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  • Foreign Secretary Liz Truss first meeting with her new EU team
    DUKAS_132921860_EYE
    Foreign Secretary Liz Truss first meeting with her new EU team
    21/12/2021. London, United Kingdom. Foreign Secretary Liz Truss first meeting with her new EU team. Foreign Secretary Liz Truss meeitng with her new EU team inside her office in the Foreign Office. Picture by Andrew Parsons / No 10 Downing Street / eyevine

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    © No10 Crown Copyright / eyevine

     

  • Foreign Secretary Liz Truss first meeting with her new EU team
    DUKAS_132921865_EYE
    Foreign Secretary Liz Truss first meeting with her new EU team
    21/12/2021. London, United Kingdom. Foreign Secretary Liz Truss first meeting with her new EU team. Foreign Secretary Liz Truss meeitng with her new EU team inside her office in the Foreign Office. Picture by Andrew Parsons / No 10 Downing Street / eyevine

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  • Foreign Secretary Liz Truss meets Chris Heaton-Harris
    DUKAS_132921861_EYE
    Foreign Secretary Liz Truss meets Chris Heaton-Harris
    21/12/2021. London, United Kingdom. Foreign Secretary Liz Truss meets Chris Heaton-Harris. The Foreign Secretary meets with the Minister of State for Europe
    Deputy Chief Negotiator for Task Force Europe Chris Heaton-Harris in her office inside the Foreign Office. Picture by Alice Hodgson / No 10 Downing Street / eyevine

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  • Foreign Secretary Liz Truss meets Chris Heaton-Harris
    DUKAS_132921859_EYE
    Foreign Secretary Liz Truss meets Chris Heaton-Harris
    21/12/2021. London, United Kingdom. Foreign Secretary Liz Truss meets Chris Heaton-Harris. The Foreign Secretary meets with the Minister of State for Europe
    Deputy Chief Negotiator for Task Force Europe Chris Heaton-Harris in her office inside the Foreign Office. Picture by Alice Hodgson / No 10 Downing Street / eyevine

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  • Foreign Secretary Liz Truss meets Chris Heaton-Harris
    DUKAS_132921864_EYE
    Foreign Secretary Liz Truss meets Chris Heaton-Harris
    21/12/2021. London, United Kingdom. Foreign Secretary Liz Truss meets Chris Heaton-Harris. The Foreign Secretary meets with the Minister of State for Europe
    Deputy Chief Negotiator for Task Force Europe Chris Heaton-Harris in her office inside the Foreign Office. Picture by Alice Hodgson / No 10 Downing Street / eyevine

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  • Brexit: Staff shortages hitting supermarket shelves
    DUKAS_128321629_EYE
    Brexit: Staff shortages hitting supermarket shelves
    A Tesco store in East London continues to run low of supplies including bottled water, toilet paper and wine. Grocery shoppers face less choice as supply chain shortages impact the industry’s ability to get food to shops post-Brexit migration rules and Covid-19.

    © Jeff Moore / eyevine

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    © Jeff Moore / eyevine

     

  • Brexit: Staff shortages hitting supermarket shelves
    DUKAS_128321628_EYE
    Brexit: Staff shortages hitting supermarket shelves
    A Tesco store in East London continues to run low of supplies including bottled water, toilet paper and wine. Grocery shoppers face less choice as supply chain shortages impact the industry’s ability to get food to shops post-Brexit migration rules and Covid-19.

    © Jeff Moore / eyevine

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    © Jeff Moore / eyevine

     

  • Brexit: Staff shortages hitting supermarket shelves
    DUKAS_128321645_EYE
    Brexit: Staff shortages hitting supermarket shelves
    A Tesco store in East London continues to run low of supplies including bottled water, toilet paper and wine. Grocery shoppers face less choice as supply chain shortages impact the industry’s ability to get food to shops post-Brexit migration rules and Covid-19.

    © Jeff Moore / eyevine

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    © Jeff Moore / eyevine

     

  • Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK.
    DUKAS_127718276_EYE
    Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK.
    Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK. Press Conference regarding Metro Bank withdrawal of Reform UK's bank account with only 60 days notice. The Mall Room, British Academy, London, Great Britain. 9th August 2021. Richard James Sunley Tice is a British businessman and politician who has been Leader of Reform UK since 6 March 2021. Tice was CEO of the real estate group CLS Holdings from 2010 to 2014, after which he became CEO of the property asset management group Quidnet Capital LLP.
    © Elliott Franks / eyevine

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    © Elliott Franks / eyevine.

     

  • Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK.
    DUKAS_127718275_EYE
    Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK.
    Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK. Press Conference regarding Metro Bank withdrawal of Reform UK's bank account with only 60 days notice. The Mall Room, British Academy, London, Great Britain. 9th August 2021. Richard James Sunley Tice is a British businessman and politician who has been Leader of Reform UK since 6 March 2021. Tice was CEO of the real estate group CLS Holdings from 2010 to 2014, after which he became CEO of the property asset management group Quidnet Capital LLP.
    © Elliott Franks / eyevine

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    © Elliott Franks / eyevine.

     

  • Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK.
    DUKAS_127718274_EYE
    Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK.
    Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK. Press Conference regarding Metro Bank withdrawal of Reform UK's bank account with only 60 days notice. The Mall Room, British Academy, London, Great Britain. 9th August 2021. Richard James Sunley Tice is a British businessman and politician who has been Leader of Reform UK since 6 March 2021. Tice was CEO of the real estate group CLS Holdings from 2010 to 2014, after which he became CEO of the property asset management group Quidnet Capital LLP.
    © Elliott Franks / eyevine

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    © Elliott Franks / eyevine.

