Euronews: UK government 'divided' over possible trade deal with Australia
Sam Lowe, a senior research fellow at the Centre for European Reform, an independent think-tank, told Euronews that the debate at the heart of the UK government is about how much access Australia should be offered.
"The big controversy is how much access to offer Australian farmers.
"Some in Cabinet [UK senior ministers] would rather that it [access] was limited, so the UK's offer was something called "tariff-rate quotas", which limits the amount of product that could come in tariff-free.
"Other parts of government would like duty and tariff-free trade, so zero tariffs, albeit phased in over a long period of time, 15 years.
"It seems the group that wants quota-free trade has won the day and I suppose the reason for that is that they need to get this done quickly.
"They want to get it done before the G7 (in June). While it could be possible to negotiate some slightly reduced rates, that would mean negotiations would drag on longer, as have the EU and Australian negotiations over exactly the same issue."
...Asked why, from an environmental perspective, London was seeking a trade deal with a country so far away, Lowe responded: "You have to put it in the broader context of the UK leaving the European Union and this government's desire to be a bastion of free trade globally. And in that context, a trade agreement with Australia is a priority, along with another trade agreement with New Zealand.
"And I suppose there's a feeling in (the UK) government [that] if they can't get these ones done, that it might be quite difficult to get anything done in future. So I fully expect this to be concluded in the next couple of weeks."