Freeports in the United Kingdom explained

Freeports in the United Kingdom are a series of government assigned special economic zones where customs rules such as taxes do not apply until goods leave the specified zone. The theoretical purpose of such freeports is to encourage economic activity in the surrounding area and increase manufacturing. Critics of such schemes, including the parliamentary opposition, see them as possible tax havens and open to money laundering.

Goods imported into freeports do not incur usual import procedures on entry and re-exit. Import duties are not payable until the goods are put into free circulation or used within the free zone.

The first freeport in the United Kingdom opened in the 1980s under Margaret Thatcher, as an attempt to combat de-industrialisation and a declining economy. Several freeports operated throughout the United Kingdom, but by 2012 the Conservative-led government decided not to renew their licences.

During the 2021 United Kingdom budget, Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rishi Sunak announced the first eight new freeports would be created.

History

In their 1983 manifesto, The Challenge of Our Times, the Conservative government outlined its plans to establish 'experimental' freeports as a part of its regional policies to modernise the British economy following the early 1980s recession.[1] After winning a second term at the general election Margaret Thatcher's government assigned freeport status to six areas; namely Belfast, Birmingham, Cardiff, Liverpool, Glasgow Prestwick Airport and Southampton. These freeports experienced limited success during their lifetime and by 2012 Prime Minister David Cameron decided not to renew the freeport licences. Teesside MP Simon Clarke blamed the failed experiment on "an uncharacteristic lack of ambition by the Thatcher Government" and "the regulatory constraints placed on them by the EU".[2]

21st century

In 2016, the then backbench MP—and later Chancellor of the ExchequerRishi Sunak published a white paper for the Centre for Policy Studies outlining his ideas for post-Brexit freeports similar to those in the United States. The paper titled The Free Ports Opportunity suggested that creation of such ports could create 86,000 jobs and help fuel the Northern Powerhouse by bringing increased trade to deprived areas.[3] After the Conservative Party's victory in the 2019 general election, plans were announced for ten freeports to be set up by 2021 with regions bidding for free status.[4] Up to 40 bids for freeport status were received during the process.[5]

As part of the 2021 United Kingdom budget, Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak announced that eight new freeports would be created in England.[6] They are East Midlands Airport, Felixstowe and Harwich, Humber region, Liverpool City Region, Plymouth, Solent, Thames and Teesside.

The UK government named three aims behind creating freeports, promoting regeneration and job creation, creating a hub for global trade and to create a hotbed for innovation.

Other devolved governments within the United Kingdom were invited to establish freeports, one or two each. The Scottish government announced plans for so called sustainable "green ports",[7] the Welsh government said it would continue, providing it received the same level of funding as England[8] and the Northern Ireland Executive said it was working with the HM Treasury to implement its own site.

List of UK Freeports

!Location!Port(s) and customs sites!Country!Operational!Note!Website
Anglesey Freeport
Porthladd Rhydd Ynys Môn
Holyhead, Anglesey Prosperity Zone, Rhosgoch, M-Sparcpending[9] https://angleseyfreeport.co.uk/home-e/
Celtic Freeport
Porthladd Rhydd Celtaidd
Milford Haven and Port Talbotpendinghttps://www.celticfreeport.wales/EN/pages
East Midlands FreeportEast Midlands AirportApril 2023[10] https://www.emfreeport.com
Forth Green FreeportGrangemouth, Rosyth and Leith ports, Edinburgh Airport, Burntislandpendinghttps://forthgreenfreeport.com
Freeport EastPort of Felixstowe, Harwich International PortJanuary 2023 [11] https://freeporteast.com
Humber FreeportPort of Immingham, Port of Hull, Port of Grimsby, Goolependinghttps://humberfreeport.org
Inverness and Cromarty Firth Green FreeportInverness, Cromarty Firth, Nigg and Inverness Airport.pendinghttps://greenfreeport.scot
Liverpool City Region FreeportLiverpool Waters, Wirral WatersJanuary 2023
Plymouth and South Devon FreeportDevonportDecember 2022 [12] https://pasdfreeport.com
Solent FreeportPort of Southampton, Southampton Airport, Portsmouth International PortDecember 2022https://solentfreeport.com
Teesside FreeportTeesport, Hartlepool, Teesside AirportDecember 2022https://www.teessidefreeport.com
Thames FreeportLondon Gateway, Port of Tilbury, Ford DagenhamMarch 2023 [13]

Rules regarding freeports

Criticism

Proposal for freeports in the United Kingdom have been heavily criticised by opposition parties, trade unions, think tanks and various economists. Reasons for this include the possibility for use as tax havens, smuggling and a way to erode worker's rights.

Despite claims of a cross party consensus, Labour Party members showed opposition to the idea with a speaker at a Labour conference describing them as "job-destroying".[18] Further to this, Labour party leader Keir Starmer called it "giving up" and "blind faith".[19] Former Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer John McDonnell suggested it to be '"a revival of a failed Thatcherite plan from the 1980s, designed to cut away at regulation and our tax base."