     

  • Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK.
    DUKAS_127718272_EYE
    Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK.
    Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK. Press Conference regarding Metro Bank withdrawal of Reform UK's bank account with only 60 days notice. The Mall Room, British Academy, London, Great Britain. 9th August 2021. Richard James Sunley Tice is a British businessman and politician who has been Leader of Reform UK since 6 March 2021. Tice was CEO of the real estate group CLS Holdings from 2010 to 2014, after which he became CEO of the property asset management group Quidnet Capital LLP.
    © Elliott Franks / eyevine

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    © Elliott Franks / eyevine.

     

  • Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK.
    DUKAS_127718265_EYE
    Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK.
    Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK. Press Conference regarding Metro Bank withdrawal of Reform UK's bank account with only 60 days notice. The Mall Room, British Academy, London, Great Britain. 9th August 2021. Richard James Sunley Tice is a British businessman and politician who has been Leader of Reform UK since 6 March 2021. Tice was CEO of the real estate group CLS Holdings from 2010 to 2014, after which he became CEO of the property asset management group Quidnet Capital LLP.
    © Elliott Franks / eyevine

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    © Elliott Franks / eyevine.

     

  • Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK.
    DUKAS_127718264_EYE
    Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK.
    Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK. Press Conference regarding Metro Bank withdrawal of Reform UK's bank account with only 60 days notice. The Mall Room, British Academy, London, Great Britain. 9th August 2021. Richard James Sunley Tice is a British businessman and politician who has been Leader of Reform UK since 6 March 2021. Tice was CEO of the real estate group CLS Holdings from 2010 to 2014, after which he became CEO of the property asset management group Quidnet Capital LLP.
    © Elliott Franks / eyevine

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    © Elliott Franks / eyevine.

     

  • Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK.
    DUKAS_127718263_EYE
    Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK.
    Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK. Press Conference regarding Metro Bank withdrawal of Reform UK's bank account with only 60 days notice. The Mall Room, British Academy, London, Great Britain. 9th August 2021. Richard James Sunley Tice is a British businessman and politician who has been Leader of Reform UK since 6 March 2021. Tice was CEO of the real estate group CLS Holdings from 2010 to 2014, after which he became CEO of the property asset management group Quidnet Capital LLP.
    © Elliott Franks / eyevine

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    http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Elliott Franks / eyevine.

     

  • Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK.
    DUKAS_127718262_EYE
    Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK.
    Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK. Press Conference regarding Metro Bank withdrawal of Reform UK's bank account with only 60 days notice. The Mall Room, British Academy, London, Great Britain. 9th August 2021. Richard James Sunley Tice is a British businessman and politician who has been Leader of Reform UK since 6 March 2021. Tice was CEO of the real estate group CLS Holdings from 2010 to 2014, after which he became CEO of the property asset management group Quidnet Capital LLP.
    © Elliott Franks / eyevine

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    http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Elliott Franks / eyevine.

     

  • Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK.
    DUKAS_127718261_EYE
    Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK.
    Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK. Press Conference regarding Metro Bank withdrawal of Reform UK's bank account with only 60 days notice. The Mall Room, British Academy, London, Great Britain. 9th August 2021. Richard James Sunley Tice is a British businessman and politician who has been Leader of Reform UK since 6 March 2021. Tice was CEO of the real estate group CLS Holdings from 2010 to 2014, after which he became CEO of the property asset management group Quidnet Capital LLP.
    © Elliott Franks / eyevine

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    © Elliott Franks / eyevine.

     

  • Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK.
    DUKAS_127718260_EYE
    Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK.
    Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK. Press Conference regarding Metro Bank withdrawal of Reform UK's bank account with only 60 days notice. The Mall Room, British Academy, London, Great Britain. 9th August 2021. Richard James Sunley Tice is a British businessman and politician who has been Leader of Reform UK since 6 March 2021. Tice was CEO of the real estate group CLS Holdings from 2010 to 2014, after which he became CEO of the property asset management group Quidnet Capital LLP.
    © Elliott Franks / eyevine

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    http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Elliott Franks / eyevine.

     

  • Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK.
    DUKAS_127718273_EYE
    Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK.
    Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK. Press Conference regarding Metro Bank withdrawal of Reform UK's bank account with only 60 days notice. The Mall Room, British Academy, London, Great Britain. 9th August 2021. Richard James Sunley Tice is a British businessman and politician who has been Leader of Reform UK since 6 March 2021. Tice was CEO of the real estate group CLS Holdings from 2010 to 2014, after which he became CEO of the property asset management group Quidnet Capital LLP.
    © Elliott Franks / eyevine

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    © Elliott Franks / eyevine.

     

  • Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK.
    DUKAS_127718271_EYE
    Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK.
    Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK. Press Conference regarding Metro Bank withdrawal of Reform UK's bank account with only 60 days notice. The Mall Room, British Academy, London, Great Britain. 9th August 2021. Richard James Sunley Tice is a British businessman and politician who has been Leader of Reform UK since 6 March 2021. Tice was CEO of the real estate group CLS Holdings from 2010 to 2014, after which he became CEO of the property asset management group Quidnet Capital LLP.
    © Elliott Franks / eyevine

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    © Elliott Franks / eyevine.

     

  • Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK.
    DUKAS_127718259_EYE
    Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK.
    Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK. Press Conference regarding Metro Bank withdrawal of Reform UK's bank account with only 60 days notice. The Mall Room, British Academy, London, Great Britain. 9th August 2021. Richard James Sunley Tice is a British businessman and politician who has been Leader of Reform UK since 6 March 2021. Tice was CEO of the real estate group CLS Holdings from 2010 to 2014, after which he became CEO of the property asset management group Quidnet Capital LLP.
    © Elliott Franks / eyevine

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    © Elliott Franks / eyevine.

