Minggu, 14 Juli 2019

Could The United Kingdom Be The Next Norway For Tesla? - CleanTechnica

July 14th, 2019 by  


Here at CleanTechnica, we’ve published a lot about Norway’s smashing EV success. It makes us wonder, who’s next? One possible answer is the United Kingdom.

This article summarizes what I found out about the market potential for Tesla vehicles in the UK over the next few years. There are many reasons the UK market is similar to Norway and could see the same success, but also many differences that could help or hurt the prospects. In this article, I’ll review all the ones I can think of and if I missed any relevant factors, I’m depend on you, the reader, to mention them in the comments (in addition to pointing out if you disagree with any of the points I made).

Image courtesy of Tcxcadet of the TMC Forums

Cost Savings

As part of our close UK second quarter coverage, we told readers about the opening of the design studio in the UK and made the point that after incentives, the car costs less to buy that the slower BMW 3 series. But that was just the first of many advantages.

Maintenance Savings

Last month, I figured 5 year maintenance costs on the Model 3 to be about $1,000, where Edmund’s calculates that the BMW 3 series has a 5 year maintenance cost of $7,202!

The real story is that after the first 3 years of free maintenance, the 3 series costs about $3,000 per year to maintain. Tesla’s record of depreciation is already strong and if they come anywhere close to meeting their goals for full self driving, depreciation is expected to be minimal or even negative compared with the $6,000 a year you expect to lose when owning the BMW 3 series.

Fuel Costs

Since gas (and electricity) cost about double what they cost in the US, the fuel savings are close to double what we see in the US, or close to $2,000 a year instead of $1,000.

Gas prices in the UK average $1.58 a liter (about $6 per U.S. gallon) as opposed to $1.95 a liter (about $7.40 per U.S. gallon) in Norway.  Electricity prices in the UK average 22 cents a kWh as opposed to 14 cent in Norway.  With gas cheaper and electricity more expensive, I don’t see the UK moving as quickly to electric vehicles as Norway is doing.

On the other hand, the fuel savings of $2,000 a year are still significantly large to cause many people to switch, even without other reasons.

New Business Tax Exemption

The news this week is that the UK has decided to exempt those that drive electric cars as their company cars from the business tax. According to this article, 6 out of 10 cars in the nation are purchased as part of a fleet, and this tax exemption will be worth between $2,500 and $5,000 per year (depending on the company’s tax bracket).

Plug In Incentives

The UK government is offering a grant worth about $4,400 to people who buy plug in vehicles. Last year, the government changed the law to only allow those buying fully electric cars to qualify, much to the dismay of the auto industry that had been taking advantage of the program to reduce the cost of cars with minimal all electric range.

Political Considerations

There are important differences that will slow Tesla’s progress in the UK compared to Norway. The UK has a significant domestic auto industry and as I mentioned in this recent article,  there are 3 types of costs to not making your cars in the country you sell them in:

  1. Internal Costs: Transportation costs, transportation time, and the huge working capital cost of building a car and then not getting paid for it for 30 to 60 days, as opposed to less than 30 days for cars made and sold on the same continent. If Tesla builds a gigafactory anywhere in Europe, these costs should be minimal.
  2. External Costs: Taxes, tariffs, and local electric vehicle incentives are frequently more favorable for vehicles made partially or fully in the country or trade region they are sold in. This is really all about Brexit, and while I’m hopeful this will go well, I could be wrong.  This article in Forbes details some of the possibilities. but since it doesn’t mention Tesla, I’ll also speculate that if the UK negotiates a lower tariff with the US than the Germany, its possible that Tesla would supply them cars from the US because the tariff may more than counter the higher shipping costs.
  3. Buy Local: Nationalism, patriotism, regionalism, whatever you call it — people like to buy products that are made closer to where they live. They like to help keep the people in their country or region employed. With no immediate plans to build a plant in the UK, this is slightly negative for Tesla. Although the passing of Brexit shows there is significant nationalism in UK politics, cars from around the world seem to be warmly received by the automotive media.  Tesla in particular has received glowing reviews recently in the UK.

Restrictions

The UK isn’t just using the carrot to encourage people to go electric, they are also using the stick.

Special zones is a big factor. Those going into London face a $15 daily charge.  Today, you can avoid this charge by using a low emission vehicle, but by October 2021, only electric vehicles will be eligible to avoid this very significant fee.  Since that is just over 2 years away and most people keep their cars for more than 2 years, everyone must be thinking that NOW would be a great time to get an electric vehicle. If that wasn’t enough, they also have a $16 per day charge to enter the ultra low emissions zone in central London.  This area is set to greatly expand in October 2021.

