Cont: Brexit: Now What? 9 Below Zero

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The prohibition was a protectionist measure to support EU chicken farmers

How so? The same rules apply to chicken produced in the EU and US producers can sell to the EU simply by conforming to EU product standards.

I'm not sure it will matter so much now, but I suppose UK chicken farmers might still want to keep it anyways.

It’s not farmers that take issue with the practice, it's consumers. Consumers object because it’s used as a substitute for cleanliness in processing and raising the animals. The only thing dipping in chlorine accomplishes is to sterilize any chicken excrement that is still on the bird, so eating it won’t make people sick. The excrement is still there and people still end up eating it.

EU standards are structured to ensure that the excrement isn’t there in the first place so ensuring it’s sterilized and eating it won't make people sick is moot.
 
Apparently the UK will seek a "Canada style deal" with the EU.

So we'd be outside a customs union and relying on unicorn-fuelled technology to reduce the administrative overhead. In particular the EU would want to ensure that the UK isn't a back-door into the EU. Any technological solution would be very expensive and take years to implement (not least because the technology doesn't exist).

Canadian companies exporting to the EU have to prove that their products conform to EU standards. Under a Canadian-style deal, UK companies would have to do the same - an expensive and time consuming process.

The Canadian deal does not include services, 80% of the UK economy and a sector which has a significant trade surplus with the EU. It specifically does not include financial passporting, something that is very important to the financial services sector.

Now any and all of this could be negotiated in a mutually beneficial way. The problem is that a bespoke trade deal is going to take orders of magnitude longer to negotiate than an "off the shelf one".

Even if the UK was able to take the Canada deal, the UK's physical proximity to the EU may mean that there will be issues.

One major reason for a Canada deal is so that the UK can immediately agree a catastrophic deal with the US :mad:
 
You are getting "sovereignty". And you can chuck that pole out of the country. Isn't that nice?

Yeah... After all why would a customer who books my service on a ongoing basis and pays me whether they use it or not (including bank holidays) and gave me a lovely Xmas present. Instead I can have a blue passport in 5 years...
 
How so? The same rules apply to chicken produced in the EU and US producers can sell to the EU simply by conforming to EU product standards.

In principle they can, but a lot of US producers are already set up to use pathogen reduction treatment (PRT) washing, and to switch over to a different process would cost them a lot of money.

It’s not farmers that take issue with the practice, it's consumers.

I find that unlikely. Most consumers probably don't even understand the issue. To the extent that they even know it exists, it's probably because of public relations campaigns by producers. A lot of product regulations exist at the behest of established producers even though they are claimed as consumer protection. The EU isn't alone in this regard, the US does it too.

Consumers object because it’s used as a substitute for cleanliness in processing and raising the animals. The only thing dipping in chlorine accomplishes is to sterilize any chicken excrement that is still on the bird, so eating it won’t make people sick. The excrement is still there and people still end up eating it.

FDA requirements already include pre-wash inspection to remove excrement, and the wash itself helps remove any traces of excrement that may have been undetected.

EU standards are structured to ensure that the excrement isn’t there in the first place so ensuring it’s sterilized and eating it won't make people sick is moot.

If traces of excrement are actually the source of concern, then that specifically is what the regulations should target. But they don't.
 
Canadian companies exporting to the EU have to prove that their products conform to EU standards. Under a Canadian-style deal, UK companies would have to do the same - an expensive and time consuming process.

This doesn't make sense to me. Don't UK companies already have to prove that their products conform to EU standards? Don't EU standards get applied to products produced within the EU? Haven't they been doing this all along?
 
FDA requirements already include pre-wash inspection to remove excrement, and the wash itself helps remove any traces of excrement that may have been undetected.

Chlorine allows wash and animal care standards to be lower, which is why the chicken is cheaper. It costs more but you can (and the EU does) get comparable food safety with higher standards for cleaning and require the birds to be kept in cleaner conditions.
I find that unlikely. Most consumers probably don't even understand the issue.

Are consumers are fine with traces of excrement in their chicken or if they would prefer to pay a little more and have no excrement whatsoever. Either one may work from a safety perspective but consumers in the UK have come down firmly on the side of chicken with “no excrement whatsoever”. So much so that the prospect of importing chicken processed under US standards is a significant political issue in the UK. It’s viewed as a major drop in product standards to the point where Brexit proponents promised that the chlorine dipped alternative would never be allowed.
 
This doesn't make sense to me. Don't UK companies already have to prove that their products conform to EU standards? Don't EU standards get applied to products produced within the EU? Haven't they been doing this all along?

Currently UK follows EU standards, so enforcing UK standards guarantees EU standards are met. The UK plans to end it's harmonization with EU standards.

This means going forward in addition to enforcing it’s own standards, the UK will require a separate process for products being exported to the EU similar to other non-EU countries like Canada.
 
Currently UK follows EU standards, so enforcing UK standards guarantees EU standards are met. The UK plans to end it's harmonization with EU standards.

This means going forward in addition to enforcing it’s own standards, the UK will require a separate process for products being exported to the EU similar to other non-EU countries like Canada.