     

  • Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK.
    DUKAS_127718258_EYE
    Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK.
    Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK. Press Conference regarding Metro Bank withdrawal of Reform UK's bank account with only 60 days notice. The Mall Room, British Academy, London, Great Britain. 9th August 2021. Richard James Sunley Tice is a British businessman and politician who has been Leader of Reform UK since 6 March 2021. Tice was CEO of the real estate group CLS Holdings from 2010 to 2014, after which he became CEO of the property asset management group Quidnet Capital LLP.
    © Elliott Franks / eyevine

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    © Elliott Franks / eyevine.

     

  • Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK.
    DUKAS_127718257_EYE
    Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK.
    Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK. Press Conference regarding Metro Bank withdrawal of Reform UK's bank account with only 60 days notice. The Mall Room, British Academy, London, Great Britain. 9th August 2021. Richard James Sunley Tice is a British businessman and politician who has been Leader of Reform UK since 6 March 2021. Tice was CEO of the real estate group CLS Holdings from 2010 to 2014, after which he became CEO of the property asset management group Quidnet Capital LLP.
    © Elliott Franks / eyevine

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    © Elliott Franks / eyevine.

     

  • Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK.
    DUKAS_127718277_EYE
    Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK.
    Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK. Press Conference regarding Metro Bank withdrawal of Reform UK's bank account with only 60 days notice. The Mall Room, British Academy, London, Great Britain. 9th August 2021. Richard James Sunley Tice is a British businessman and politician who has been Leader of Reform UK since 6 March 2021. Tice was CEO of the real estate group CLS Holdings from 2010 to 2014, after which he became CEO of the property asset management group Quidnet Capital LLP.
    © Elliott Franks / eyevine

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  • ‘A perfect storm’: UK beet growers fear Brexit threatens their future. They produce half the country’s sugar needs, but expect new trade deals to make their tough situation worse.
    DUKAS_128329097_EYE
    ‘A perfect storm’: UK beet growers fear Brexit threatens their future. They produce half the country’s sugar needs, but expect new trade deals to make their tough situation worse.
    In a field in Norfolk, the sight of lush green leaves sprouting from the soil are giving farmer Ed Lankfer cause for optimism. ÒI think this is one of the best crops we have ever grown,Ó he says, surveying one of his fields of sugar beet. The signs are promising so far for this yearÕs harvest, which takes place later than for other crops, during the autumn and winter. It would mark quite the turnaround from 2020Õs terrible harvest, when bad weather and pests caused yields of the white sugar-yielding root to plummet by as much as 60%, leaving Lankfer with a £12,000 loss. Sugar beet has been grown on LankferÕs 225-hectare (556-acre) family farm in the village of Wereham since his grandfather first introduced it in 1928, alongside other crops. However, recent years of falling prices, coupled with risks from weather and disease, have many farmers questioning whether there is a future in growing it.
    This is before growers feel the impact of post-Brexit trade deals with large sugar producers such as Australia. ItÕs a concern for Lankfer, whose land is in international trade secretary Liz TrussÕs constituency. He has twice hosted her at the farm to answer questions from growers. British farmers hail sugar beet for its role in crop rotation and the timing of its harvest. ÒItÕs a good break crop, and it spreads the workload over the winter,Ó says Lankfer. The destination of his beet is visible from the field itself: the factory at nearby Wissington where it is processed, eventually ending up in products such as Coca-Cola and Cadbury chocolate, or bagged and sold to consumers under the Silver Spoon brand.
    The British Sugar refinery in Wissington is visible from Ed LankferÕs farm.
    © Si Barber / Guardian / eyevine

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    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • ‘A perfect storm’: UK beet growers fear Brexit threatens their future. They produce half the country’s sugar needs, but expect new trade deals to make their tough situation worse.
    DUKAS_128329100_EYE
    ‘A perfect storm’: UK beet growers fear Brexit threatens their future. They produce half the country’s sugar needs, but expect new trade deals to make their tough situation worse.
    In a field in Norfolk, the sight of lush green leaves sprouting from the soil are giving farmer Ed Lankfer cause for optimism. ÒI think this is one of the best crops we have ever grown,Ó he says, surveying one of his fields of sugar beet. The signs are promising so far for this yearÕs harvest, which takes place later than for other crops, during the autumn and winter. It would mark quite the turnaround from 2020Õs terrible harvest, when bad weather and pests caused yields of the white sugar-yielding root to plummet by as much as 60%, leaving Lankfer with a £12,000 loss. Sugar beet has been grown on LankferÕs 225-hectare (556-acre) family farm in the village of Wereham since his grandfather first introduced it in 1928, alongside other crops. However, recent years of falling prices, coupled with risks from weather and disease, have many farmers questioning whether there is a future in growing it.
    This is before growers feel the impact of post-Brexit trade deals with large sugar producers such as Australia. ItÕs a concern for Lankfer, whose land is in international trade secretary Liz TrussÕs constituency. He has twice hosted her at the farm to answer questions from growers. British farmers hail sugar beet for its role in crop rotation and the timing of its harvest. ÒItÕs a good break crop, and it spreads the workload over the winter,Ó says Lankfer. The destination of his beet is visible from the field itself: the factory at nearby Wissington where it is processed, eventually ending up in products such as Coca-Cola and Cadbury chocolate, or bagged and sold to consumers under the Silver Spoon brand.
    The British Sugar refinery in Wissington is visible from Ed LankferÕs farm.
    © Si Barber / Guardian / eyevine