Between these 2 fees, people that drive into London daily will all be at least considering an electric car (assuming they don’t want to use public transit), because $31 per day would be big impact on the majority of upper middle class people that drive cars into the city.

On the other hand, according to Wikipedia, the UK doesn’t plan to ban the sale of new gas and diesel cars till 2040, while Norway plans to ban them by 2025. Without all these big sticks, those in rural areas will probably be slower to convert than people in Norway.

Conclusion

Looking at the July 10th BMW press release, you can see that Tesla sales for June have already caused BMW sales to drop over 11% from last year. Meanwhile, there was only a 4.9% decline in the overall market. I have little doubt the 3 series drop alone is much greater. Even more astonishing, this included only a week of Tesla Model 3 deliveries. In that same report, there was a 49% decrease in plug-in hybrid sales.  It could be that as people see that the Tesla Model 3 just simply works exceptionally well, and they wonder why they should even bother with all the complexity of a plug in hybrid.

Clearly Tesla is having a big impact.

The real question (which I don’t have an answer for) is this: will Tesla come to replace BMW in the luxury market over the next few years with it’s simple lineup of a few cars outselling BMW’s more differentiated lineup (as is happening now in the US)?  If you believe this will happen, Tesla will sell a similar number of cars in the UK as they sell today in the US!

Even though the car market is about an eighth the size (about 2 million per year vs. 16 million per year), people in the UK like luxury vehicles more than the people in the US. With BMW sales in the UK for the first 6 months at about 120,000, doubling that and assuming Tesla could replace BMW’s share would give us yearly sales (after the Model Y is available) of 240,000.

That would be shocking, but the more shocking speculation is: If the UK’s combination of enhanced incentives, fuel costs, political considerations and restrictions cause the country to truly go electric like Norway (clearly not as quickly), and Tesla could achieve a 25% market share not of just electric vehicle sales, but all vehicle sales, that could end up being over 500,000 vehicles a year!

Tesla may need a second gigafactory in the UK just to satisfy the UK demand, especially if Brexit goes poorly.

Use my Tesla referral link to get 1,000 miles of free Supercharging on a Tesla Model S, Model X, or Model 3, here’s the link: https://ts.la/paul92237 (but if someone else helped you, please use their link). 
 




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About the Author

A Software engineer for over 30 years, first developing EDI software, then developing data warehouse systems. Along the way, I've also had the chance to help start a software consulting firm and do portfolio management. In 2010, I took an interest in electric cars because gas was getting expensive. In 2015, I started reading CleanTechnica and took an interest in solar, mainly because it was a threat to my oil and gas investments. Follow me on Twitter @atj721 Tesla investor. Tesla referral code: https://ts.la/paul92237



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https://cleantechnica.com/2019/07/14/could-the-united-kingdom-be-the-next-norway-for-tesla/

2019-07-14 17:00:59Z
CBMiW2h0dHBzOi8vY2xlYW50ZWNobmljYS5jb20vMjAxOS8wNy8xNC9jb3VsZC10aGUtdW5pdGVkLWtpbmdkb20tYmUtdGhlLW5leHQtbm9yd2F5LWZvci10ZXNsYS_SAQA

Brexit: Philip Hammond warns UK will lose control in no-deal scenario - BBC News

Media playback is unsupported on your device

Philip Hammond has warned the UK will not be able to control key elements of a no-deal Brexit.

The chancellor told BBC Panorama that if the UK leaves without a deal, then the EU will control many of the levers - including what happens at the French port of Calais.

Ex Brexit Secretary David Davis told the programme that Whitehall never believed a no-deal Brexit would happen.

The EU has set the UK a deadline of 31 October to leave the bloc.

But despite spending £4.2bn on Brexit preparations, Mr Hammond warned that the government has limited influence on how a no-deal scenario might look.

Asked if the UK can control Brexit, he said: "We can't because many of the levers are held by others - the EU 27 or private business. We can seek to persuade them but we can't control it."

He added: "For example, we can make sure that goods flow inwards through the port of Dover without any friction but we can't control the outward flow into the port of Calais," he told Panorama.

"The French can dial that up or dial it down, just the same as the Spanish for years have dialled up or dialled down the length of the queues at the border going into Gibraltar."

French officials have previously rejected suggestions they could resort to a "go-slow" policy at Calais if there is no Brexit deal - insisting that closing the port would be "economic suicide".

