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Executive summary
Jan 7, 2021
4 min to read
As Big Ben chimed in Westminster on the evening of December 31, 2020, at 11 p.m. – or midnight in Brussels, the United Kingdom (“UK”) completed its withdrawal from its 47-year participation in the European Union (“EU”).
The withdrawal process had commenced on January 31, 2020, with the implementation of the Withdrawal Agreement which was followed by a holding over period. Throughout that period, all the rights and obligations of the EU continued in the UK for a transition during which the two sides would negotiate the terms and conditions of their relationship past December 31, 2020.
Of interest to Canada during that transition period was the status of Canada-EU Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (“CETA”) that had taken seven years to negotiate with the EU and had been provisionally implemented on September 21, 2017. With the December 31, 2020 end of the Withdrawal Agreement transition period would also end the CETA free trade agreement as it applied to the UK.
Canada and the UK already both shared the same sovereign and were members together in North Atlantic Treaty Organization, the G7, the G20 and the Commonwealth. These historical and political ties underscored the extent of the trade and investment relations between two countries:
Eager to avoid an absurd situation where Canada and the UK would have to go from a free trade situation under CETA back to a World Trade Organization trade situation, with all the applicable tariffs on goods and non tariff trade barriers associated with that status, negotiations between the two countries concluded with a joint announcement on November 21, 2020, whereby the provisions of CETA would be rolled over and continued after the end of the Withdrawal Agreement transition period until such a time that it would be replaced by a formal Canada-UK free trade agreement. The counties undertook to commence negotiations of the Canada-UK free trade agreement in 2021.
Thus, it is business as usual for those entrepreneurs importing from, or exporting to, the UK as it was before Brexit with all the advantages of CETA, such as:
If prior to December 31, 2020, you were considering doing business with the UK, the advantages of CETA will continue post-Brexit. As such, the same questions regarding doing business in a foreign country will need to be considered:
Our BCF team will be pleased to advise you concerning the opportunities offered by the continuation of CETA with the UK post-Brexit.
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