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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • ‘A perfect storm’: UK beet growers fear Brexit threatens their future. They produce half the country’s sugar needs, but expect new trade deals to make their tough situation worse.
    DUKAS_128329082_EYE
    ‘A perfect storm’: UK beet growers fear Brexit threatens their future. They produce half the country’s sugar needs, but expect new trade deals to make their tough situation worse.
    In a field in Norfolk, the sight of lush green leaves sprouting from the soil are giving farmer Ed Lankfer cause for optimism. “I think this is one of the best crops we have ever grown,” he says, surveying one of his fields of sugar beet. The signs are promising so far for this year’s harvest, which takes place later than for other crops, during the autumn and winter. It would mark quite the turnaround from 2020’s terrible harvest, when bad weather and pests caused yields of the white sugar-yielding root to plummet by as much as 60%, leaving Lankfer with a £12,000 loss. Sugar beet has been grown on Lankfer’s 225-hectare (556-acre) family farm in the village of Wereham since his grandfather first introduced it in 1928, alongside other crops. However, recent years of falling prices, coupled with risks from weather and disease, have many farmers questioning whether there is a future in growing it.
    This is before growers feel the impact of post-Brexit trade deals with large sugar producers such as Australia. It’s a concern for Lankfer, whose land is in international trade secretary Liz Truss’s constituency. He has twice hosted her at the farm to answer questions from growers. British farmers hail sugar beet for its role in crop rotation and the timing of its harvest. “It’s a good break crop, and it spreads the workload over the winter,” says Lankfer. The destination of his beet is visible from the field itself: the factory at nearby Wissington where it is processed, eventually ending up in products such as Coca-Cola and Cadbury chocolate, or bagged and sold to consumers under the Silver Spoon brand.
    Farmer Ed Lankfer's sugarbeet crop at Laurel Farm, Wereham, Norfolk,UK
    © Si Barber / Guardian / eyevine

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  • ‘A perfect storm’: UK beet growers fear Brexit threatens their future. They produce half the country’s sugar needs, but expect new trade deals to make their tough situation worse.
    DUKAS_128329115_EYE
    ‘A perfect storm’: UK beet growers fear Brexit threatens their future. They produce half the country’s sugar needs, but expect new trade deals to make their tough situation worse.
    In a field in Norfolk, the sight of lush green leaves sprouting from the soil are giving farmer Ed Lankfer cause for optimism. “I think this is one of the best crops we have ever grown,” he says, surveying one of his fields of sugar beet. The signs are promising so far for this year’s harvest, which takes place later than for other crops, during the autumn and winter. It would mark quite the turnaround from 2020’s terrible harvest, when bad weather and pests caused yields of the white sugar-yielding root to plummet by as much as 60%, leaving Lankfer with a £12,000 loss. Sugar beet has been grown on Lankfer’s 225-hectare (556-acre) family farm in the village of Wereham since his grandfather first introduced it in 1928, alongside other crops. However, recent years of falling prices, coupled with risks from weather and disease, have many farmers questioning whether there is a future in growing it.
    This is before growers feel the impact of post-Brexit trade deals with large sugar producers such as Australia. It’s a concern for Lankfer, whose land is in international trade secretary Liz Truss’s constituency. He has twice hosted her at the farm to answer questions from growers. British farmers hail sugar beet for its role in crop rotation and the timing of its harvest. “It’s a good break crop, and it spreads the workload over the winter,” says Lankfer. The destination of his beet is visible from the field itself: the factory at nearby Wissington where it is processed, eventually ending up in products such as Coca-Cola and Cadbury chocolate, or bagged and sold to consumers under the Silver Spoon brand.
    Farmer Ed Lankfer's sugarbeet crop at Laurel Farm, Wereham, Norfolk,UK
    © Si Barber / Guardian / eyevine

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    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • ‘A perfect storm’: UK beet growers fear Brexit threatens their future. They produce half the country’s sugar needs, but expect new trade deals to make their tough situation worse.
    DUKAS_128329094_EYE
    ‘A perfect storm’: UK beet growers fear Brexit threatens their future. They produce half the country’s sugar needs, but expect new trade deals to make their tough situation worse.
    In a field in Norfolk, the sight of lush green leaves sprouting from the soil are giving farmer Ed Lankfer cause for optimism. ÒI think this is one of the best crops we have ever grown,Ó he says, surveying one of his fields of sugar beet. The signs are promising so far for this yearÕs harvest, which takes place later than for other crops, during the autumn and winter. It would mark quite the turnaround from 2020Õs terrible harvest, when bad weather and pests caused yields of the white sugar-yielding root to plummet by as much as 60%, leaving Lankfer with a £12,000 loss. Sugar beet has been grown on LankferÕs 225-hectare (556-acre) family farm in the village of Wereham since his grandfather first introduced it in 1928, alongside other crops. However, recent years of falling prices, coupled with risks from weather and disease, have many farmers questioning whether there is a future in growing it.
    This is before growers feel the impact of post-Brexit trade deals with large sugar producers such as Australia. ItÕs a concern for Lankfer, whose land is in international trade secretary Liz TrussÕs constituency. He has twice hosted her at the farm to answer questions from growers. British farmers hail sugar beet for its role in crop rotation and the timing of its harvest. ÒItÕs a good break crop, and it spreads the workload over the winter,Ó says Lankfer. The destination of his beet is visible from the field itself: the factory at nearby Wissington where it is processed, eventually ending up in products such as Coca-Cola and Cadbury chocolate, or bagged and sold to consumers under the Silver Spoon brand.
    ÔA perfect stormÕ: UK beet growers fear Brexit threatens their future. They produce half the countryÕs sugar needs, but expect new trade deals to make their tough situation worse.
    Farmer Ed Lankfer's sugarbeet crop at Laurel Farm, Wereham, Norfolk,UK
    © Si Barber / Guardian / eyevine

