Belfast 1

Get ready for the NI Windsor Agreement processes

The Windsor Framework was agreed in February to ease post-Brexit trade between Northern Ireland (NI) and the rest of the UK, but concerns remain about a continuing lack of clarity over the details of the Windsor Framework - which begins to come into force from the 1st October.

Prior to the Windsor agreement the process for movements to NI is under the TSS (Trader Support Scheme) with shippers submitting a simplified declaration, under the UK Trader Scheme (UKTS). 

However, this only complied with the Safety and Security declarations required by the Ferry operators and a second supplementary declaration is made in NI, with commodity code, value of goods, and additional information statements specific to goods.

Most critically of all a percentage calculation of goods “at risk of moving to the South” are applied and duty invoiced to the Consignee for potential sales not actual.

As a result of the Windsor Framework, the Government is able to introduce a scheme to reimburse the payment of EU customs duties paid on goods moved into NI that were not sold or used in the EU - The Customs (Northern Ireland: Repayment And Remission) (Eu Exit) (Amendment) Regulations 2023.

The agreement establishes a new UK Internal Market Scheme (UKIMS) for the movement of goods from the UK to NI and is being phased in from 30th September. 

The existing UKTS will be replaced by the new UK Internal Market Scheme (UKIMS) with effect from 30th September 2023. This will enable businesses established in Great Britain to join and declare goods “not at risk” if they are brought into Northern Ireland for sale or final use by end consumers in the UK.

Traders who join UKIMS will be able to declare their goods as ‘not at risk’ which means they will not be charged duty if entering NI from free circulation in Great Britain. They will, however, be charged UK duty if entering Northern Ireland from outside the EU and the UK, or if the goods were not in free circulation in GB.

Green Lane

The ‘Green Lane’ will significantly expand the range of businesses who can benefit; end the requirement for traders to provide customs commodity codes; scrap supplementary declarations; and ensure that businesses can move their goods using commercial information.

It is worth noting that both lanes are ‘virtual’ and no physical lanes, or markings exist.

Regulatory easements in the green lane do not exist for all types of goods. The focus is on those goods with the most onerous SPS compliance obligations, including pre-packaged products of animal or plant origin, food and food products.

Meat and fresh dairy products are to be labelled ‘Not for EU’ from October 2023, all other dairy products from October 2024, and composite products, fruit, vegetables and fish from July 2025.

Traders will need to be registered on the Northern Ireland Retail Movement Scheme (NIRMS) for SPS goods and the UK Internal Market Scheme (UKIMS) for general goods. 

For goods moving on or after 30th September 2023, the UK Trader Scheme authorisation will no longer be valid and traders must use the UK Internal Market Scheme (UKIMS) authorisation to declare your goods ‘not at risk’ of entering the EU, if the applicable EU duty is greater than zero.

Green Lane Process
Trader uses commercial info and submits to TSS
Haulier obtains GMR
Goods are moved

Red Lane
Goods not for final consumption in Northern Ireland must go through a red lane
‘At risk’ goods will be charged the applicable EU duty

Red Lane Process
Haulier completed Entry Summary Declaration (ENS)
Simplified Frontier Declaration (SFD)
Haulier obtains GMR
Goods are moved
Supplementary declaration
Pay duty

Key dates
June 2023 - Traders can register for UKIMS
September 2023 - UKIMS must be used for no duty to be applied (Green Lane)
October 2023 - STANMI replaced by NI Retail Movement Scheme (NIRMS)
September 2024 - Full Green Lane implemented

A number of questions remain outstanding including…
- Who will run the Trusted Trader Scheme and what are the costs involved?
- How long will the government fund the TSS – the Trader Support Service (03 10 23 - HMRC confirm extension 31 12 24)
- How will the red and green lanes work in practice, especially where groupage loads are concerned?

At the moment it appears that trailers containing a mix of cargoes eligible for the green lane, will need to go through the red lane, even if just one consignment entering NI is in the red lane.

Retailers, especially the supermarkets, are likely to be the largest users of the Green Lane; while manufacturers in Northern Ireland appear more likely to use the red lane, so that goods can be shown to comply with applicable EU law and so be processed and sold on within the EU market.