Media playback is unsupported on your device

Earlier this month, Mr Hammond told MPs a no-deal Brexit could cost the Treasury up to £90bn and said it would be up to them to ensure that "doesn't happen".

He has also said it was "highly unlikely" he would still be in his job after Theresa May stands down next month.

The Panorama programme - entitled Britain's Brexit Crisis - will outline the tensions in government during Theresa May's time at Number 10 when it is broadcast on Thursday.

Mr Davis, who quit as Brexit secretary last year, told the BBC that the Treasury wanted to avoid talking about the prospect of leaving without a deal.

He concluded that many in Whitehall did not believe it would ever happen - despite two years of planning.

"I've got to be able to say to you 'if this doesn't work we'll leave anyway' and you've got to believe it.

"And for you to believe it I've got to believe it. And I don't think Whitehall really ever believed that they would actually carry out the plans we laid so carefully over two years."

Tory leadership favourite Boris Johnson has pledged the UK will leave the EU on 31 October - with or without a deal.

His rival Jeremy Hunt has said he can negotiate a new deal for the UK "by the end of September" - and that he "expects" the UK will leave the EU before Christmas.

Voting among the party's 160,000 or so members is under way, with a winner expected to be announced on 23 July.

Britain's Brexit Crisis is on BBC1 this Thursday, July 18, at 9pm.


Do you have any questions about what would happen in the event of a no-deal Brexit?

Use this form to ask your question:

If you are reading this page and can't see the form you will need to visit the mobile version of the BBC website to submit your question.

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https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-48978739

2019-07-14 13:41:10Z
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Leaked UK memo says Trump left Iran deal to spite Obama - AOL

LONDON (AP) — A U.K. newspaper published more leaked memos from Britain's ambassador in Washington on Sunday, despite a police warning that doing so might be a crime.

In one 2018 cable published by the Mail on Sunday, U.K. ambassador Kim Darroch says President Donald Trump pulled out of an international nuclear deal with Iran as an act of "diplomatic vandalism" to spite his predecessor, Barack Obama.

The memo was written after then-Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson visited Washington in a failed attempt to persuade the U.S. not to abandon the Iran nuclear agreement.

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British Conservative party leadership contender Boris Johnson gets in a car as he leaves home in south London, Tuesday, June 18, 2019. Contenders for leadership in Britain's ruling Conservative Party to become the next Prime Minister, jostled for attention Monday as the race narrowed into a contest to seize the mantle of challenger to front-runner Boris Johnson. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham)

British Conservative party leadership contender Boris Johnson leaves home in south London, Tuesday, June 18, 2019. Contenders for leadership in Britain's ruling Conservative Party to become the next Prime Minister, jostled for attention Monday as the race narrowed into a contest to seize the mantle of challenger to front-runner Boris Johnson. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham)

Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnson is an American-born British journalist and former mayor of London.

Britain's Conservative party leadership candidate Boris Johnson talks during the first party hustings at the ICC in Birmingham, England, Saturday June 22, 2019. (AP Photo/Rui Vieira)

British Conservative Party leadership and prime minister contender Boris Johnson leaves home in south London, Friday, June 21, 2019. Britain's next leader will be chosen by about 160,000 members of the governing Conservative Party in a runoff between two candidates: former Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson and current Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham)

British Conservative Party leadership and prime minister contender Boris Johnson gets in a car as he leaves home in south London, Friday, June 21, 2019. Britain's next leader will be chosen by about 160,000 members of the governing Conservative Party in a runoff between two candidates: former Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson and current Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham)

British Conservative party leadership contender Boris Johnson arrives for a live TV debate in central London Tuesday, June 18, 2019. Britain's Conservative Party is holding a contest to replace Prime Minister Theresa May, and party legislators will continue to hold elimination votes until the final two contenders will be put to a vote of Conservative Party members nationwide, with the winner due to become Conservative Party leader and prime minister. (AP Photo/Vudi Xhymshiti)

British Conservative Party lawmaker Boris Johnson leaves his home in London, Thursday, June 13, 2019. Britain's Conservative Party is holding an election to replace Prime Minister Theresa May, who resigned last week after failing to lead Britain out of the European Union on schedule. Former Foreign Minister Boris Johnson is currently the bookies favorite to replace May. (AP Photo/Frank Augstein)

Britain's Conservative Party lawmaker Boris Johnson gestures as he speaks during the official launch of his leadership campaign, in London, Wednesday June 12, 2019. Boris Johnson solidified his front-runner status in the race to become Britain's next prime minister on Tuesday, gaining backing from leading pro-Brexit lawmakers.(AP Photo/Frank Augstein)

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"The outcome illustrated the paradox of this White House: you got exceptional access, seeing everyone short of the president; but on the substance, the administration is set upon an act of diplomatic vandalism, seemingly for ideological and personality reasons - it was Obama's deal," Darroch wrote.

