COVID-19: Details of plan to reopen France border with the UK could soon be announced
France shut its border with the UK for 48 hours聽on Sunday night, prompting delays for freight lorries heading across the Channel.
Tuesday 22 December 2020 11:59, UK
Talks with France on reopening full trade and transport across the Channel are "ongoing" and "details of a plan could be announced as early as today", Sky News has learned.
France shut its border with the UK for 48 hours on Sunday night, prompting delays for freight lorries heading across the Channel as a new variant of coronavirus spreads across the UK. The closure is due to end tonight at 11pm UK-time.
Home Secretary Priti Patel told Sky News on Tuesday morning the government is still "working to get a resolution" and suggested that drivers could be mass tested at ports as part of the answer.
She said: "We'll see what materialises today," with a Downing Street source telling Sky News that a plan "could be announced" on Tuesday.
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Lorries unable to get back across the border have been "stuck for days now", according to Sky News correspondent Milena Veselinovic in Dover, who said they had been piling up before the French travel ban amid the Christmas rush for goods and Brexit uncertainty.
As many as 900 lorries were parked on the M20 as of 6pm on Monday, according to Kent Police, with "at least six" stationary on the nearby A2 this morning, as well as traffic building up in Dover town centre.
Ms Patel told Sky News that a plan is "in both our interests", as "there are European hauliers right now who want to be going home".
She didn't give any specific details on how mass testing could be introduced at ports, but said they are "absolutely part of discussions".
The M20 motorway was closed on Monday night to allow for the implementation of Operation Brock - contingency measures which involve using a moveable barrier to keep traffic moving on the motorway whenever there is disruption at the Channel.
Highways England had earlier said Operation Brock would replace Operation Stack, which was activated overnight on Sunday, with hauliers "advised to avoid travelling to Kent as disruption could last for several days".
It said Operation Brock "opens up more of the road network" in the county "because it means traffic can continue to move in both directions on the M20 whereas Stack effectively closes it to coastbound traffic".
Mr Johnson said at a Downing Street news briefing the number of lorries waiting on the M20 had been reduced from 500 to 170, but Highways England later corrected that figure with the 900 one provided by Kent Police.
The PM said he had spoken with French President Emmanuel Macron and both sides are working to "unblock the flow of trade as fast as possible", as well as chairing a meeting of the government's emergency COBRA committee.
The closure of cross-Channel routes alarmed businesses, including those relying on the trouble-free passage of produce into the UK, as well as holidaymakers looking to leave for the continent - all with the added complication of the end of the Brexit transition period on 31 December.
Supermarket giant Sainsbury's warned that disruption in Kent could hit supplies of lettuce, some salad leaves, cauliflowers, broccoli and citrus fruit, all of which are imported from mainland Europe in the winter.
Britons have been told to continue shopping normally.
Addressing a Downing Street news conference, Boris Johnson said the "vast majority" of food and medical supplies are unaffected by the move.
The emergence of the new variant, which could be up to 70% more transmissible than other variants of coronavirus, has also seen a raft of countries introduce travel bans from the UK.
The Northern Ireland Executive held an emergency late-night meeting amid a row over whether a Great Britain travel ban should be introduced, proposed by Sinn Fein but voted down by the executive.
Speaking about the variant of coronavirus that is spreading across the UK, the government's chief scientific adviser Sir Patrick Vallance said at the Downing Street briefing: "The evidence on this virus is that it spreads easily, it's more transmissible, we absolutely need to make sure we have the right level of restrictions in place.
"I think it is likely that this will grow in numbers of the variant across the country and I think it's likely, therefore, that measures will need to be increased in some places, in due course, not reduced."
The New and Emerging Respiratory Virus Threats Advisory Group (Nervtag) met again on Monday to consider the new variant and said, while it does not appear to alter the course of the disease, it does spread more easily.
"That again reinforces the point that it's important to get ahead of this and to make sure that the tiering system is adequate to stop things going, and not to watch it and react in retrospect," Sir Patrick said.
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Given the "inevitable mixing" over Christmas "I think there will be some increases in numbers over the next few weeks", he added.
The discovery of the variant and worries about its spread saw the prime minister announce a new Tier 4 of COVID-19 restrictions for parts of England at the weekend, effectively cancelling Christmas plans for millions.
Mr Johnson also reduced the planned five-day relaxation of restrictions over the festive period to just Christmas Day.