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  • ‘A perfect storm’: UK beet growers fear Brexit threatens their future. They produce half the country’s sugar needs, but expect new trade deals to make their tough situation worse.
    DUKAS_128329113_EYE
    ‘A perfect storm’: UK beet growers fear Brexit threatens their future. They produce half the country’s sugar needs, but expect new trade deals to make their tough situation worse.
    In a field in Norfolk, the sight of lush green leaves sprouting from the soil are giving farmer Ed Lankfer cause for optimism. “I think this is one of the best crops we have ever grown,” he says, surveying one of his fields of sugar beet. The signs are promising so far for this year’s harvest, which takes place later than for other crops, during the autumn and winter. It would mark quite the turnaround from 2020’s terrible harvest, when bad weather and pests caused yields of the white sugar-yielding root to plummet by as much as 60%, leaving Lankfer with a £12,000 loss. Sugar beet has been grown on Lankfer’s 225-hectare (556-acre) family farm in the village of Wereham since his grandfather first introduced it in 1928, alongside other crops. However, recent years of falling prices, coupled with risks from weather and disease, have many farmers questioning whether there is a future in growing it.
    This is before growers feel the impact of post-Brexit trade deals with large sugar producers such as Australia. It’s a concern for Lankfer, whose land is in international trade secretary Liz Truss’s constituency. He has twice hosted her at the farm to answer questions from growers. British farmers hail sugar beet for its role in crop rotation and the timing of its harvest. “It’s a good break crop, and it spreads the workload over the winter,” says Lankfer. The destination of his beet is visible from the field itself: the factory at nearby Wissington where it is processed, eventually ending up in products such as Coca-Cola and Cadbury chocolate, or bagged and sold to consumers under the Silver Spoon brand.
    Farmer Ed Lankfer inspecting his sugarbeet crop at Laurel Farm, Wereham, Norfolk,UK
    © Si Barber / Guardian / eyevine

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  • ‘A perfect storm’: UK beet growers fear Brexit threatens their future. They produce half the country’s sugar needs, but expect new trade deals to make their tough situation worse.
    DUKAS_128329114_EYE
    ‘A perfect storm’: UK beet growers fear Brexit threatens their future. They produce half the country’s sugar needs, but expect new trade deals to make their tough situation worse.
    In a field in Norfolk, the sight of lush green leaves sprouting from the soil are giving farmer Ed Lankfer cause for optimism. “I think this is one of the best crops we have ever grown,” he says, surveying one of his fields of sugar beet. The signs are promising so far for this year’s harvest, which takes place later than for other crops, during the autumn and winter. It would mark quite the turnaround from 2020’s terrible harvest, when bad weather and pests caused yields of the white sugar-yielding root to plummet by as much as 60%, leaving Lankfer with a £12,000 loss. Sugar beet has been grown on Lankfer’s 225-hectare (556-acre) family farm in the village of Wereham since his grandfather first introduced it in 1928, alongside other crops. However, recent years of falling prices, coupled with risks from weather and disease, have many farmers questioning whether there is a future in growing it.
    This is before growers feel the impact of post-Brexit trade deals with large sugar producers such as Australia. It’s a concern for Lankfer, whose land is in international trade secretary Liz Truss’s constituency. He has twice hosted her at the farm to answer questions from growers. British farmers hail sugar beet for its role in crop rotation and the timing of its harvest. “It’s a good break crop, and it spreads the workload over the winter,” says Lankfer. The destination of his beet is visible from the field itself: the factory at nearby Wissington where it is processed, eventually ending up in products such as Coca-Cola and Cadbury chocolate, or bagged and sold to consumers under the Silver Spoon brand.
    Farmer Ed Lankfer inspecting his sugarbeet crop at Laurel Farm, Wereham, Norfolk,UK
    © Si Barber / Guardian / eyevine

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  • ‘A perfect storm’: UK beet growers fear Brexit threatens their future. They produce half the country’s sugar needs, but expect new trade deals to make their tough situation worse.
    DUKAS_128329096_EYE
    ‘A perfect storm’: UK beet growers fear Brexit threatens their future. They produce half the country’s sugar needs, but expect new trade deals to make their tough situation worse.
    In a field in Norfolk, the sight of lush green leaves sprouting from the soil are giving farmer Ed Lankfer cause for optimism. “I think this is one of the best crops we have ever grown,” he says, surveying one of his fields of sugar beet. The signs are promising so far for this year’s harvest, which takes place later than for other crops, during the autumn and winter. It would mark quite the turnaround from 2020’s terrible harvest, when bad weather and pests caused yields of the white sugar-yielding root to plummet by as much as 60%, leaving Lankfer with a £12,000 loss. Sugar beet has been grown on Lankfer’s 225-hectare (556-acre) family farm in the village of Wereham since his grandfather first introduced it in 1928, alongside other crops. However, recent years of falling prices, coupled with risks from weather and disease, have many farmers questioning whether there is a future in growing it.
    This is before growers feel the impact of post-Brexit trade deals with large sugar producers such as Australia. It’s a concern for Lankfer, whose land is in international trade secretary Liz Truss’s constituency. He has twice hosted her at the farm to answer questions from growers. British farmers hail sugar beet for its role in crop rotation and the timing of its harvest. “It’s a good break crop, and it spreads the workload over the winter,” says Lankfer. The destination of his beet is visible from the field itself: the factory at nearby Wissington where it is processed, eventually ending up in products such as Coca-Cola and Cadbury chocolate, or bagged and sold to consumers under the Silver Spoon brand.
    Farmer Ed Lankfer inspecting his sugarbeet crop at Laurel Farm, Wereham, Norfolk,UK
    © Si Barber / Guardian / eyevine

