Brexit: Chemical makers desperately seeking certainty
12 Apr 2019
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London – The EU has agreed to delay the UK’s potential exit until the end of October, or sooner if parliamentary support is achieved.
Although ‘no deal’ is most likely off the table, it is highly likely that the uncertainty will drag on, said Steve Elliott, chief executive of the Chemical Industries Association (CIA).
Elliott also reported ‘murmurings’ among CIA member companies that the relative certainty around a ‘no deal’ exit might be better than drifting along further.
With no deal, he added, tariffs in the chemicals world would be 5.5% and 6.5%: “The vast majority of our sector could live with that.”
Delays at borders would be a far more significant problem, Elliot noting: “Some 60% of our exports head to the EU27, and up to 70% of our imports come from the EU27.
“Any disruption around our increasingly just-in-time operations will be a problem, and there are studies that say the chemical sector will most badly affected.’
In survey of CIA members, about half of respondents said their contingency plans included stockpiling inputs near their production sites, and outputs near customers.
‘About 80% are close to completing those contingencies,’ said Nick Sturgeon, CIA’s energy and competitiveness director.
A similar number were planning to switch chemical registrations under REACH to an EU entity, but only half have thus far implemented it, Sturgeon added.
However, about 3000 of the UK’s 12,000 chemical registrations have already been transferred to EU27 companies.
ERJ edit of report by UK-based sister title Urethanes Technology International
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