Darroch announced his resignation last week after the newspaper published cables in which he'd branded the Trump administration dysfunctional and inept. The White House responded by refusing to deal with him, and Trump branded the ambassador a "pompous fool" in a Twitter fusillade.

U.K. police are hunting the culprits behind the leak — and, contentiously, have warned journalists that publishing the documents "could also constitute a criminal offence."

Yet both Johnson and Jeremy Hunt, the two contenders to become Britain's next prime minister, have defended the media's right to publish.

"We have to make sure that we defend the right of journalists to publish leaks when they are in the national interest," Hunt said.

British officials have said they have no evidence that hacking was involved in the documents' release, and that the culprit is likely to be found among politicians or civil servants in London.

Police are investigating the leak as a potential breach of the Official Secrets Act, which bars public servants from making "damaging" disclosures of classified material. Breaking the act carries a maximum sentence of two years in prison, though prosecutions are rare.

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https://www.aol.com/article/news/2019/07/14/leaked-uk-memo-says-trump-axed-iran-deal-to-spite-obama/23769228/

2019-07-14 12:30:31Z
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A YouTube star was killed in the UK’s first fatal crash involving an electric scooter - yahoo.com

Emily Hartridge
Emily Hartridge

YouTube/Emily Hart


  • A YouTube star and presenter was killed after a crash between an electric scooter and a truck in London.

  • Emily Hartridge made videos about fitness and mental health, and her most popular video had 24 million views.

  • Multiple UK news outlets said that it was the first fatality involving electric scooters in the UK, where they are illegal to ride on public roads but their increasing popularity could lead to a law change.

  • Police said that a woman in her 30s was killed in the crash, and multiple UK news outlets identified Hartridge as the victim while YouTubers and TV presenters paid tribute.

A YouTube star and presenter was killed in an electric scooter crash in what is believed to be the first fatal crash involving one of the scooters in the UK.

An announcement on Emily Hartridge's official Instagram account on Saturday said that Hartridge "was involved in an accident yesterday and passed away."

"We all loved her to bits and she will never be forgotten. She has touched so many lives it's hard to imagine things without her," the post said.

Instagram Embed:
//instagram.com/p/Bz2exS2nQdM/embed
Width: 540px

London's Metropolitan Police said that a woman in her 30s died at the scene after a crash between an electric scooter and a truck on Friday.

Multiple UK outlets, including the BBC, The Guardian, and Sky News, identified Hartridge, 35, as the victim.

Read more: The scooter wars are coming to Europe this summer. But first they have to prove they're not like Uber.

Hartridge had almost 50,000 Instagram followers and almost 350,000 subscribers on YouTube, while her most popular video has 24 million views. She posted regularly about topics like mental health, fitness, and sex.

Youtube Embed:
//www.youtube.com/embed/ZnmXslKnv4Y
Width: 560px
Height: 315px

Sky News reported that she was due to host a mental health event on Saturday, and wrote that she wanted to "create a safe space where women could talk about whatever they wanted and feel supported by other women who have gone through similar experiences."

She was also was also an actress, appeared in the short series "Sketch My Life" and the series "Oh S**t I'm 30."

YouTube Creators said in a statement that it was "deeply saddened" to learn of her death, while other YouTubers and UK TV presenters also paid tribute.

FILE - In this May 28, 2019, file photo, a man on a scooter passes a parked scooter along the Mission Beach boardwalk in San Diego. As electric scooters have rolled into more than 100 cities worldwide, many of the people riding them have ended up in the emergency room with serious injuries. Others have been killed. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull, File)
FILE - In this May 28, 2019, file photo, a man on a scooter passes a parked scooter along the Mission Beach boardwalk in San Diego. As electric scooters have rolled into more than 100 cities worldwide, many of the people riding them have ended up in the emergency room with serious injuries. Others have been killed. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull, File)

Associated Press

Sky News and The Guardian said that the crash is believed to be the first fatal crash involving an electric scooter in the UK. It is not known what kind of scooter was involved in the crash.

In the US, at least 11 deaths involving electric scooters were recorded between January 2018 and June 2019.