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  • ‘A perfect storm’: UK beet growers fear Brexit threatens their future. They produce half the country’s sugar needs, but expect new trade deals to make their tough situation worse.
    DUKAS_128329095_EYE
    ‘A perfect storm’: UK beet growers fear Brexit threatens their future. They produce half the country’s sugar needs, but expect new trade deals to make their tough situation worse.
    In a field in Norfolk, the sight of lush green leaves sprouting from the soil are giving farmer Ed Lankfer cause for optimism. “I think this is one of the best crops we have ever grown,” he says, surveying one of his fields of sugar beet. The signs are promising so far for this year’s harvest, which takes place later than for other crops, during the autumn and winter. It would mark quite the turnaround from 2020’s terrible harvest, when bad weather and pests caused yields of the white sugar-yielding root to plummet by as much as 60%, leaving Lankfer with a £12,000 loss. Sugar beet has been grown on Lankfer’s 225-hectare (556-acre) family farm in the village of Wereham since his grandfather first introduced it in 1928, alongside other crops. However, recent years of falling prices, coupled with risks from weather and disease, have many farmers questioning whether there is a future in growing it.
    This is before growers feel the impact of post-Brexit trade deals with large sugar producers such as Australia. It’s a concern for Lankfer, whose land is in international trade secretary Liz Truss’s constituency. He has twice hosted her at the farm to answer questions from growers. British farmers hail sugar beet for its role in crop rotation and the timing of its harvest. “It’s a good break crop, and it spreads the workload over the winter,” says Lankfer. The destination of his beet is visible from the field itself: the factory at nearby Wissington where it is processed, eventually ending up in products such as Coca-Cola and Cadbury chocolate, or bagged and sold to consumers under the Silver Spoon brand.
    Farmer Ed Lankfer inspecting his sugarbeet crop at Laurel Farm, Wereham, Norfolk,UK
    © Si Barber / Guardian / eyevine

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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

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  • ‘A perfect storm’: UK beet growers fear Brexit threatens their future. They produce half the country’s sugar needs, but expect new trade deals to make their tough situation worse.
    DUKAS_128329099_EYE
    ‘A perfect storm’: UK beet growers fear Brexit threatens their future. They produce half the country’s sugar needs, but expect new trade deals to make their tough situation worse.
    In a field in Norfolk, the sight of lush green leaves sprouting from the soil are giving farmer Ed Lankfer cause for optimism. “I think this is one of the best crops we have ever grown,” he says, surveying one of his fields of sugar beet. The signs are promising so far for this year’s harvest, which takes place later than for other crops, during the autumn and winter. It would mark quite the turnaround from 2020’s terrible harvest, when bad weather and pests caused yields of the white sugar-yielding root to plummet by as much as 60%, leaving Lankfer with a £12,000 loss. Sugar beet has been grown on Lankfer’s 225-hectare (556-acre) family farm in the village of Wereham since his grandfather first introduced it in 1928, alongside other crops. However, recent years of falling prices, coupled with risks from weather and disease, have many farmers questioning whether there is a future in growing it.
    This is before growers feel the impact of post-Brexit trade deals with large sugar producers such as Australia. It’s a concern for Lankfer, whose land is in international trade secretary Liz Truss’s constituency. He has twice hosted her at the farm to answer questions from growers. British farmers hail sugar beet for its role in crop rotation and the timing of its harvest. “It’s a good break crop, and it spreads the workload over the winter,” says Lankfer. The destination of his beet is visible from the field itself: the factory at nearby Wissington where it is processed, eventually ending up in products such as Coca-Cola and Cadbury chocolate, or bagged and sold to consumers under the Silver Spoon brand.
    Farmer Ed Lankfer inspecting his sugarbeet crop at Laurel Farm, Wereham, Norfolk,UK
    © Si Barber / Guardian / eyevine

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  • ‘A perfect storm’: UK beet growers fear Brexit threatens their future. They produce half the country’s sugar needs, but expect new trade deals to make their tough situation worse.
    DUKAS_128329101_EYE
    ‘A perfect storm’: UK beet growers fear Brexit threatens their future. They produce half the country’s sugar needs, but expect new trade deals to make their tough situation worse.
    In a field in Norfolk, the sight of lush green leaves sprouting from the soil are giving farmer Ed Lankfer cause for optimism. “I think this is one of the best crops we have ever grown,” he says, surveying one of his fields of sugar beet. The signs are promising so far for this year’s harvest, which takes place later than for other crops, during the autumn and winter. It would mark quite the turnaround from 2020’s terrible harvest, when bad weather and pests caused yields of the white sugar-yielding root to plummet by as much as 60%, leaving Lankfer with a £12,000 loss. Sugar beet has been grown on Lankfer’s 225-hectare (556-acre) family farm in the village of Wereham since his grandfather first introduced it in 1928, alongside other crops. However, recent years of falling prices, coupled with risks from weather and disease, have many farmers questioning whether there is a future in growing it.
    This is before growers feel the impact of post-Brexit trade deals with large sugar producers such as Australia. It’s a concern for Lankfer, whose land is in international trade secretary Liz Truss’s constituency. He has twice hosted her at the farm to answer questions from growers. British farmers hail sugar beet for its role in crop rotation and the timing of its harvest. “It’s a good break crop, and it spreads the workload over the winter,” says Lankfer. The destination of his beet is visible from the field itself: the factory at nearby Wissington where it is processed, eventually ending up in products such as Coca-Cola and Cadbury chocolate, or bagged and sold to consumers under the Silver Spoon brand.
    Farmer Ed Lankfer inspecting his sugarbeet crop at Laurel Farm, Wereham, Norfolk,UK
    © Si Barber / Guardian / eyevine

