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Items to disappear from supermarket shelves and prices to increase if UK crashes out of EU, group including Lidl, the Co-op, Pret a Manger and KFC say.
Prices will soar and border delays will halt fresh food imports following the "shock" of a no-deal Brexit, Britain’s major supermarkets have warned.
Big names KFC, Pret, Lidl, Co-Op, M&S, Waitrose, Sainsbury's, Asda and McDonald's have signed a damning letter warning food supplies could run short - read it in full.
British government’s lack of clarity on EU trade deal ‘could limit fish, dairy and meat range’.
Customs experts and leading supermarkets warn produce such as meat, fruit and vegetables could be in short supply in Northern Ireland.
Bonded customs warehouses are in demand to manage duties / U.K. firms exporting food to Ireland snap up Dublin storage
Marks & Spencer has warned that up to 15% of its food product lines could be unavailable in its Northern Ireland shops in January.
New border rules introduced last week are already creating problems for exporters and traders, say firms.
Sweets are among retailer’s products affected by ‘rules of origin’ regulations.
Marks & Spencer says complex procedures resulting from EU withdrawal impacting on its performance.
Business groups tell ministers to sort out bureaucratic mess caused by EU trade deal.
Ham sandwiches confiscated, Percy Pigs exiled, and the threat of rotten fish in Westminster are some of the problems plaguing the UK.
What has changed in the 31 days since the UK left and how has it impacted consumers and businesses?
British supermarkets that have stores in Europe are facing supply problems because of post-Brexit rules on exports to the EU. It's affecting fresh produce at 20 Marks and Spencer stores in France, Morrison's in Gibraltar, and a chain of UK supermarkets in Belgium is on the verge of closure with no deliveries since December.
Supermarket prices will rise more than is necessary unless there is greater collaboration with European suppliers on post-Brexit trade frictions, a Dutch business has warned.
Marks & Spencer says Brexit and the Irish Sea border have added about £30m of costs to its island of Ireland business.
Marks & Spencer expects to incur between between £42 million (€49 million) and £47 million in Brexit costs for the current year, with a particular impact upon its business in the Ireland.
M&S expects to pay between £42 million and £47 million in additional costs this year, versus £16 million in 2020.
The end of the holiday season heralds the return to centre stage of a number of burning Brexit-related issues this autumn.
A grace period on food imports checks is set to end on 1 October.