In 2018, they were found to be involved in at least 1,545 accidents in the US.

Read more: The e-scooter boom has caused at least 11 deaths in the US since the beginning of 2018

Riding electric scooters is illegal on public roads in the UK, but in influx of electric scooter companies have meant that they are still sometimes used. The UK government is considering dropping the ban as a result.

The UK's transport minister is meeting with the heads of major scooter companies including Bird and Lime next week to tell them that they need to tell customers about the current law when selling their products, according to The Guardian. 

NOW WATCH: Inside Roborace: the Formula One for self-driving cars

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2019-07-14 11:07:00Z
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Brexit: Philip Hammond warns UK will lose control in no-deal scenario - BBC News

Media playback is unsupported on your device

Philip Hammond has warned the UK will not be able to control key elements of a no-deal Brexit.

The chancellor told BBC Panorama that if the UK leaves without a deal, then the EU will control many of the levers - including what happens at the French port of Calais.

Ex Brexit Secretary David Davis told the programme that Whitehall never believed a no-deal Brexit would happen.

The EU has set the UK a deadline of 31 October to leave the bloc.

But despite spending £4.2bn on Brexit preparations, Mr Hammond warned that the government has limited influence on how a no-deal scenario might look.

Asked if the UK can control Brexit, he said: "We can't because many of the levers are held by others - the EU 27 or private business. We can seek to persuade them but we can't control it."

He added: "For example, we can make sure that goods flow inwards through the port of Dover without any friction but we can't control the outward flow into the port of Calais," he told Panorama.

"The French can dial that up or dial it down, just the same as the Spanish for years have dialled up or dialled down the length of the queues at the border going into Gibraltar."

French officials have previously rejected suggestions they could resort to a "go-slow" policy at Calais if there is no Brexit deal - insisting that closing the port would be "economic suicide".

Media playback is unsupported on your device

Earlier this month, Mr Hammond told MPs a no-deal Brexit could cost the Treasury up to £90bn and said it would be up to them to ensure that "doesn't happen".

He has also said it was "highly unlikely" he would still be in his job after Theresa May stands down next month.

The Panorama programme - entitled Britain's Brexit Crisis - will outline the tensions in government during Theresa May's time at Number 10 when it is broadcast on Thursday.

Mr Davis, who quit as Brexit secretary last year, told the BBC that the Treasury wanted to avoid talking about the prospect of leaving without a deal.

He concluded that many in Whitehall did not believe it would ever happen - despite two years of planning.

"I've got to be able to say to you 'if this doesn't work we'll leave anyway' and you've got to believe it.

"And for you to believe it I've got to believe it. And I don't think Whitehall really ever believed that they would actually carry out the plans we laid so carefully over two years."

Tory leadership favourite Boris Johnson has pledged the UK will leave the EU on 31 October - with or without a deal.

His rival Jeremy Hunt has said he can negotiate a new deal for the UK "by the end of September" - and that he "expects" the UK will leave the EU before Christmas.

Voting among the party's 160,000 or so members is under way, with a winner expected to be announced on 23 July.

Britain's Brexit Crisis is on BBC1 this Thursday, July 18, at 9pm.


Do you have any questions about what would happen in the event of a no-deal Brexit?

Use this form to ask your question:

If you are reading this page and can't see the form you will need to visit the mobile version of the BBC website to submit your question.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-48978739

2019-07-14 09:19:52Z
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Brexit: Philip Hammond warns UK will lose control in no-deal scenario - BBC News

Media playback is unsupported on your device

Philip Hammond has warned the UK will not be able to control key elements of a no-deal Brexit.

The chancellor told BBC Panorama that if the UK leaves without a deal, then the EU will control many of the levers - including what happens at the French port of Calais.

Ex Brexit Secretary David Davis told the programme that Whitehall never believed a no-deal Brexit would happen.

The EU has set the UK a deadline of 31 October to leave the bloc.

But despite spending £4.2bn on Brexit preparations, Mr Hammond warned that the government has limited influence on how a no-deal scenario might look.

Asked if the UK can control Brexit, he said: "We can't because many of the levers are held by others - the EU 27 or private business. We can seek to persuade them but we can't control it."

He added: "For example, we can make sure that goods flow inwards through the port of Dover without any friction but we can't control the outward flow into the port of Calais," he told Panorama.

"The French can dial that up or dial it down, just the same as the Spanish for years have dialled up or dialled down the length of the queues at the border going into Gibraltar."

