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The delayed goods are presumably important to the individuals and businesses in the EU who ordered them, though, as are the time-limited cancer drugs that are having to be destroyed because of the delays important to the patients who need them (and since the British exporter is having to set up a new plant in the RoI to supply them, it looks as if they can't readily be sourced elsewhere).Or the EU could decide it's not really that important to them to set up a system of new BCPs. The ROI for Europe seems dubious, so why bother?
The effects on the UK of all these are going to be considerably more painful, at least in the short- to medium-term than they are on the EU, but nevertheless they will probably be very painful indeed for particular EU businesses and their customers, and for particular areas.
Question for EU readers -- what steps, if any, are national governments or the EU taking to mitigate the problems caused by Brexit for their citizens and local businesses?















