on goods that then come into this country. We would want to be pushing the Government to say that that has to come into play in terms of the next steps of discussions.

    If I may, I will pick up on the accusation of crying wolf. I really do not think that we have been, and I do not think that the report suggests we have. We probably started out asking slightly different questions. We recognise that there is fantastic veterinary involvement within the membership of Professor Bartels’s group, and we really appreciate the attention that has been given to the serious health and welfare concerns that exist in Australia, but I am afraid that I would point again to the level of consultation that has gone on between the TAC and the veterinary community. We were given the opportunity to put in two sides of size 12 Times New Roman—incidentally, as a dyslexic, it is impossible to read—and that is the limit of the communication that we have had.

    Q222 Mark Garnier: On exactly that point, this is the first time you have done this. Are you confident that this is a learning process in terms of the scrutiny of all this stuff? I think this is the first TAC report that has been produced. You are clearly not happy with the process, given the amount you have been able to put into it. Do you get the sense that the TAC will look at the next one in a slightly different way as things develop? Do you think it will evolve?

    James Russell: I sat and listened to Professor Bartels’s evidence earlier, and the thing that I heard was that the TAC is comfortable with its current terms of reference.

    Q223 Mark Garnier: Terms of reference are different from working practices, though, aren’t they?

    James Russell: Fair comment, but whether we will still be asking and answering the same questions is probably a conversation that we can have afterwards. Anthony pointed earlier to exactly that question of how far you are able to go in interrogating this from the point of view of protecting health and welfare standards.

    Mark Garnier: If you have any thoughts on this in the future, it would be very useful if you could write to the Committee and let us know if you do not think they are evolving in a Darwinian process.

    Chair: I noticed that the TAC was mentioned as being specific and narrow, and that feeds into our current struggles with the Department. On the 150 people a day, maybe you should have a mobile phone number that they can phone if they see a sheep lambing—if they know what a sheep lambing looks like.

    Q224 Martin Vickers: Could I turn to you, Gerald? There is an eight-year transition before the UK market opens up to Australian sugar. How will that affect your business?

    Gerald Mason: As a cane refiner in the UK, we welcome the agreement. We would have liked to be able to buy cane sugar from Australia duty-free and quota free much earlier than in eight years, because the way UK trade policy works allows EU sugar manufacturers unlimited duty-free, quota free access to the UK today, but it prevents us, as a UK manufacturer, competing with them, by limiting where we can buy cane sugar from. We would have liked to see duty-free, quota free earlier that eight years.

    It gives us a chance to start the relationships with the sugar cane farmers in Queensland again. The typical size of a sugar farm in Australia is 100 hectares, so it is not what you imagine when you think of Australia. Until 1973, we used to buy 20% of our sugar from them, but we lost the relationship when the UK joined the EEC.

    Contrary to a lot of what you have heard, the other really important thing for us is that it allows us, for the first time, to buy a much bigger share of the raw material for our business in the UK from suppliers who produce to the highest ethical and environmental standards. To give you some idea, around 40% of the sugar mills that we could buy from in Australia are independently certified to the highest standards, and the average among cane sugar producers globally is about 7%, so this is not an industry where we expect to buy vast armadas of cheaply produced, poor-quality sugar from them. The reason we want to buy from Australia is that it is an industry, at least in sugar—I don’t know a lot about all the other markets—that produces to the highest standards.

    Finally, it might surprise you to learn that the data we look at, and the calculations we have been working on for the last few years, suggest that the carbon footprint for bringing cane sugar from Australia to the UK and refining it in our operation in London is going to be pretty competitive with the best beet sugar producers in the EU. So we welcome the agreement, although we would have liked it to come before eight years.

    Q225 Martin Vickers: Do you think there will be benefits not just to yourselves, but to the UK economy generally?