HMRC UPDATE, 3rd OCTOBER 2023 - HMRC has confirmed the extension of the Trader Support Service until 31 December 2024, as a free to use service, educating traders on applicable processes and supporting them to submit customs and safety and security declarations.

We will continue to share information on the new framework and processes as they become available.

Our customs team are working directly with affected clients, to ensure that they are prepared and compliant with new customs processes, declarations and requirements.

If you have any questions or concerns about the Windsor Agreement and trade with NI/IE please EMAIL Andy Fitchett, Brokerage Manager, who will be happy to review your situation.

Customs House

HMRC to phase export transition to CDS

HMRC announced last week that after listening to industry leaders they had decided to move away from the planned hard start on the 30th November 2023, in favour of a phased transition to the Customs Declaration Service (CDS) from the current Customs Handling of Import and Export Freight (CHIEF) platform for UK exports.

Those businesses that have the IT functionality in place will still be able to transition to CDS by Thursday 30th November, ahead of the majority that will now migrate to CDS at the beginning of 2024.

High-volume declarants able to migrate by the end of November will be contacted by HMRC next month to assist in the switch, while remaining exporters will be assisted from the beginning of next year.

CHIEF’s replacement, CDS has been a long time coming and there have been many changes in the implementation timetable. This revision to the deadline is quite short and businesses need to continue working towards transitioning from CHIEF to CDS.

Metro has been ready for some time and is already processing hundreds of export entries via CDS every week.

If HMRC are right to delay and traders are not aware, then speak to Metro, because we can make the transition to CDS a painless one. Do not wait until the big switch off and call us now.

CDS replaced CHIEF as the UK imports platform last September and the initial intention was that it would come online for exports on the 31st January this year, but this was pushed back initially to the 31st March and then to the 30th November to allow for more testing.

The Loadstar reported that the decision to phase in CDS for exports was tied to continual outages and messaging faults after HMRC forced through last year’s September deadline for imports. 

Sources at the time said neither the industry nor the software houses had been afforded adequate time to ensure the CDS system was ready and able to handle the scale of declarations coming its way.

Inventory-Linked Ports (ILPs) are those ports and airports that have customs control systems linked to HMRC systems, allowing for quick electronic clearance of goods on arrival. Our customs team believe that the development of a resilient operating system for those inventory-linked locations, including Felixstowe and Southampton forced HMRC’s hand in announcing a further delay.

There are still some outstanding issues in terms of the duality of operating CHIEF and CDS through non-inventory locations, including RoRo ports such as Dover, Holyhead and the Channel Tunnel, but these appear to have been addressed and are now well into beta testing.

Our customs team can explain how your exports are affected by the CDS/CHIEF changes and what actions are necessary to protect your outbound traffic flows.

Metro clients have been migrated onto the CDS platform and are supported by our customs brokerage team, but you must hold a valid GB EORI and be registered on the Government Gateway to use CDS. 

If you have not registered for CDS, or are uncertain how it applies to you, we can guide you through the changes and actions required. 

EMAIL Andy Fitchett, Brokerage Manager, for further information, or to discuss your situation.

Dover blur

Food border checks delayed for 5th time

The UK was set to roll out new health certification requirements for medium and high-risk goods originating in the EU, such as meat and dairy, from October, but there is now official confirmation from No 10 that last week’s Financial Times report was correct and the government is postponing border controls until January 2024.

Plans to roll out controls on all goods entering Britain post-Brexit were initially meant to begin at the start of 2021, around the same time the EU introduced strict requirements on all UK food exports.

However, import controls have since been delayed four times over the past two years, with the October 2023 deadline’s move to January the fifth to be delayed. 

"Having listened to the views of industry, the government has agreed to a delay of three months for the introduction of remaining sanitary and phytosanitary controls" it said in a statement.

New physical checks on imports, due to come into effect in January, will now start in April.

According to a survey of EU suppliers by the Cold Chain Federation (CCF), the delay could avoid disruption during the Christmas trading window, with 39% of European food producing businesses supplying goods to the UK unaware of the new rules.

