Angela Merkel calls on EU to step up no-deal preparations after 'very limited' progress in Brexit talks

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Angela Merkel has called on Brussels to step up preparations for a no-deal scenario since "very limited" progress has been made during the Brexit negotiations.

Boris Johnson’s Europe adviser David Frost and the EU's chief negotiator Michel Barnier continue to lead the talks aimed at reaching a deal before the post-Brexit transition period expires at the end of the year.

But Mrs Merkel said that progress so far has been "very limited" and that the EU must be ready for the possibility that “a deal doesn’t materialise”.

Meanwhile, Downing Street has stressed that the UK will be ready to trade with the EU without a formal agreement.

Frost and Barnier
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It comes as Germany assumes the rotating EU Council presidency for the next six months, giving the chancellor an influential role in the final phase of the Brexit process.

In a sign of the strained relations between the two sides, the UK failed to meet a deadline for submitting equivalence assessments on financial services regulations.

These could help determine the City’s access to European markets and vice versa.

Whitehall sources suggested that the demands made by the EU in 1,000 pages of questionnaires were “much broader than the equivalence criteria set out in legislation”.

Ms Merkel has urged Brussels to prepare for a no-deal scenario
PA

They added that they did not recognise the unique starting point between the two sides which had been, until January 31, members of the same trading bloc.

The UK has insisted that it wanted to “work constructively” with the EU.

The Prime Minister’s official spokesman said: “We believe that there is a free trade agreement to be reached but we have also been very clear that we will be prepared for either eventuality at the end of the year, whether that be a free trade agreement or having a trading relationship based on the same terms that Australia currently has.”

Australia does not yet have a formal trade deal with the EU.

A “very significant” number of firms were already prepared for the fact that the UK is leaving the customs union and single market, whether or not a trade deal is agreed with Brussels, the PM’s spokesman said.

The UK had also “learned a significant amount” from the preparations for a potential no-deal Brexit at the end of October 2019 “and we will ensure that we are ready to exit the transition period on December 31”.

Mr Barnier said the European Commission has sent questionnaires to the UK covering 28 areas where equivalence assessments are possible but so far just four have been answered.

The Prime Minister’s official spokesman said: “We have completed our own proportionate and thorough assessment of the EU on time.

“What we are doing is returning over 1,000 pages of questionnaires that were sent by the EU to the UK late.

“These are straightforward assessments as we start from having similar rules and a history of co-operation and we are ready to reach comprehensive findings of equivalence once the EU has clarified its position.”

The final 248 pages of the EU’s questions were not received until May 25, officials complained.