    Gerald Mason: Yes, absolutely. The benefit to us is that it really helps us to ensure that our manufacturing business in the UK is competitive and, more importantly than ever, sustainable. Our customers—the retailers, the big food and drink manufacturers, the food service providers—all want us to be buying sugar from suppliers who take ethics and the environment seriously, so it will help us maintain those customers. It will help the UK maintain two different models of sugar production—beet and cane—which we think is good for consumers, choice and competition.

    Martin Vickers: Thank you, Chair.

    Chair: Now we have a short and sweet question from Sir Mark Hendrick.

    Q226 Sir Mark Hendrick: When I questioned the Secretary of State not long after she was appointed on the carbon footprint of transporting goods of whatever kind from Australia or New Zealand as compared to Europe, she gave the impression that there was very little carbon produced through shipping. I don’t quite know what technology she was proposing to use, but I found that difficult to believe, but you have just made a similar point about the carbon footprint from the EU as compared to Australia. How can it be even comparable?

    Gerald Mason: You have to look at the whole model of production, not just the freight element. The freight element of sugar that we could bring from Australia and refine in the UK would be about 25% of its carbon footprint. It is wrong to say that there is no carbon impact of transporting something 12,500 miles—there is. With sugar, you have to look at the whole chain.

    Sugar cane, for instance, is a grass. It gets harvested each year. You don’t have to move thousands of tonnes of soil a year to plough the field and replant it each year, whereas with sugar beet you do have to do that, so that helps offset that. In sugar cane, when the crop is harvested in Australia and then processed in the mills, it is the fibre from the plant that powers the mills—the bagasse—so they don’t bring in fossil fuel to power the plants, whereas in beet factories in Europe they will generally use either natural gas to power the factory or, in some cases, they still use coal.

    The models are completely different. There is more freight carbon with cane sugar, but there is a lot less agricultural and processed carbon. When you add it up, that is why the two are broadly comparable.

    Q227 Sir Mark Hendrick: So it is the production methods and not necessarily the transport—

    Gerald Mason: Yes. I would say that you should never see distance as a proxy for carbon footprint. Of course there is carbon with distance, but in all of our supply chains there are lots of other elements to it, and we’re all obviously learning quickly now how to measure and assess these things.

    Q228 Chair: Nick von Westenholz of the NFU, it’s not just sheep that you are dealing with, of course; there is more to farming. Last year the NFU said it was incredibly concerned about the opening of the UK market to Australian sugar, as a different rulebook applies to Australian sugar growers compared to UK beet growers. Can you flesh out your objection a little bit more?

    Nick von Westenholz: Yes. Actually, we have already touched on this. It doesn’t have to be specific to sugar; particularly with a view to pesticides—plant protection products—there is a difference in approach in Australia compared to the UK.

    It gets a little complicated when it comes to sugar because, as Gerald has just outlined, they are different crops: they have different agronomic requirements, and these are obviously different parts of the world. But the Australian system for approving pesticides is a risk-based system, and in the UK we use a hazard-based system. Now, there are advocates of both, but the upshot is that the hazard system is far more precautionary and generally will lead to less pesticides being available for farmers. In particular, the hazard-based system will say that if certain active ingredients have certain characteristics, they will not even be considered for approval, whatever risk mitigations you may be able to put in place to reduce risk.

    So there are products available in Australia for all sorts of different crops that are not available in the UK. I make no comment about whether that involves higher or lower standards; it’s just a different standard that allows farmers in Australia access to tools to help them to control pests and diseases that are not available to UK farmers. This is actually a really good example of where the Australian deal, as I was saying earlier, doesn’t introduce any sort of mechanism to address that clear difference in regulatory approaches.

    Q229 Chair: You think it’s undermining farming, particularly in Norfolk and East Anglia, or wherever?

    Nick von Westenholz: UK beet growers have had huge issues with pests over the last couple of years and they have had important pesticides removed from use, which has exacerbated that situation. So, yes, producing sugar in the UK is costly. There have been increased costs on it and some of those increased costs can be traced to the regulatory system under which UK sugar producers operate. That is the basic point that we are making.