However, the National Farmers Union has campaigned vociferously against further postponement to checks, arguing that it is unfair to British producers, as it continues to give EU farmers a competitive advantage, while UK exporters have had to endure checks on food exports to the bloc for the past two years.

Under the new post-Brexit import rules, due to come into force from 31st October and now pushed back a further three months, export health certificates signed by a qualified certifying officer would become mandatory for every consignment of ‘medium risk’ meat, dairy and fish products exported from the EU to the UK.

The CCF had written to ministers, sharing their survey’s findings, requesting that the October implementation be moved back to the 31st January 2024, because they believe that the government needs to deliver a much wider and better resourced communications campaign, to increase awareness among EU businesses.

The CCF said that with so much stress, cost inflation and other pressures in the food supply chain this year, moving the start date to January 2024 could make a big difference.

Their survey also found that 78% of EU businesses believed costs will increase to their UK customers as a result of the new rules, and while 60% said they planned to continue servicing UK customers at the same frequency after the new rules implementation, 10% had planned to reduce the frequency and 7% planned to stop altogether.

With the current regulations for imports of foodstuffs remaining unchanged, there is a further three months to prepare your suppliers for the changeover and keep your supply chains running freely. 

We can guide you on the new import procedures and help you to educate your suppliers, with full support for all your import and export documentary needs.

Metro are at the forefront of customs brokerage solutions for the food and drink industry, with our automated CuDoS declaration platform and dedicated team of customs experts, reacting swiftly to any changes in the UK’s trading regimes.

To learn how we can simplify and automate customs declarations for your businesses, please EMAIL Andy Fitchett, Brokerage Manager, to review the options.

Truck in Switzerland

Take your customs declarations to a whole new level

Metro provide customs clearance services at all UK airports and ports of arrival and departure, including inland border points, with import and export entry processes completed within two hours.

Simply provide us with your commercial invoice, packing list and any other supporting documents and we will file your customs declarations directly with customs, using our HMRC approved CuDoS software.

The Metro Customs Document operating System (CuDoS) deploys the latest artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning (ML) and automation capabilities to optimise data capture and accelerate customs declaration processes, while reducing costs and increasing handling capacity by 25%.

Our AI and ML engines eliminate manual data entry and human errors, and because CuDoS ‘learns’ your data, it becomes smarter and accelerates tasks, for even greater efficiencies. 

CuDoS offers two hour turnaround times, from customer instruction through to document delivery, with 96% of declarations processed and submitted to HMRC within 30 minutes, and all at a market-leading 99% processing accuracy.

Metro’s customs experts have many years detailed knowledge in import and export trade compliance, rules of origin, classification codes and tax calculations.

With Metro’s CuDoS there’s no need for lengthy email chains and chasing phone calls, with document management, distribution and repository capability, providing audit trails of document movements and data-based insights, with comprehensive reports and analytics.

And while CuDoS provides 24/7 access to process and track transit, and customs processing, our customs team are available - for that personal touch - from 07:00 to 19:00 weekdays and with weekend support.

Customs Document operating System (CuDoS)
AI, ML and automation driven CuDoS optimises data driven declaration for speed, accuracy and compliance
20% reduction in headline costs and 25% increase in volumes
SLA of 98% on two hour turnaround times, from instruction to document delivery
96% of declarations processed and submitted to HMRC within 30 minutes
99% processing accuracy
Dashboard view of customs activities, tracking, and reports
Customs badges across all UK ports and airports

Imports
RoRo, container and regional ports covered
All UK airports covered
Compatible with Simplified Customs Declaration Procedures (SCDP) and special customs regimes

Exports
RoRo, container and regional ports covered
All UK airports covered
Exit Summary Declaration application
Goods Vehicle Movement Service (GVMS)
Transit documents
ATA Carnet

Metro are at the forefront of automated customs brokerage solutions, simplifying and automating customs declarations for importers and exporters, with our CuDoS declaration platform and dedicated team of customs experts ready to support businesses of all types and sizes.

CuDoS simplifies and reduces the cost of trade, creating efficiencies and ensuring customs compliance by removing human errors.

To learn how we can simplify and automate customs declarations for your businesses, please EMAIL Andy Fitchett to review the options.