nobody
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Post by nobody on Mar 7, 2018 15:26:27 GMT
One of the big problems (unless it’s been addressed) is that fisher folk are allowed a quota of a type of fish. Since catching them with nets is indiscriminate, if they catch the “wrong sort” they are thrown over the side, dead, they keep fishing until they reach their quota of the “right” sort. In 2011, the EU Commission set out its policy to stop the waste of throwing non-quota fish overboard. The Commission isn't the government of the EU and can't make laws. The main decision-making body is the Council. In the case of fisheries policy, the Fisheries Ministers of the 28 meet at the Council building in Brussels. They finally reached an agreement, based on the Commission proposals and legislation was adopted in February 2013. The ban is being phased in gradually from 2014 and, by 2019, it will cover all the EU’s fisheries, with some exceptions. So, nothing to do with the EU then, nice fudge By 2019 it will cover all the EU fisheries, with some exceptions. Even fudgeier,
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bertruss2
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Post by bertruss2 on Mar 7, 2018 15:41:41 GMT
Does that mean you don't know that the Council is the main organisation of the EU?
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nobody
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Post by nobody on Mar 7, 2018 15:51:59 GMT
It’s your post Bert.
Its up to the EU to make the law, you seem to suggest otherwise.
And why “certain exceptions”and why?
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bertruss2
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Post by bertruss2 on Mar 7, 2018 15:56:55 GMT
The final deal follows more than three years of difficult negotiations, in which the UK took the lead to secure significant reform of the fundamentally flawed current CFP.
The new Common Fisheries Policy will radically transform fishing practices in Europe. www.gov.uk/government/news/new-common-fisheries-policy-deal-ends-discardsThe UK government not only hails the reform of the EU fisheries policy but claims to have taken a leading role in bringing it about. After Brexit, obviously, it will lose its ability to shape EU policy. It's not likely to be able to act independently either. But that depends on the Free Trade deal that comes into force with the EU in 2021. 75% of fish caught by UK boats is exported, with the EU being the biggest customer.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Mar 8, 2018 8:51:36 GMT
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Post by unclejunior on Mar 8, 2018 10:05:56 GMT
While Euroclear’s headquarters is based in Brussels, it has historically been a UK plc company and a tax resident in Switzerland...more a brass plate insurance move than anything more significant......Google &Toyota investing hundreds of millions in UK however ....
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bertruss2
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Post by bertruss2 on Mar 8, 2018 11:33:24 GMT
With Brexit,the question is how much of taxpayers' money will have to go in tax breaks and subsidies to multinationals to keep them in Britain. Car companies have particular problems when the supply chain is spread over a number of EU countries. There are no British car makers (except for a few small specialist companies). What the UK has is foreign-owned assembly plants. Brexit threatens the whole business. the crankshaft used in the BMW Mini, which crosses the Channel three times in a 2,000-mile journey before the finished car rolls off the production line.
A cast of the raw crankshaft – the part of the car that translates the movement of the pistons into the rotational motion required to move the vehicle – is made by a supplier based in France.
From there it is shipped to BMW’s Hams Hall plant in Warwickshire, where it is drilled and milled into shape. When that job is complete, each crankshaft is then sent back across the Channel to Munich, where it inserted into the engine.
From Munich, it is back to the Mini plant in Oxford, where the engine is then “married” with the car.
If the car is to be sold on the continent then the crankshaft, inside the finished motor, will cross the Channel for a fourth time.www.theguardian.com/business/2017/mar/03/brexit-uk-car-industry-mini-britain-eu
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Post by unclejunior on Mar 8, 2018 12:35:58 GMT
Haha ...I’m sure Toyota didn’t even consider all that before sticking in another quarter of a billion..!!?? If only they had consulted The Guardian or Bert for some financial advice etc
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nobody
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Post by nobody on Mar 8, 2018 12:40:22 GMT
😀
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bertruss2
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Post by bertruss2 on Mar 8, 2018 14:39:17 GMT
Haha ...I’m sure Toyota didn’t even consider all that before sticking in another quarter of a billion..!!?? If only they had consulted The Guardian or Bert for some financial advice etc I'm sure Toyota will keep their options open. As long as the bungs keep flowing from the UK taxpayer, thanks to Brexit, they'll keep on using the UK as a base for car assembly plants, for the cheap British labour.
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Post by perrykneeham on Mar 8, 2018 19:41:55 GMT
Haha ...I’m sure Toyota didn’t even consider all that before sticking in another quarter of a billion..!!?? If only they had consulted The Guardian or Bert for some financial advice etc I'm sure Toyota will keep their options open. As long as the bungs keep flowing from the UK taxpayer, thanks to Brexit, they'll keep on using the UK as a base for car assembly plants, for the cheap British labour. You do realise that the transport and re-transport of vehilcles and sub-assemblies affects continental plants as much as it affects UK ones? I assume that you also realise that all duties are only payable on finished vehicles under existin WTO conventions. Stop wanking.
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Post by unclejunior on Mar 8, 2018 20:35:50 GMT
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Post by flatandy on Mar 8, 2018 20:47:20 GMT
Strongest since 2010, you say? Hmm. I wonder what could have caused the British economy to go to sh*t in 2010 so badly that it's taken 8 years to recover.
So, yeah, the Tories have finally made it back to the level it was under Gordon Brown.
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Post by perrykneeham on Mar 9, 2018 7:22:09 GMT
Strongest since 2010, you say? Hmm. I wonder what could have caused the British economy to go to sh*t in 2010 so badly that it's taken 8 years to recover. So, yeah, the Tories have finally made it back to the level it was under Gordon Brown. Just the British economy, was it?
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Mar 9, 2018 8:03:10 GMT
1 GBP =1.12209EUR is the reason why exports are up
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Post by perrykneeham on Mar 9, 2018 8:32:39 GMT
And?
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Mar 9, 2018 8:36:46 GMT
And what?
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Mar 10, 2018 16:59:04 GMT
A couple of smackers for you... The Tories just lost ALL FIVE by-elections they were defending in ‘worst night of local elections since Theresa May became leader’ linkAnd... Rees-Mogg set to benefit hugely from Brexit.What a vile piece of shite this creature is.
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Post by perrykneeham on Mar 10, 2018 17:14:07 GMT
Hahahaha! Intelligent, successful and principled man puts his money where his mouth is shockah!
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Post by Minge är en jävla besserwisser on Mar 10, 2018 18:34:56 GMT
A couple of smackers for you... The Tories just lost ALL FIVE by-elections they were defending in ‘worst night of local elections since Theresa May became leader’ linkAnd... Rees-Mogg set to benefit hugely from Brexit.What a vile piece of shite this creature is. Explain to me why an emerging markets fund will benefit hugely from Brexit.
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