by Suff » 23 Dec 2020, 10:54
I didn't say it was an EU embargo as such. This is an intra EU thing, if France wants to block the flow of EU exports and imports, that is between them and the Commission. France has emergency rights to do this, but they are blocking cross EU trade. Something the Commission is charged with controlling. Which is why the Commission is calling for France to resolve the issue as quickly as possible.
Whether there is a motive for doing this, right now, I don't care either. I noticed, last night, that the seafood counter, normally bursting with product at this time, was less than half full. It is probably sitting amongst the thousands of tons of seafood blocked in Dover.
However that doesn't change the fact that goods bought from the EU by the UK and UK goods sold to the EU are being blocked at the Channel. There is a simple answer to this. Don't sell into the EU and don't buy from the EU if the ability to send and receive the goods is compromised.
This is neither a B related thing, nor a trade embargo. It is a relationship thing between the UK and an external trade partner. If it were the US, or China or any other country in the world, we would source elsewhere until the country blocking our trade decided to change their mind.
The fact that it is just over a 22m stretch of water is irrelevant. A foreign trade partner has blocked our trade. My default answer to that is "don't trade with them then". This can take months or years to switch the trade, but it would be my preferred action no matter who they are.
Just as an aside, I note that when 42,000 people a day and nearly 1,000 people a day, were being infected and dying in France, respectively, less than two months ago, the borders were not shut. Pots and kettles.
There are 10 types of people in the world:
Those who understand Binary and those who do not.