    Q230 Chair: Gerald Mason, could you just respond to the NFU—as sweetly as possible, if you don’t mind the pun?

    Gerald Mason: When we first heard the farmers saying this—that somehow Australian sugar was illegal—obviously it made us concerned, and we wanted to take a look at the situation and understand it. We don’t want to buy sugar that is produced illegally. We spent quite a lot of time looking at it a few years ago, and what we found is that the situation is much more complicated than that, as I think the TAC outcome makes clear.

    Broadly speaking, it is not that the pesticides are illegal; it is that not every pesticide is approved for every crop in every geography, for good reason. We found that there were 20 active ingredients that were approved for use on cane in Australia that were not registered for sugar beet in the UK. That was the core of the farmers’ complaint. But, actually, when you look at it, seven of those 20 were registered for use on other crops in the UK. So it was not that they were somehow wrong; it is just that they were not approved for use in sugar beet in the UK, because they had no use. So there were 13 that were not registered for use in sugar beet production in the UK.

    When we looked at it the other way round, we also found that there were pesticides approved for use on sugar beet in the UK that were not registered for use on sugar cane in Australia, and six were not registered at all for any type of crop in Australia. So it works both ways—it’s a two-way street.

    The other important thing we found is that there was a huge difference in application rates, so it’s not just about what’s applied. We think that the application rate for pesticides on sugar beet in the UK is about 45% to 50% higher than it is on the sugar cane in Australia. So it’s not just the type of products you are using; it’s also the amount that you apply, obviously.

    For us, the other thing that is interesting is cost. The TAC work said, “Does this give a cost advantage to the sugar cane farmers in Australia?” If you are going to start talking about cost, you have to look at the whole model of agriculture, and of course the one big difference between sugar cane production in Australia and sugar beet production in the UK is that there is virtually no income support for sugar cane farmers in Australia, whereas in the UK at the moment sugar beet farmers get about 25% to 30% extra on top of the value of the sugar beet they sell from income support. All of that is due to change, obviously.

    Our conclusion from all of this is that it is true that there are different systems for different crops, because there are different genuses and climates. We are not suggesting that Australia is any better, although in some areas it is, on things like application rates; we are just suggesting that these are both well-regulated markets that are appropriate to their specific situations. It bothered us when we read that the farmers were saying that somehow Australian sugar was illegal; the conclusion that we got to was very similar to the conclusion that the TAC reached.

    Q231 Chair: The politics of sugar goes a little further than just the NFU or whatever; it also affects other countries, and it can quickly become quite bitter. To go with the flow of this, the Commonwealth Caribbean countries, or Belize and Fiji, to name but two countries—one with the Queen as head of state—are heavily reliant on exporting raw cane sugar under preferential terms granted by the UK. How far will the new market access for Australia be at the expense of such developing countries? It might also have a constitutional knock-on for the monarchy, of course.

    Gerald Mason: As the grantee of the royal warrant for Tate & Lyle Sugars, I will not get involved in a discussion about royal issues, Chair.

    Q232 Chair: The point I am trying to make is that there are a lot of knock-ons with sugar. We have heard from countries that will be affected by changes in sugar, with companies moving elsewhere. Such countries have tailored their economies, as they see it, to supplying people like Tate & Lyle, but then Tate & Lyle simply ups and vanishes. I could use the terms they used, but I will not.

    Gerald Mason: When I joined Tate & Lyle in 2004, you would have been absolutely right, because the vast majority of our sugar came from ACP countries and LDCs—countries like Barbados, St Kitts, Jamaica and all these countries that today do not export any sugar to the UK.

    Q233 Chair: What happens to them when you decide to go to Australia?

    Gerald Mason: Today, they do not sell sugar to us anyway. Only about 15% of all the sugar that comes to the UK today comes from ACPs—

    Q234 Chair: And what percentage was it before?

    Gerald Mason: It was 100% when I joined 18 years ago—

    Q235 Chair: Is that because you have gone elsewhere and forced them to move?

