The buffer period between the U.K.'s vote to leave the European Union and its implementation is nearly at an end, and business sectors are doing what they can to ensure minimal disruption after March 29, 2019.
The manifesto sent to Theresa May effectively asks the U.K. do everything in its power to ensure free, or at least frictionless, trade. U.K. business is accustomed to operating under a single customs, financial and regulatory environment like other EU partners. Any change to these policies could rattle business continuity.
In an earlier report, the National Farmers Union outlined three potential outcomes of Brexit negotiations and their expected impact:
The food supply chain is particularly dependent on unimpeded trade.
The European Sea Ports Organization, for example, recently called on negotiators to consider the cost of customs disruption, which could lead to bottlenecks across the EU.
But it's not just seaports that are at risk of disruption.
Leaving the EU raises the prospect of a "hard border" between the Irish Republic and the U.K.'s Northern Ireland, raising operating costs in an otherwise co-dependent region. In 2015, more than £1.3 billion worth of agriculture products traversed that border as either imports or exports.
"It is hard to overstate the potential of international trade implications of Brexit for UK farmers," the NFU wrote in the earlier report. "Whatever the eventual outcome from the forthcoming negotiations, there are likely to be significant changes to the competitive landscape in which our farmers operate."
Source: https://www.supplychaindive.com/news/UK-Brexit-food-supply-chain-manifesto/524677/