French officials have previously rejected suggestions they could resort to a "go-slow" policy at Calais if there is no Brexit deal - insisting that closing the port would be "economic suicide".

Media playback is unsupported on your device

Earlier this month, Mr Hammond told MPs a no-deal Brexit could cost the Treasury up to £90bn and said it would be up to them to ensure that "doesn't happen".

He has also said it was "highly unlikely" he would still be in his job after Theresa May stands down next month.

The Panorama programme - entitled Britain's Brexit Crisis - will outline the tensions in government during Theresa May's time at Number 10 when it is broadcast on Thursday.

Mr Davis, who quit as Brexit secretary last year, told the BBC that the Treasury wanted to avoid talking about the prospect of leaving without a deal.

He concluded that many in Whitehall did not believe it would ever happen - despite two years of planning.

"I've got to be able to say to you 'if this doesn't work we'll leave anyway' and you've got to believe it.

"And for you to believe it I've got to believe it. And I don't think Whitehall really ever believed that they would actually carry out the plans we laid so carefully over two years."

Tory leadership favourite Boris Johnson has pledged the UK will leave the EU on 31 October - with or without a deal.

His rival Jeremy Hunt has said he can negotiate a new deal for the UK "by the end of September" - and that he "expects" the UK will leave the EU before Christmas.

Voting among the party's 160,000 or so members is under way, with a winner expected to be announced on 23 July.

Britain's Brexit Crisis is on BBC1 this Thursday, July 18, at 9pm.


Do you have any questions about what would happen in the event of a no-deal Brexit?

Use this form to ask your question:

If you are reading this page and can't see the form you will need to visit the mobile version of the BBC website to submit your question.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-48978739

2019-07-14 07:58:36Z
52780332071927

Brexit: Philip Hammond warns UK will lose control in no-deal scenario - BBC News

Media playback is unsupported on your device

Philip Hammond has warned the UK will not be able to control key elements of a no-deal Brexit.

The chancellor told BBC Panorama that if the UK leaves without a deal, then the EU will control many of the levers - including what happens at the French port of Calais.

Ex Brexit Secretary David Davis told the programme that Whitehall never believed a no-deal Brexit would happen.

The EU has set the UK a deadline of 31 October to leave the bloc.

But despite spending £4.2bn on Brexit preparations, Mr Hammond warned that the government has limited influence on how a no-deal scenario might look.

Asked if the UK can control Brexit, he said: "We can't because many of the levers are held by others - the EU 27 or private business. We can seek to persuade them but we can't control it."

He added: "For example, we can make sure that goods flow inwards through the port of Dover without any friction but we can't control the outward flow into the port of Calais," he told Panorama.

"The French can dial that up or dial it down, just the same as the Spanish for years have dialled up or dialled down the length of the queues at the border going into Gibraltar."

French officials have previously rejected suggestions they could resort to a "go-slow" policy at Calais if there is no Brexit deal - insisting that closing the port would be "economic suicide".

Media playback is unsupported on your device

Earlier this month, Mr Hammond told MPs a no-deal Brexit could cost the Treasury up to £90bn and said it would be up to them to ensure that "doesn't happen".

He has also said it was "highly unlikely" he would still be in his job after Theresa May stands down next month.

The Panorama programme - entitled Britain's Brexit Crisis - will outline the tensions in government during Theresa May's time at Number 10 when it is broadcast on Thursday.

Mr Davis, who quit as Brexit secretary last year, told the BBC that the Treasury wanted to avoid talking about the prospect of leaving without a deal.

He concluded that many in Whitehall did not believe it would ever happen - despite two years of planning.

"I've got to be able to say to you 'if this doesn't work we'll leave anyway' and you've got to believe it.

"And for you to believe it I've got to believe it. And I don't think Whitehall really ever believed that they would actually carry out the plans we laid so carefully over two years."

Tory leadership favourite Boris Johnson has pledged the UK will leave the EU on 31 October - with or without a deal.

His rival Jeremy Hunt has said he can negotiate a new deal for the UK "by the end of September" - and that he "expects" the UK will leave the EU before Christmas.

Voting among the party's 160,000 or so members is under way, with a winner expected to be announced on 23 July.

Britain's Brexit Crisis is on BBC1 this Thursday, July 18, at 9pm.


Do you have any questions about what would happen in the event of a no-deal Brexit?

Use this form to ask your question:

If you are reading this page and can't see the form you will need to visit the mobile version of the BBC website to submit your question.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-48978739

2019-07-14 07:41:44Z
52780332071927