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  • ‘A perfect storm’: UK beet growers fear Brexit threatens their future. They produce half the country’s sugar needs, but expect new trade deals to make their tough situation worse.
    DUKAS_128329098_EYE
    ‘A perfect storm’: UK beet growers fear Brexit threatens their future. They produce half the country’s sugar needs, but expect new trade deals to make their tough situation worse.
    In a field in Norfolk, the sight of lush green leaves sprouting from the soil are giving farmer Ed Lankfer cause for optimism. “I think this is one of the best crops we have ever grown,” he says, surveying one of his fields of sugar beet. The signs are promising so far for this year’s harvest, which takes place later than for other crops, during the autumn and winter. It would mark quite the turnaround from 2020’s terrible harvest, when bad weather and pests caused yields of the white sugar-yielding root to plummet by as much as 60%, leaving Lankfer with a £12,000 loss. Sugar beet has been grown on Lankfer’s 225-hectare (556-acre) family farm in the village of Wereham since his grandfather first introduced it in 1928, alongside other crops. However, recent years of falling prices, coupled with risks from weather and disease, have many farmers questioning whether there is a future in growing it.
    This is before growers feel the impact of post-Brexit trade deals with large sugar producers such as Australia. It’s a concern for Lankfer, whose land is in international trade secretary Liz Truss’s constituency. He has twice hosted her at the farm to answer questions from growers. British farmers hail sugar beet for its role in crop rotation and the timing of its harvest. “It’s a good break crop, and it spreads the workload over the winter,” says Lankfer. The destination of his beet is visible from the field itself: the factory at nearby Wissington where it is processed, eventually ending up in products such as Coca-Cola and Cadbury chocolate, or bagged and sold to consumers under the Silver Spoon brand.
    Farmer Ed Lankfer inspecting his sugarbeet crop at Laurel Farm, Wereham, Norfolk,UK
    © Si Barber / Guardian / eyevine

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  • French fishermen say new conditions on licenses, implemented following the UK's departure from the EU, were imposed on April 30 without any discussion with French officials.  The new conditions caused around 50 French boats to converge on Jersey's harbour
    DUKAS_124973296_EYE
    French fishermen say new conditions on licenses, implemented following the UK's departure from the EU, were imposed on April 30 without any discussion with French officials. The new conditions caused around 50 French boats to converge on Jersey's harbour
    Jersey to be 'masters of waters' - Macron dealt hammer blow in fishing spat. ERSEY has said it will retain control of its waters after France claimed it would be victorious in upcoming talks following a bitter fishing row post-Brexit.
    © David Ferguson / Guardian / eyevine

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  • French fishermen say new conditions on licenses, implemented following the UK's departure from the EU, were imposed on April 30 without any discussion with French officials.  The new conditions caused around 50 French boats to converge on Jersey's harbour
    DUKAS_124973293_EYE
    French fishermen say new conditions on licenses, implemented following the UK's departure from the EU, were imposed on April 30 without any discussion with French officials. The new conditions caused around 50 French boats to converge on Jersey's harbour
    Jersey to be 'masters of waters' - Macron dealt hammer blow in fishing spat. ERSEY has said it will retain control of its waters after France claimed it would be victorious in upcoming talks following a bitter fishing row post-Brexit.
    Louis Jackson The Fresh Fish Company
    © David Ferguson / Guardian / eyevine

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  • French fishermen say new conditions on licenses, implemented following the UK's departure from the EU, were imposed on April 30 without any discussion with French officials.  The new conditions caused around 50 French boats to converge on Jersey's harbour
    DUKAS_124973298_EYE
    French fishermen say new conditions on licenses, implemented following the UK's departure from the EU, were imposed on April 30 without any discussion with French officials. The new conditions caused around 50 French boats to converge on Jersey's harbour
    Jersey to be 'masters of waters' - Macron dealt hammer blow in fishing spat. ERSEY has said it will retain control of its waters after France claimed it would be victorious in upcoming talks following a bitter fishing row post-Brexit.
    Lobster and Spider crab for sale The Fresh Fish Company
    © David Ferguson / Guardian / eyevine

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  • French fishermen say new conditions on licenses, implemented following the UK's departure from the EU, were imposed on April 30 without any discussion with French officials.  The new conditions caused around 50 French boats to converge on Jersey's harbour
    DUKAS_124973302_EYE
    French fishermen say new conditions on licenses, implemented following the UK's departure from the EU, were imposed on April 30 without any discussion with French officials. The new conditions caused around 50 French boats to converge on Jersey's harbour
    Jersey to be 'masters of waters' - Macron dealt hammer blow in fishing spat. ERSEY has said it will retain control of its waters after France claimed it would be victorious in upcoming talks following a bitter fishing row post-Brexit.
    Toby Greatbatch from Greatcatch Seafood
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  • French fishermen say new conditions on licenses, implemented following the UK's departure from the EU, were imposed on April 30 without any discussion with French officials.  The new conditions caused around 50 French boats to converge on Jersey's harbour
    DUKAS_124973340_EYE
    French fishermen say new conditions on licenses, implemented following the UK's departure from the EU, were imposed on April 30 without any discussion with French officials. The new conditions caused around 50 French boats to converge on Jersey's harbour
    Jersey to be 'masters of waters' - Macron dealt hammer blow in fishing spat. ERSEY has said it will retain control of its waters after France claimed it would be victorious in upcoming talks following a bitter fishing row post-Brexit.
    Toby Greatbatch from Greatcatch Seafood
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  • French fishermen say new conditions on licenses, implemented following the UK's departure from the EU, were imposed on April 30 without any discussion with French officials.  The new conditions caused around 50 French boats to converge on Jersey's harbour
    DUKAS_124973301_EYE
    French fishermen say new conditions on licenses, implemented following the UK's departure from the EU, were imposed on April 30 without any discussion with French officials. The new conditions caused around 50 French boats to converge on Jersey's harbour
    Jersey to be 'masters of waters' - Macron dealt hammer blow in fishing spat. ERSEY has said it will retain control of its waters after France claimed it would be victorious in upcoming talks following a bitter fishing row post-Brexit.
    Scallop diver Toby Greatbatch from Greatcatch Seafood
    Freshly caught scallop
    © David Ferguson / Guardian / eyevine

