Northern Ireland could become ‘permanent casualty’ of Brexit if Protocol dispute not resolved

Anti NI Protocol sign above a sign for the Northern Ireland Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs (DAERA) site on Duncrue Street in Belfast.
Anti NI Protocol sign above a sign for the Northern Ireland Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs (DAERA) site on Duncrue Street in Belfast.
Liam McBurney
Max Parry

By Max Parry


Published: 29/07/2021

- 06:05

Updated: 14/02/2023

- 11:09

The EU and UK remain at odds over the implementation of new checks and processes on goods being shipped into Northern Ireland from the rest of the UK

The Northern Ireland Protocol risks becoming a constant irritant in future EU/UK relations unless both sides change their “fundamentally flawed” approaches to resolving the dispute, peers have found.

A House of Lords committee set up to examine the controversial post-Brexit trading arrangements for the Irish Sea has warned that Northern Ireland could become a “permanent casualty” of Brexit unless compromise is found urgently.


The EU and UK remain at odds over the implementation of new checks and processes on goods being shipped into Northern Ireland from the rest of the UK.

The committee has published an introductory report on the arrangements that have created the economic barriers on Irish Sea trade.

Despite having membership drawn from a variety of political viewpoints, including nationalist and unionist peers from Northern Ireland, the committee’s findings were unanimously agreed.

The peers expressed concern that the “fundamentally flawed” approaches adopted by the UK and EU were hampering efforts to find solutions.

They said the UK approach had been characterised by a “lack of clarity, transparency and readiness” while the EU had demonstrated a “lack of balance, understanding and flexibility”.

They said the EU mistrusts whether the UK is acting in good faith while the UK believes the EU is adopting a disproportionate approach to the implementation of the protocol.

This has led to a “serious deterioration” in relations between London, Belfast, Dublin and Brussels, the report found.

Lord Jay of Ewelme, who chairs the committee on the protocol, said there was an urgent need for compromise.

“That won’t be easy, but it is an absolute necessity that the UK and the EU should now work together urgently to identify solutions if Northern Ireland is not to become a permanent casualty of the Brexit process,” he said.

“The tensions over the protocol currently seem insoluble. Yet that was also true of the political situation during the Troubles. But the peace process ultimately took root and flourished, through a process of time, patience, dialogue, and most of all trust. Those same qualities are now needed to address the problems that Brexit and the protocol present.”

In an interview with the PA news agency, he added: “If there is no resolution, if it just festers, it seems to me it will become a constant irritant in the relationship between the EU and the UK and it will become an irritant within the island of Ireland, between north and south.

“I cannot see that that is in the interest of either community or any of the communities in Northern Ireland nor of business people in Northern Ireland nor of the economy of Northern Ireland and that’s what worries me, that’s why I really do think it is important to reach an agreement here.

“This is not something in my view that can just be allowed or should just be allowed to fester. I think that’s a real worry.”

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