I was just thinking of parts being bought by F1 teams from all over the world, implications of delays at customs which could have a knock on effect of in season development. This could delay development or give rise to costs if teams have to develop and manufacture these parts in house. Implications are huge yet it all hangs on a deal that is to be made... could a team like Williams survive Brexit?henry wrote:On a technical point in the near term it depends on how the next few weeks play out. If the U.K. agrees a withdrawal deal to leave the EU in March 2019 then not much that affects the teams directly changes for another 2 years. If a deal is not reached chaos is likely to ensue. Getting cars and personnel between the U.K. and EU will potentially require more, different, and as yet unspecified processes. It may or not have a flavour of the issues in India when F1 tried its hand there.
As I said if we leave with a negotiated transition deal we will see, and the teams will see, very little difference from now.JonoNic wrote: ↑09 Dec 2018, 14:50I was just thinking of parts being bought by F1 teams from all over the world, implications of delays at customs which could have a knock on effect of in season development. This could delay development or give rise to costs if teams have to develop and manufacture these parts in house. Implications are huge yet it all hangs on a deal that is to be made... could a team like Williams survive Brexit?henry wrote:On a technical point in the near term it depends on how the next few weeks play out. If the U.K. agrees a withdrawal deal to leave the EU in March 2019 then not much that affects the teams directly changes for another 2 years. If a deal is not reached chaos is likely to ensue. Getting cars and personnel between the U.K. and EU will potentially require more, different, and as yet unspecified processes. It may or not have a flavour of the issues in India when F1 tried its hand there.
Thing is there's a free flow inside EU of parts, staff and services and anything else than free would be a step back. Very few parts had to be imported from outside EU, but when You narrow the scope to inside and outside UK, the proportions will shift quite significantly I would guess.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑09 Dec 2018, 16:26motor manufacture already relies on rather free flow of parts between countries that often don't have (free) trade agreements
so what's the problem ?
you don't need a trade agreement to trade
any citizen or commercial entity can trade with any other unless one of them is in N Korea or Iran etc
the EU has very few trade agreements with anyone
That's quite an optimistic thinking. Not all benefits of EU membership will hold, especially after transition period. Furthermore, nothing is really certain until 29th of March and to higher degree until june 2020. Decleration on future relations haven't been even voted in UK yet and it has to be agreed by the EU just before the brexit, too. What will happen after the transition time is really an unknown for now.henry wrote: ↑09 Dec 2018, 16:00As I said if we leave with a negotiated transition deal we will see, and the teams will see, very little difference from now.JonoNic wrote: ↑09 Dec 2018, 14:50I was just thinking of parts being bought by F1 teams from all over the world, implications of delays at customs which could have a knock on effect of in season development. This could delay development or give rise to costs if teams have to develop and manufacture these parts in house. Implications are huge yet it all hangs on a deal that is to be made... could a team like Williams survive Brexit?henry wrote:On a technical point in the near term it depends on how the next few weeks play out. If the U.K. agrees a withdrawal deal to leave the EU in March 2019 then not much that affects the teams directly changes for another 2 years. If a deal is not reached chaos is likely to ensue. Getting cars and personnel between the U.K. and EU will potentially require more, different, and as yet unspecified processes. It may or not have a flavour of the issues in India when F1 tried its hand there.
Effectively on March 29 2019 the U.K. will cease to be a member of the EU club but will continue to enjoy the benefits of membership, single market, customs union, under a new legal agreement the sets out the rights and obligations of each side. The U.K. will continue to pay the membership fee and agrees to abide by any new club rules but will not take part in the management functions.
One thing that is not clear is the UK position in regard to the deals that the EU has with third countries. The EU have said they will ask those partners to extend the deals to the U.K. for the transition period. But they can’t guarantee that. So parts and services that rely on those agreements might be at risk of disruption.
It was specifically the transition period I was noting. A legal agreement for the transition period has been formed but not yet signed, as you say. After the transition there is a political agreement which says, in essence, both sides will try hard to have a mutually beneficial relationship after 2020.netoperek wrote: ↑09 Dec 2018, 16:37
That's quite an optimistic thinking. Not all benefits of EU membership will hold, especially after transition period. Furthermore, nothing is really certain until 29th of March and to higher degree until june 2020. Decleration on future relations haven't been even voted in UK yet and it has to be agreed by the EU just before the brexit, too. What will happen after the transition time is really an unknown for now.