    Gerald Mason: No, that is because of changes that the EU made to the sugar beet regime. The way that the system worked is that it had to combine trade and—

    Q236 Chair: Will this make it worse for them?

    Gerald Mason: I do not think that it will make a great deal of difference at all. The big difference was made when the EU deregulated beet sugar production—

    Q237 Chair: You will still be getting 15% of your sugar from them?

    Gerald Mason: Yes, we will, roughly speaking, because that is the hard core—we are the biggest buyer of Fairtrade sugar in the world, and we can only get that from the smallholder model in some of the ACP countries.

    To reiterate, it is not us that has chosen not to buy from these countries over the years; the fact is, beet sugar production became deregulated in the EU. The thing that gave these countries the value of their preference was that a hole in the market was left for them by limiting beet sugar production, but that was ended in 2017; beet sugar producers can now produce as much as they want, and they did. They expanded their production in the UK and the rest of the EU massively. That has pushed the prices down, which means that most of those countries choose not to sell their sugar to us any more. It is not us choosing not to buy it.

    Q238 Mark Garnier: Do you import the cane, or the raw sugar, then refine in the UK?

    Gerald Mason: We import raw cane sugar: the sugar cane, the plant, is harvested and goes to a mill near wherever the sugar cane is grown, and it gets crushed and turned into a kind of rough brown sugar, which we bring in.

    Q239 Mark Garnier: You bring that in. My question really is, why is it economically better to do that, rather than to refine it in Australia and bring it back as refined sugar?

    Gerald Mason: There are a couple of reasons really. One is that most of the sugar mills that refine cane sugar cannot produce sugar to food grade standard. You would need a massive amount of investment in the dozens of mills that supply our one factory to do that, so it is more cost-effective. Another reason is that the freight cost is much more. You have to move refined sugar in food grade containers, whereas we move raw sugar in these big vessels. A third reason is that, once we get the sugar here, there are about 650 different products that UK consumers want from us, so if we were bringing in the processed product, we would still have to do a degree of transformation once we got it here. That is why the model works.

    Q240 Mark Garnier: But it is not to do with the weird anomaly that we see in the rice market where unmilled rice does not have any tariffs levied on it, but milled rice does. You are not arbitraging the tariffs.

    Gerald Mason: No, most of the free trade agreements that the UK has allow duty-free access for both raw and refined product. We would always say that we can compete with refined product because of those three reasons I just talked to you about.

    Chair: We are dealing with life’s goodies quite often in this session. We are moving away from sugar to something else.

    Q241 Sir Mark Hendrick: Could I ask a question to Miles Beale, who has sat very patiently throughout this session so far? Clearly, the sector that you work in, Miles—unlike some of the sectors we have discussed earlier—can see a great advantage in the deal we are talking about, particularly, I would guess, gin and whisky. Can you expand on what opportunities you see for the people you represent and how they see things going forward in this deal?

    Miles Beale: By and large, you are correct. The DIT trade strategy White Paper in 2017 made it clear that imports are almost as important as exports to GDP in the UK. Wines and spirits are two products where the benefit of a trade deal is clear. The UK is the largest exporter of spirits in the world. It is the second largest importer of wine by both volume and value. There are tariffs on spirits going into the Australian market. They are low but they will be removed if this agreement goes through. Equally, the good news for UK consumers is that there are tariffs on Australian wine. There is actually more Australian wine on the UK market than wine from any other destination, which might seem odd given that it is the other side of the world, but that is a fact. It is about 250 million litres a year and 330 million bottles. Getting rid of the tariffs will save between 6p and 9p per bottle.

    On the basic facts of an improvement in trade terms just on tariffs, there are huge benefits. There are some benefits in terms of technical barriers to trade. That is where we would say more could be done. The agreement in principle included some ideas around a wine and spirit annex. That did not materialise in the Australia free trade agreement, although it has in the New Zealand one. I think we would accept that there was a bit of a trade-off between speed and the perfect outcome.

