UK-EU SPS Agreement Could Boost Scottish Seafood Exports, Reduce Trade Barriers
House of Lords hears sanitary and phytosanitary deal would end physical checks on farm produce and veterinary certificates, though not all paperwork will disappear
Quick Look
- The UK and EU are close to finalising a sanitary and phytosanitary agreement to reduce Brexit trade barriers.
- The deal would end physical checks on farm produce and eliminate £200 veterinary certificates, while potentially removing "Not for EU" labelling requirements.
- It could significantly boost Scottish langoustine and oyster exports, though customs, VAT and safety declarations will still be required.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
Since Brexit, UK agrifood exporters have faced significant barriers including physical checks, veterinary certificates costing £200 each, and "Not for EU" labelling requirements. Up to 20,000 British businesses stopped exports to the EU due to these border controls. The EU implemented all Brexit rules in Dover from day one, while the UK took a more lenient approach with random inspections.
A new agriculture agreement with the EU would not wipe out all Brexit paperwork but may greatly increase sales of Scottish langoustines and oysters, the House of Lords has heard. The UK and EU are close to finalising a sanitary and phytosanitary (SPS) agreement to reduce Brexit trade barriers, and while it will have "modest" impact on the UK economy the agreement will be significant, peers on the European affairs committee were told on Tuesday. It would spell the end of physical checks on farm produce and the end of the need for veterinary certificates, which cost £200 each. It could also remove the need to label food as "Not for EU", which has been "a significant problem" for wholesalers and distributors, said William Bain, head of trade policy at the British Chambers of Commerce. Bain, who is Scottish, said it could reopen the door for exports of Scottish langoustines and molluscs. Before Brexit, they would be fished and diners in Paris could be eating them within a day. Many exports stopped because border checks reduced the seafood's shelf life. However, an SPS deal would not be erase all paperwork, with British exporters still having to fill out customs, VAT, and safety and security declarations. Labour's plan to reduce trade barriers for food exporters would mean applying all future EU rules and regulations in relation to farm produce under what is known as "dynamic alignment". Under negotiation is an agreement to accept the 76 laws that have either been passed in Brussels or from which the UK has already diverged in the farm food area. On Tuesday, peers were told that the UK could have pursued an alternative path such as the "mutual recognition" of food standards that supports trade between New Zealand and the UK. That would have removed the need for dynamic alignment with the EU, said Shanker Singham, chair of the Growth Commission and a past adviser to some MPs on alternative arrangements for Brexit in Northern Ireland. He said the UK had significant commercial heft in talks, with about 23% of the EU's global exports of agrifood going to the UK – with "much less" going the other way. This is partly because the EU implemented all Brexit rules in Dover and beyond from day one, with up to 20,000 British businesses stopping exports to the bloc as a result. The UK, however, never applied the border controls in the same way, eventually opting for random inspections on fresh food. Singham said the trade imbalance gave Keir Starmer a huge buyer's advantage in talks. "The interesting thing here is that the UK government hasn't really used the leverage it has," he said. He suggested the UK could pursue an alternative system where both sides would "mutually recognise" their standards, as New Zealand and Australia do, rather than dynamically align with the EU. "If you don't ask, you don't get," he told peers. "One has to be very, very careful when one is giving away one's own regulatory authority in any area. Sam Lowe, head of trade and market access practice at Flint Global, said the advantage of dynamic alignment was that "physical inspections would pretty much disappear", something a New Zealand-Australian style mutual recognition deal would not afford. "What we're actually asking for is the EU to recognise our dynamic alignment, and in doing so, treat our exporters better," he said. The EU exporters have an advantage because the UK recognises their rules. "So what we are actually doing is asking them to give us something back on that," he added.
What to Watch
AI outlook — possibilities, not facts
SPS agreement will be finalised within the next few months
Likely · Within months
Scottish langoustine and oyster exports to EU will resume within 6 months of agreement
Likely · Within months
UK government may face pressure to pursue mutual recognition alternative
Possible · Within months
Open Questions
- When exactly will the SPS agreement be finalised?
- Will all 76 EU laws be accepted under dynamic alignment?
- Could the UK successfully pursue mutual recognition instead?
- How quickly will Scottish seafood exports resume after the agreement?






