LONDON (Reuters) – Britain’s government is in talks with businesses on the additional customs declarations needed after the country leaves the European Union’s customs union, cabinet office minister Michael Gove said on Wednesday.
“We are conducting work with (business) to determine exactly how many additional customs declarations may be required and what additional staff may be required in order to process them,” Gove told a parliamentary committee.
“There will be unfettered access for goods from Northern Ireland into Great Britain. There will be some new checks of course on products of animal origin.”
(Reporting by Guy Faulconbridge and Kate Holton, writing by Elizabeth Piper; editing by Sarah Young)