    The only other thing I would say on technical barriers to trade is there are some things we would still like to be done outside of a free trade agreement. For example, mutual acceptance of wine-making practices would certainly open up both markets for both countries. That does not need to be done in bilateral trade deals; it could be done through CPTPP, but actually it could be done through things like the World Wine Trade Group, so there are ways that you could improve on this deal outwith it. Lastly and probably most importantly, there are things that the UK Government could and should do that would improve on a good base. We have had one example where they got it right, which was they abolished wine imports certificates, which has had, at least, the same benefit as getting rid of tariffs will have for trade in wine with Australia.

    On the other hand, one could argue that the Government have not shown a co-ordinated approach to some of this, because—just as one example—the most obvious practical technical barrier to trade for the wine sector would be if the Chancellor’s proposals on the alcohol duty reform go through. Just to bring that to life a bit, getting rid of tariffs will save about £22 million a year just on trade in Australian wine imported to the UK. That will be dwarfed by a new taxation regime in the UK, which will put about £92 million—almost £100 million extra—on to trade just in Australian wine imports to the UK, so the Government are not joined up in that respect.

    Sir Mark Hendrick: Chair, it is Anthony’s question next on technical barriers. Do you want to go ahead?

    Anthony Mangnall: Unless you have a follow-up.

    Sir Mark Hendrick: I think Miles has touched on the technical side.

    Chair: The only barrier I am wondering about is when will we see Auz-secco—or Oz-secco—on the market? That is the innovation we are waiting for.

    Q242 Anthony Mangnall: Let us go to a hypothetical scenario. When retirement is inevitably forced upon me and I retire in south Devon and set up my wine shop—

    Chair: Not long to go, Anthony.

    Q243 Anthony Mangnall: Not long to go, Chair. I decide to set up as a wine merchant. There I am, looking at this deal, saying, “Great, we have got rid of export certificates. Great, we have removed tariffs.” I am then being hit by the UK’s own duty on wine. Can you go into that a little bit more? We are talking most often about small farmers and the impact of this deal. We are now talking about this, being one of the things we most boasted about, and the wine industry saying, “This is fantastic—5% lost.” We are then saying that all our small wine merchants are going to be impacted because our own customs and laws are changing.

    Miles Beale: That is right. The tariffs have a benefit for you, if you were setting up that business. It is between 6p and 9p for every bottle of wine you import from Australia. The problem will be that the new duty regime will put up the cost and, therefore, the price of at least 93% of all Australian wines on the market. Australian wines will be hit harder than anything else. That is principally because the Chancellor wants to introduce something where duty increases with strength, and Australia has the hottest growing conditions on the planet.

    Q244 Anthony Mangnall: You will not thank me for saying that I am a prolific cider drinker, and I would have to be in the south-west. What is the share of Australian wine into the UK market versus French, Spanish or Italian?

    Miles Beale: By volume, Australia is No. 1. About one sixth of UK wine imports are from Australia. In fact, 20% of Australian wine imports are then re-exported to somewhere else in the northern hemisphere. That’s the thing that makes the UK the centre of the global wine trade. So it is very much about trading, not simply about importing for consumption. Australia is No. 1; even by value it comes in at No. 3. Italy and France are the next two, but Australia is No. 1.

    Q245 Anthony Mangnall: So it hits our small businesses; it hits our wine merchants who export. Why on earth were we getting evidence that this was good for the wine business?

    Miles Beale: The deal is good for the wine business. The problem is that the Chancellor’s domestic policy on taxation wipes it out and goes further. The point is that they need to be co-ordinated. There is obviously an error; it is not joined up. To give you a practical example, there are almost 1,000 independent wine merchants in the UK. On average, they will stock between 1,000 and 1,500 different types of wine. To give you a guide, Tesco, which does the most volume sales of wine, has only 500. So it is a disproportionate impact on small businesses, such as those 1,000 or so wine merchants.