What is likely to happen is that they will simply use one process that adheres to the higher standard, like car makers build to the California emission standard now even for states which don't require it. If the EU standard is higher, then that is no more expensive and time consuming than it would be by remaining. If the UK standard is higher, well, any extra expense will be something the UK will have decided is worth it to get that higher standard.
 
Are consumers are fine with traces of excrement in their chicken or if they would prefer to pay a little more and have no excrement whatsoever. Either one may work from a safety perspective but consumers in the UK have come down firmly on the side of chicken with “no excrement whatsoever”. So much so that the prospect of importing chicken processed under US standards is a significant political issue in the UK. It’s viewed as a major drop in product standards to the point where Brexit proponents promised that the chlorine dipped alternative would never be allowed.

I don't actually believe this is the real motivation. If that were the real concern, all you'd need to do is have labeling requirements. People who didn't want the US-style processing could avoid it, people who wanted cheaper chicken could buy it. But labeling doesn't suffice if you're not just trying to avoid buying it yourself, but preventing other people from buying it.

And the people with the real incentive to prevent others from buying it are the producers, not consumers. That's why I think this is all a PR campaign driven by producers, even if they've managed to get popular support with appeals to emotion.
 
And it would require those goods and services to comply with EU rules and regulations but with no influence on those rules - so much for the UK not being a "rule taker".

IMO this is just yet another example of Brexiteers having no clue about the realities of international trade and running smack-back into the brick wall of reality.

Maybe we just opt for the Russia scenario where export quality vodka is the good stuff but there is no obligation for locally produced hooch to not make you go blind.
 
Chlorine allows wash and animal care standards to be lower, which is why the chicken is cheaper. It costs more but you can (and the EU does) get comparable food safety with higher standards for cleaning and require the birds to be kept in cleaner conditions.


Are consumers are fine with traces of excrement in their chicken or if they would prefer to pay a little more and have no excrement whatsoever. Either one may work from a safety perspective but consumers in the UK have come down firmly on the side of chicken with “no excrement whatsoever”. So much so that the prospect of importing chicken processed under US standards is a significant political issue in the UK. It’s viewed as a major drop in product standards to the point where Brexit proponents promised that the chlorine dipped alternative would never be allowed.

Given the US and EU food poisoning rates - the EU approach seems to work better - and there are situations where the washing is ineffective.
 
There are plenty of food poisoning cases due to chicken in EU countries, and the USA regardless of the regulations.

Regulations are only any good if they're adhered to - and the person preparing and cooking the chicken also needs to follow recommended handling and cooking precautions. In no country is it safe to eat badly prepared or undercooked chicken.
 
What is likely to happen is that they will simply use one process that adheres to the higher standard, like car makers build to the California emission standard now even for states which don't require it. If the EU standard is higher, then that is no more expensive and time consuming than it would be by remaining. If the UK standard is higher, well, any extra expense will be something the UK will have decided is worth it to get that higher standard.

Talking explicitly about products. Unless the UK explicitly adopts the EU standard (politically difficult because that would make us a "rule taker") then the product in question would have to be recertified for the EU regardless of whether the UK standard was higher, lower or equivalent. Certification is a time consuming and expensive process which may be worthwhile if you're doing millions of pounds worth of business but not if you're a smaller company trying to break into a market.

One of the supposed benefits of Brexit was an alleged reduction in red tape for business. The opposite seems to be the case for anyone dealing internationally.
 
Apparently the UK will seek a "Canada style deal" with the EU.

So we'd be outside a customs union and relying on unicorn-fuelled technology to reduce the administrative overhead. In particular the EU would want to ensure that the UK isn't a back-door into the EU. Any technological solution would be very expensive and take years to implement (not least because the technology doesn't exist).

Canadian companies exporting to the EU have to prove that their products conform to EU standards. Under a Canadian-style deal, UK companies would have to do the same - an expensive and time consuming process.

The Canadian deal does not include services, 80% of the UK economy and a sector which has a significant trade surplus with the EU. It specifically does not include financial passporting, something that is very important to the financial services sector.

Now any and all of this could be negotiated in a mutually beneficial way. The problem is that a bespoke trade deal is going to take orders of magnitude longer to negotiate than an "off the shelf one".

Even if the UK was able to take the Canada deal, the UK's physical proximity to the EU may mean that there will be issues.

One major reason for a Canada deal is so that the UK can immediately agree a catastrophic deal with the US :mad:

In other words the UK has no idea what it is doing. Together with Priti Patel's idea for an 'Australian-style' point system (er, she does know there has been a points system since 2008...?) it is totally ******.
 
In principle they can, but a lot of US producers are already set up to use pathogen reduction treatment (PRT) washing, and to switch over to a different process would cost them a lot of money.



I find that unlikely. Most consumers probably don't even understand the issue. To the extent that they even know it exists, it's probably because of public relations campaigns by producers. A lot of product regulations exist at the behest of established producers even though they are claimed as consumer protection. The EU isn't alone in this regard, the US does it too.



FDA requirements already include pre-wash inspection to remove excrement, and the wash itself helps remove any traces of excrement that may have been undetected.



If traces of excrement are actually the source of concern, then that specifically is what the regulations should target. But they don't.


Question: who or what has been excreting over the dead bodies of chickens?
 
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