UK-EU summit live: Starmer and EU leaders set to agree post-Brexit reset deal
FILE PHOTO: Starmer and von der Leyen in New York, September 25, 2024. Leon Neal/Pool via REUTERS
The economic benefit of any deal will be limited by Starmer's promise to not rejoin the EU's single market or customs union.
But he has instead sought to negotiate better market access in some areas - a difficult task when the EU opposes so-called "cherry picking" of EU benefits without the obligations of membership.
Removing red tape on food trade will require Britain to accept EU oversight on standards, but Starmer is likely to argue that it is worth it to help lower the cost of food, and grow the sluggish economy.
One trade expert who has advised politicians in both London and Brussels said the government needed to "break the taboo" on accepting EU rules, and doing so to help farmers and small businesses was smart.
Trade experts also said Britain benefited from the greater focus on defence, making the deal look more reciprocal, and said improved ties made sense in a more volatile world.
When "trade disruption is so visible and considerable" anything that reduced trade friction with a country's biggest trading partner made sense, said Allie Renison, a former UK government trade official at consultancy SEC Newgate.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
8 minutes ago
- BBC News
Marathe takes on Rangers role
Leeds United chairman Paraag Marathe is to take up a new position at Scottish Premiership side will work in the role of the club's new vice-chairman alongside his existing position at Elland news comes after Leeds' owners, San Francisco 49ers Enterprises, completed a multi-million pound takeover at Ibrox led by private healthcare tycoon Andrew Cavenagh, who will become Rangers' has been on the Whites' board of directors for five years, serving as vice-chairman for over two years before taking on the role as was a key figure in leading the club's ownership transition to 49ers Enterprises in July 2023.


The Independent
9 minutes ago
- The Independent
Russian captain denies manslaughter in North Sea collision as he faces UK trial
The Russian captain of a cargo ship that collided with a U.S. tanker in the North Sea pleaded not guilty to the manslaughter of one of his crew at a U.K. court hearing on Friday. Vladimir Motin, 59, from St. Petersburg, appeared by video link from prison for the pretrial hearing at London's Central Criminal Court. Assisted by a Russian interpreter, he denied a charge of gross manslaughter over the death of 38-year-old Mark Angelo Pernia. Motin was ordered detained until his next hearing, and his trial was set for Jan. 12. The Portugal-flagged cargo ship Solong was traveling at about 15 knots (17 mph or 28 kph) when it hit the anchored tanker MV Stena Immaculate about 12 miles (19 kilometers) off the coast of northeast England on March 10, sparking a fire that lasted nearly a week. The tanker was transporting jet fuel for the U.S. military. Rescuers saved 36 people from both ships. Pernia, from the Philippines, is missing and presumed dead. U.K. authorities have said that there's nothing to indicate that the collision was connected to national security. Environmental damage from the collision was far less than initially feared, though thousands of pellets used in plastics production, known as nurdles, from the ruptured containers on the Solong have since washed up along England's east coast. Conservationists say the nurdles aren't toxic, but can harm animals if ingested.


Sky News
11 minutes ago
- Sky News
More than 40% of Europe slides into drought, including pockets of Greece, southern Italy and Spain
Well over a third of Europe, including parts of holiday destinations like Spain, Greece and Italy, are now in drought. March was Europe's warmest on record - a trend driven by climate change - and also saw below average rain across large parts of the north and east of the continent. Now 41.2% of Europe finds itself in some form of drought, according to the latest update from the EU's European Drought Observatory, which covers 11 to 20 May. It is most acute in pockets of south-eastern Spain, Cyprus, Greece and Albania, where the strongest "alert" category has been issued, as well as parts of Poland and Ukraine. But broad stretches of northern and eastern Europe through France, Germany, Poland and Ukraine also drying up, sowing concerns about crop yields. On Thursday, the UK's Environment Agency officially declared a drought in North West England after river and reservoir levels were licked away by a dry spring. Greece tourism is 'unsustainable' In Greece, "overtourism" from millions flocking to its beaches adds further pressure to water supplies, said Nikitas Mylopoulos, professor of water resource management at Thessaly University. "The tourist sector is unsustainable and there is no planning... leading to a tremendous rise in water demand in summer," he told Sky News. "The islands have an intense problem of drought and water scarcity." Islands like Santorini and Mykonos are now forced to ship in water from Athens or desalination plants to provide for showers and swimming pools. In the past, many residents could make do with local methods like rainwater harvesting. But agriculture is a far bigger drain on the country's water, with waste rife and policies lacking, said Prof Mylopoulos. 1:55 Wildfire season could be 'particularly difficult' This year's hot and dry conditions are also fuelling the risk of yet another fierce wildfire season in Greece. Last week civil protection minister Ioannis Kefalogiannis warned of a "particularly difficult" summer. He said a record 18,000 firefighters have been deployed and the drone fleet almost doubled in a bid to combat fires being fuelled by a hotter climate. Droughts and their causes are more complicated, but scientists at World Weather Attribution say global warming is exacerbating drought in some parts of the world, including around the Mediterranean. They found the drought of 2022, which spread across the Northern Hemisphere, was made 20 times more likely by climate change. The International Hydropower Association said drought and intense rain in Europe are pushing power plants to "operate at the limits of their existing equipment". Extreme weather costs the EU about €28.3bn (£23.8bn) in lost crops and livestock per year, according to insurance firm Howden. Hayley Fowler, professor of climate change impacts at Newcastle University, said: "With global warming, we expect more prolonged and intense droughts and heatwaves punctuated by more intense rainfall, possibly causing flash floods. "In recent years, we have experienced more of these atmospheric blocks, causing record heat and persistent drought, as well as severe flooding in other locations in Europe.