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Home UK N. Ireland

UK-EU deal long overdue, says garden centre owner

May 20, 2025
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John Campbell and Andrew McNair

BBC News NI

BBC A man with grey hair wearing a purply shirt, stands before shelves of various plants in a garden centre. It is inside greenhouse covers. BBC

Robin Mercer has had difficulty sourcing roses

Robin Mercer, from Hillmount Garden Centre in County Down, said the deal was “long overdue” as the current arrangements had driven up costs.

“In the past before Brexit we were bringing in trolley loads of roses every week, now we’re having to source them from different places and there isn’t the same selection,” he said.

“There’s a lot of suppliers in England that won’t work with us now because it’s too much hassle, too much paperwork.”

Getty Images The Rosa 'Eustacia Vye' flowers in summer -Rosa 'Eustacia Vye' flowers in summer. there are three and they are a delicate pink colour. Getty Images

A horticulture industry body says lifting trade barriers should “boost our range of plants and products and how quickly we can get them”

Customs declarations

The deal should also mean GB retailers resume online sales of plants and seeds to Northern Ireland.

However the changes are not yet legally binding and therefore it is unlikely they will be implemented until next year.

In the meantime some requirements which the last government signed up to in 2023 Windsor Framework deal will continue to be implemented.

For example a new phase of “Not for EU” labelling on GB food products being sold in NI will go ahead in July.

That is despite the fact that labelling with ultimately be phased out as a result of the new deal.

Most commercial goods being sold from GB to NI will also continue to require customs declarations, even the products which are covered by Monday’s deal.

NI fishing and food supply

Patsy Farren is from Donegal Prime Fish, based in Skeoge industrial estate in Londonderry.

He believes Monday’s deal could open up new markets for his company and cut down on red tape.

They used to sell smoked salmon to Germany but after Brexit, he said the paperwork made that process too complicated.

“The headache for us after Brexit was that GB suppliers just said they wouldn’t be bothered with the paperwork and would no longer supply us,” he told BBC Radio Foyle’s North West Today programme.

“They just dropped us so we found our own market on the island of Ireland”.

Patsy Farren A man with short grey hair, somewhat balding. He is wearing glasses and a blue zip up jacket. He is sitting in a vehicle. Patsy Farren

Patsy Farren believes the deal could open up new markets for his fishing company

Lynas Foods Shows close-up of a fair-haired man with light-coloured hair smilingLynas Foods

Andrew Lynas, managing director of Coleraine-based Lynas Foods

Lynas Foods in Coleraine has 180 suppliers from Great Britain.

Managing director Andrew Lynas hopes the deal will cut down on paperwork and “the big unseen” of costs.

“It’s okay moving goods to Scotland at the moment but getting them back is a nightmare,” he told BBC Radio Foyle’s North West Today programme.

He said they were “cautiously optimistic” that the deal could be a good one.

“But the devil will be in the detail and we think it will be about 18 months before we know that,” he said.

PA Media Hilary Benn is an older man with short white hair. He has a pair of thin, circular glasses and is walking outside a grey brick building with a black iron gate in front. He is wearing a navy suit jacket, a white collared shirt and a red tie. He is also carrying a red leather folder.PA Media

Hilary Benn said the deal was a “major step forward” for businesses in NI

Northern Ireland Secretary Hilary Benn said the deal was a “very practical agreement” which has been warmly welcomed across many sectors.

“I think when people judge this they will see it as a good deal that is particularly good for Northern Ireland because it will remove a lot of the paperwork, the checks, the costs and so on,” he told BBC News NI’s Good Morning Ulster programme.

Benn said the deal meant there would be a “significant easing” of paperwork needed to send some products back and forth, first introduced by the Windsor Framework.

He said this would allow goods to flow more freely between the UK and the EU.

“Let us celebrate what’s been achieved because it really is a significant step forward for many, many businesses that are moving goods from Great Britain to Northern Ireland, which is why the welcome has been so positive,” he added.

Stuart Anderson, director of public affairs at Northern Ireland Chamber of Commerce, said he remained concerned about the customs burden for movement between GB and NI.

However he said the new deal was “hugely positive news” on the face of it.

He added that businesses in Northern Ireland had “carried a significant amount of the burden in getting us to today”.

What’s in the new UK/EU deal?

Getty Images A farmer wearing a red and black check shirt, yellow trousers and a grey gilet, pictured from the neck down as he loads three large green trays of vegetables into the rear of a vehicle boot. There are broccoli, green beans and red peppers.Getty Images

If a full agri-food deal follows, potentially later this year, that will reduce the need for checks and controls on products being sent from GB to Northern Ireland

The “landmark deal” agreed on Monday was an attempt by the Labour government to reset relations between UK and the EU.

The wide-ranging agreement includes:

  • an agri-food deal which means the vast majority of routine border checks on animal and plant shipments to and from the EU will be dropped
  • a 12-year fishing agreement which gives EU boats continued access to UK waters until 2038, which is an extension of the current rules.
  • the establishment of a formal UK-EU defence and security pact in which both sides will share more information and coordinate on sanctions.
  • a new animal passport system aimed at making it easier for UK pets to travel to the EU and reduce the need for repeat vet certificates

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer described it as a “new partnership between an independent Britain and our allies in Europe” but critics accused him of betraying Brexit voters.

The Conservatives said the UK will have to follow EU agri-food rules without having any say in how those rules are made.



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