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  • French fishermen say new conditions on licenses, implemented following the UK's departure from the EU, were imposed on April 30 without any discussion with French officials.  The new conditions caused around 50 French boats to converge on Jersey's harbour
    DUKAS_124973306_EYE
    French fishermen say new conditions on licenses, implemented following the UK's departure from the EU, were imposed on April 30 without any discussion with French officials. The new conditions caused around 50 French boats to converge on Jersey's harbour
    Jersey to be 'masters of waters' - Macron dealt hammer blow in fishing spat. ERSEY has said it will retain control of its waters after France claimed it would be victorious in upcoming talks following a bitter fishing row post-Brexit.
    Scallop diver Toby Greatbatch from Greatcatch Seafood
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

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  • French fishermen say new conditions on licenses, implemented following the UK's departure from the EU, were imposed on April 30 without any discussion with French officials.  The new conditions caused around 50 French boats to converge on Jersey's harbour
    DUKAS_124973299_EYE
    French fishermen say new conditions on licenses, implemented following the UK's departure from the EU, were imposed on April 30 without any discussion with French officials. The new conditions caused around 50 French boats to converge on Jersey's harbour
    Jersey to be 'masters of waters' - Macron dealt hammer blow in fishing spat. ERSEY has said it will retain control of its waters after France claimed it would be victorious in upcoming talks following a bitter fishing row post-Brexit.
    Spider crab
    © David Ferguson / Guardian / eyevine

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  • French fishermen say new conditions on licenses, implemented following the UK's departure from the EU, were imposed on April 30 without any discussion with French officials.  The new conditions caused around 50 French boats to converge on Jersey's harbour
    DUKAS_124973305_EYE
    French fishermen say new conditions on licenses, implemented following the UK's departure from the EU, were imposed on April 30 without any discussion with French officials. The new conditions caused around 50 French boats to converge on Jersey's harbour
    Jersey to be 'masters of waters' - Macron dealt hammer blow in fishing spat. ERSEY has said it will retain control of its waters after France claimed it would be victorious in upcoming talks following a bitter fishing row post-Brexit.

    © David Ferguson / Guardian / eyevine

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  • French fishermen say new conditions on licenses, implemented following the UK's departure from the EU, were imposed on April 30 without any discussion with French officials.  The new conditions caused around 50 French boats to converge on Jersey's harbour
    DUKAS_124973335_EYE
    French fishermen say new conditions on licenses, implemented following the UK's departure from the EU, were imposed on April 30 without any discussion with French officials. The new conditions caused around 50 French boats to converge on Jersey's harbour
    Jersey to be 'masters of waters' - Macron dealt hammer blow in fishing spat. ERSEY has said it will retain control of its waters after France claimed it would be victorious in upcoming talks following a bitter fishing row post-Brexit.
    Scallop shells
    © David Ferguson / Guardian / eyevine

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  • French fishermen say new conditions on licenses, implemented following the UK's departure from the EU, were imposed on April 30 without any discussion with French officials.  The new conditions caused around 50 French boats to converge on Jersey's harbour
    DUKAS_124973292_EYE
    French fishermen say new conditions on licenses, implemented following the UK's departure from the EU, were imposed on April 30 without any discussion with French officials. The new conditions caused around 50 French boats to converge on Jersey's harbour
    Jersey to be 'masters of waters' - Macron dealt hammer blow in fishing spat. ERSEY has said it will retain control of its waters after France claimed it would be victorious in upcoming talks following a bitter fishing row post-Brexit.
    Fresh Scallops
    © David Ferguson / Guardian / eyevine

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  • French fishermen say new conditions on licenses, implemented following the UK's departure from the EU, were imposed on April 30 without any discussion with French officials.  The new conditions caused around 50 French boats to converge on Jersey's harbour
    DUKAS_124973338_EYE
    French fishermen say new conditions on licenses, implemented following the UK's departure from the EU, were imposed on April 30 without any discussion with French officials. The new conditions caused around 50 French boats to converge on Jersey's harbour
    Jersey to be 'masters of waters' - Macron dealt hammer blow in fishing spat. ERSEY has said it will retain control of its waters after France claimed it would be victorious in upcoming talks following a bitter fishing row post-Brexit.
    Chancre crab in holding tanks at Aqua Mar, fish merchants, Victoria Pier, St Helier, Jersey
    © David Ferguson / Guardian / eyevine

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  • French fishermen say new conditions on licenses, implemented following the UK's departure from the EU, were imposed on April 30 without any discussion with French officials.  The new conditions caused around 50 French boats to converge on Jersey's harbour
    DUKAS_124973294_EYE
    French fishermen say new conditions on licenses, implemented following the UK's departure from the EU, were imposed on April 30 without any discussion with French officials. The new conditions caused around 50 French boats to converge on Jersey's harbour
    Jersey to be 'masters of waters' - Macron dealt hammer blow in fishing spat. ERSEY has said it will retain control of its waters after France claimed it would be victorious in upcoming talks following a bitter fishing row post-Brexit.
    Fernando Carvalho from Aqua Mar, fish merchants, Victoria Pier, St Helier, Jersey
    © David Ferguson / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • French fishermen say new conditions on licenses, implemented following the UK's departure from the EU, were imposed on April 30 without any discussion with French officials.  The new conditions caused around 50 French boats to converge on Jersey's harbour
    DUKAS_124973337_EYE
    French fishermen say new conditions on licenses, implemented following the UK's departure from the EU, were imposed on April 30 without any discussion with French officials. The new conditions caused around 50 French boats to converge on Jersey's harbour
    Jersey to be 'masters of waters' - Macron dealt hammer blow in fishing spat. ERSEY has said it will retain control of its waters after France claimed it would be victorious in upcoming talks following a bitter fishing row post-Brexit.
    Fernando Carvalho from Aqua Mar, fish merchants, Victoria Pier, St Helier, Jersey
    © David Ferguson / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

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