acd1202:
Having just read it, it certainly isn’t bs, it’s logical even obvious and says exactly what I would expect to be happening.
If your a driving for a UK company in a UK vehicle no change, our right to drive temporarily in an EU member is covered by the Geneva convention, nothing to do with the EU, likewise their ability to drive here. If a Brit wishes to work for an EU employer in an EU vehicle let’s say Dutch for example we will have to take a dcpc in NL, just as an EU citizen will have to take a UK dcpc if they wish to work here. Whether driving licences are accepted for longterm residency and employment is a matter for each state, again temporary visits are covered by the Geneva convention.
If after having tipped in France we want to reload France for Germany we would need an the modern equivalent of a multi-trip book, a German tipping here and finding a load for Italy likewise will need a book. No multi-trip book you can only reload to your country of origin. Cabotage will cease to be possible both by UK hauliers in the EU and in the UK by EU hauliers.
As I have thought all along, Brexit may well be the revival of the UK international transport industry. Get our house in order with permits and there is no change, but is the Romanian who comes here a couple of times a year going to bother getting a book, I think not. Likewise is the Pole who some believe is depressing wages here still going to come if he has to take a dcpc in English at his own expense before he can start work?
This is supposed to be happening when no agreement is reached or a very hard brexit becomes reality.
You just have to realise there will be only UK hauliers and EU hauliers. As Franglais mentioned, if a uk haulier wants to do a transport from britain to let 's say Germany, he will need a German permit and a Belgian or French transit permit, if he wants to do cabotage in europe, he will need the book, a EU haulier will need a UK permit only, as he goes from the EU bloc to the UK and back to the EU and can load for any country in the EU he wants.
In this scenario I think it will become even harder for British hauliers as it already is now.
short walk:
Looking at it from the EU27 side they must wonder what do the Brits want? It seems the Brits themselves don’t actually seem to know! What a mess!
IMHO is this where at the moment lies the problem. There is to big a difference of opinion between the tories themselves, and even between labour as Corbyn now is looking for a soft Brexit.
The British decided to leave the EU, it is up to the brits to make clear how they want to continue with the EU.(and one way or another, you can not avoid working with the EU).
As I mentioned earlier, your politicians organised a referendum, making it a simple choice: yes or no, but is far more complicated than just in or out, and you have a press who are digging the trenches, and sod the consequences.
Sombody told once: every country gets the politicians it deserves, I do not know what you have done to get who you got now.