- Title: UK's Dover is ready for Brexit but eyes French border and paperwork
- Date: 15th October 2019
- Summary: DOVER, ENGLAND, UK (OCTOBER 11, 2019) (REUTERS) TRAFFIC AT PORT OF DOVER VARIOUS OF LORRIES DRIVING PAST SIGN READING (English): 'WELCOME TO DOVER / PLEASE DRIVE CAREFULLY' CCTV SCREENS SHOWING TRAFFIC IN VARIOUS AREAS OF PORT OF DOVER TERMINAL CONTROL OFFICER STANDING UP AND LOOKING AT SCREENS FERRY PORT READING (English): 'DOVER' WORKER GUIDING LORRY ON TO FERRY SILHOUETTE OF PORT OF DOVER CEO, DOUG BANNISTER, WITH PORT SEEN IN BACKGROUND BANNISTER BEING INTERVIEWED (SOUNDBITE) (English) PORT OF DOVER CEO, DOUG BANNISTER, SAYING: "Look the Port of Dover is fully ready for Brexit. We've also been in contact with our sister ports in Calais and Dunkirk, they're ready, our ferry operators are ready. Now what we are saying by being fully ready is: we're not guaranteeing that there's going to be no disruption or no congestion because clearly under a no-deal Brexit there would be, but what we are saying is that we're ready to handle that." VARIOUS OF LORRIES DRIVING PAST SIGNS READING (English/French): 'EXIT' (SOUNDBITE) (English) PORT OF DOVER CEO, DOUG BANNISTER, SAYING: "I expect that the first of November it will be okay, and primarily that's down to it being a low traffic day. But I do think that as we roll forward into the next week, that we could start to see some of it begin to bite. I think we'll have enough lead time to start to feel how tightly that's going to bite to put in place the appropriate measures, but it will be more towards the end of the end of that week where we'll start to feel whether this is going to be a significant issue or not." WHITE CLIFF / QUEUE OF LORRIES BY PORT DOVER CASTLE WITH UNION JACK FLAG IN FOREGROUND UNION JACK FLAG FLYING WHITE CLIFFS / FERRY AT PORT (SOUNDBITE) (English) PORT OF DOVER CEO, DOUG BANNISTER, SAYING: "One of the challenges that we have is that we don't yet know what the rules of the game are going to be, whether it’s a no-deal Brexit or a deal Brexit, and if it's a deal Brexit is it a customs union, is it a trade agreement, is it a Canada, is it a Norway, we don't know this yet. As soon as the industry, the sector, logistics knows what those are they'll adapt very, very quickly but we need to know that." BANNISTER SPEAKING (SOUNDBITE) (English) PORT OF DOVER CEO, DOUG BANNISTER, SAYING: "The earliest that we can understand the rules of the game, so what is the trading environment in a post-Brexit scenario, the better the entire industry will be able to build in their plans and what they need to do to be successful in that environment. Clearly, we'd like to know as early as possible and the earlier that we know the much better prepared we'll be for that exact scenario. Right now, all we can plan on is a no-deal Brexit scenario." HIGH VIS JACKET READING (English): 'PORT OF DOVER' TERMINAL CONTROL OFFICER WORKING AT DESK
- Embargoed: 29th October 2019 09:47
- Keywords: Port of Dover Dover channel Doug Bannister CEO Brexit customs no-deal Brexit
- Location: DOVER, ENGLAND, UNITED KINGDOM
- City: DOVER, ENGLAND, UNITED KINGDOM
- Country: United Kingdom
- Topics: European Union,Government/Politics
- Reuters ID: LVA001B17JFIF
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text:Dover, Europe's busiest ferry port, is as prepared for Brexit as it can be, but there are uncertainties over the extent to which freight operators are ready for new declarations and whether France will keep goods moving, the port's chief executive said.
As one of the United Kingdom's main arteries for European trade since Roman times, Dover handles 119 billion pounds ($149 billion) worth of trade, or 17 percent of the country's trade in goods each year, making it a potential Brexit pressure point.
"The port of Dover is fully ready for Brexit," CEO Doug Bannister told Reuters from the control tower overlooking the port where at gale was buffeting hundreds of lorries from Europe motoring towards the British road system.
"Now what we are saying by fully ready is: we are not guaranteeing that is going to be no disruption or congestion because clearly under a no-deal Brexit there would be, but we are saying is that we are ready to handle that."
Prime Minister Boris Johnson is trying to strike a divorce deal to allow an orderly departure on October 31, though he has said he will exit without a deal unless the EU does a deal.
A "no-deal" divorce could disrupt trade between the world's fifth largest economy from the world's biggest trading bloc, dislocating supply chains, cutting food imports and turning southern England and northern France in giant lorry parks as congestion at Dover and Calais come to a standstill.
So, when will the trouble hit - if it does?
Bannister, who has warned that a 2-minute delay at Dover could lead to a 17-mile queue of lorries in Kent, said he expected lower traffic volumes in the first days after Brexit, especially with France celebrating All Saints' Day on November 1.
"I do think that as we roll forward into the next week, that we could start to see some of it begin to bite," he said. "I expect that November 1 it will be okay and that is primarily due to it being a low traffic day,"
BREXIT RULES?
While Dover's famous White Cliffs are just 33 km (21 miles) from France, the port has held immense symbolic, strategic and military significance for centuries as the key to the kingdom.
The Norman Castle which sits atop the cliffs may lie upon a much older Iron Age fort, while in the Cold War, the tunnels deep beneath the castle were designated as a regional power centre should London be destroyed by a Soviet nuclear attack.
Bannister said one of the problems is that no-one actually knows on what terms the United Kingdom will be trading after Brexit.
He says that if there is a deal, "it depends what the nature of the deal is. One of the challenges that we have is that we don't yet know what the rules of the game are going to be."
"Right now, all we can plan on is a no-deal Brexit scenario."
British government no-deal planning documents from August, known as Operation Yellowhammer, said 50-85% of lorries might not be ready for French customs reducing the flow rate to 40-60% of current levels within one day.
"That is a pessimistic outlook," Bannister. "What I am anticipating is that there will be more border-ready vehicles by the time they get to the border."
On motorways across the United Kingdom, signs warn: "Freight to EU - papers may change 1 Nov. Please check."
Other uncertainties are what happens on the British road system - whether it clogs up - and what happens on the EU border in Calais.
Bannister said the size of trade with the EU meant that any delays would hurt both sides.
"Government (in the UK) has been very clear and very firm that there will be no incremental checks at the border so traffic will continue to flow - we have not had the same level of assurance from the French authorities," he said.
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