    The other way to give the Committee an example is that 93% of Australian wines will become more expensive. An average Australian red will be about 15% ABV. That will be an extra 68p for that bottle, just in duty. That is additional—VAT is applied after duty. It is already at £2.23. I don’t wish to guess what the Committee likes to spend on a bottle of wine, but £2.23 is already tax. Another 60p on top would be quite a significant increase.

    Anthony Mangnall: For Angus, the answer is “never enough”. Thank you for that.

    Q246 Chair: Maybe moving on that theme a little bit, I have known many whisky drinkers in my time. Some have consumed a little and some have consumed quite a lot. The one thing they have in common is that they are able to define what they are drinking. They do know they are drinking whisky.

    Apparently, in Australia the definition of whisky is not very clear. Almost anything can be labelled as whisky, which is a strange circumstance. Will there be an agreed definition of what is whisky in Australia, so that it can be enforceable? There is also a feeling that the Australians run a discriminatory excise regime that favours domestically produced spirits, over the best stuff produced in Scotland.

    Miles Beale: If we take those two in turn—in reverse order, perhaps. There is a perfectly fair comment that says that the agreement in principle talked about protecting definitions of whisky, and Scotch whisky would have expected to benefit from that agreement. It hasn’t happened; it should happen. It can be done without reopening an entire free trade agreement, and I think it should be.

    Secondly, the definition is really about ensuring that people understand what they are drinking. So it needs to be clear to consumers when they are drinking Scotch versus a whisky produced somewhere else. There are, of course, other parts of the UK that produce decent whisky, and that will be different from Australian whisky. What I think is really important is that we do not fall into the same trap as the Australians, which is to promote through the tax system one particular product over another. As I am sure the Chair would agree, fair competition between the whiskies would see his favourite come out on top, I am sure.

    Q247 Chair: Absolutely. I can see a number of whiskies on the west coast of Scotland, in particular, doing well. We are rushed for time and there is a camera issue going on as well, but I have a final point on sugar. From 2017 to 2019, Belize exported 22% of its sugar to the UK, Guyana exported 14% and South Africa exported 13%, as did several of those ACP countries. Belize was about 88% dependent on the UK in the 2017-19 period, after the sugar beets stuff; Fiji was 38% dependent. Tate & Lyle was the one refiner. There is an issue being flagged by DIT that it could impact those countries quite badly if you substitute the higher-cost, lower-volume cane sugar from the LDCs and the ACP countries with lower-cost, higher-volume cane sugar from Australia.

    Gerald Mason: Fiji has no interest in shipping to us anymore. This year they are going to have the lowest sugar crop in 60 years.

    Q248 Chair: Might they be interested in coming years?

    Gerald Mason: We will always be there, but most of these industries are in decline. They are relatively high cost, and they cannot meet the ethical and environmental standards that our market wants now.

    Q249 Chair: Belize?

    Gerald Mason: We still buy a significant quantity from Belize. Actually, Belize is trying to develop its local market in the Caribbean. As lots of the other Caribbean producers decline, in places such as Jamaica, Barbados and Saint Kitts, Belize sees its future as switching to supplying direct-consumption sugars in the Caribbean. Tate & Lyle owns in Belize as well. If it made economic sense, we would bring the sugar here; it makes more sense to keep it closer to home where it is more valuable now as the other producers go out of business. I can write to the Committee separately about this, as you are clearly very interested in it. I will get some more detail to you.

    Chair: Thank you. I appreciate that. There is an offensive interest in making sure that the whisky gets its proper place in Australia, and maybe a defensive interest in sugar—or an offensive interest, depending on which way you look at it. Thank you all very much; time has been our enemy, but I appreciate the five of you giving evidence very much. It is particularly good to have a vet on the panel, who knows his serial number, especially as my daughter is studying veterinary science at Glasgow University. On that family note, it is good to have a vet here. I thank you all—sheep producers, NFU, sugar, wine, and vets—for coming along. It has been really useful—as was our earlier panel with Professor Bartels. Thank you.