At a Liberal Democrat conference in 2019, members passed a motion for the abolition of freeports due to the increased risk of money-laundering and tax evasion.[20] Similarly the then Home Affairs spokesperson—and later leader— Sir Ed Davey suggested the UK could become the world capital of money laundering.

In Scotland, the Scottish National Party (SNP) was sceptical, with trade minister Ivan McKee calling them a "shiny squirrel" to distract from the consequences of Brexit. adding "the reputation of freeports across the world is mixed, with concerns about deregulation and risks of criminality, tax evasion and reductions in workers’ rights". First Minister Nicola Sturgeon also raised concern over them being "low-cost, low-wage, low-value opportunities". Despite these remarks, in 2021 the SNP announced its own version of freeports, called 'green ports', which they say will adopt "best practice which helps deliver our net-zero emissions and fair work principles, alongside supporting regeneration and innovation ambitions".

Freeport developments

East Midlands Freeport

An inland Freeport, comprising 533 hectares at three sites, East Midlands Airport, East Midlands Intermodal Park and the Ratcliffe-on-Soar Power Station redevelopment site. Given £25m of initial capital to develop transport infrastructure and a Hydrogen Skills Academy.[21] The airport is investing £120m in a 5 year modernisation program.[22]

Freeport East

Funding of £25m was provided in 2023 to start the process of generating 13,500 new jobs at two sites at the Port of Felixstowe and Harwich International Port and four customs sites including Bathside Bay.[23] 50% of business rates that would have gone to central government can be used by the local authority for training and local developments.[24]

Liverpool City Region Freeport

One of the customs sites, in Sefton will hold Atlantic Park a highly specified industrial and logistics development, built on a former Rolls Royce factory site.[25] Another named Arc Royal, located next to the ship builder Cammell Laird, will be a carbon neutral distribution/production building.[26]

Plymouth and South Devon Freeport

Three sites were acquired in late 2023 for £7.8m at Beaumont Way in Langage, Sherford and Millbay Docks using the £20m provided by the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities. The target is to generate 3,500 jobs, mainly in the defence and maritime industries.[27]

Solent Freeport

Eight locations for the Solent Freeport, the Navigator quarter next to Southampton Airport and Eastleigh rail depot, Portsmouth has the port and Dunsbury Park, with five zones in Southampton at Fawley, the Exxonmobil oil terminal, two sites on the New Forest side of the water and a 30 acre site at Redbridge. Portico Shipping providing a new HMRC customs facility at Portsmouth.[28]

Teesside Freeport

See main article: Teesside Freeport. Comprising 4,500 acres it is the largest Freeport in the UK, with sites at Teesworks, Teesside International Airport, PD Teesport, Wilton International, Port of Middlesbrough, the Port of Hartlepool, Able Seaton Port, Redcar Bulk Terminal and LV Shipping.[29] Plans have been submitted for British Steel to open a new steel production plant, with an electric arc furnace, inside the Teesworks Freeport area.[30]

Thames Freeport

Thames Freeport comprises 1,700 acres of land over three sites, the Port of Tilbury, Ford’s Dagenham plant and the London Gateway. Thames Freeport at Tilbury 2 has had a new daily ferry link to Rotterdam (Europoort) since March 2024.[31]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Tha Challenge of Our Times: Conservative Party General Election Manifesto 1983. Conservative Party. 7 March 2021. Margaret Thatcher Foundation.
  2. Freeports . . . 647 . 11 October 2018 . . MP for Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland . 168WH. 172WH . All those [1980s] freeports, however, failed to achieve the success that we have witnessed in others around the world, because they did not offer anything like the advantages that could be acquired in many other freeports outside Europe. That was partly due to an uncharacteristic lack of ambition by the Thatcher Government, but mostly due to the regulatory constraints placed on them by the EU..
  3. Book: Sunak, Rishi . Rishi Sunak . The Free Ports Opportunity . . London . 2016 . 978-1-910627-40-2 . 9 May 2021 . 12 May 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210512233156/https://www.cps.org.uk/files/reports/original/161109144209-TheFreePortsOpportunity.pdf . dead .
  4. Web site: David . Goodman. 10 February 2020. U.K. Begins Search for Free Ports as Spending Pledges Mount. MSN. Bloomberg News.
  5. Web site: Peters. Tom. 15 February 2021. Local Labour leaders should beware the false promise of free ports. 7 March 2021. Labour List.
  6. News: 2021-03-03 . Freeports: What are they and where will they be? . . 2021-03-03.
  7. News: Grant. Alistair. 21 January 2021. SNP accused of 'humiliating climbdown' over UK freeport plans. The Herald. 7 March 2021. . Glasgow . 0965-9439.
  8. News: Wells . Ione . 5 March 2021 . Risk freeports could drive trade away from Wales, Welsh ministers claim . . Wales: Politics . 8 March 2021.
  9. Web site: Wales’ new freeports unveiled . 22 March 2023.
  10. Web site: 3 March 2021 . U.K. Names Eight Freeports in Bid to Boost Post-Brexit Trade . 7 March 2021 . supplychainbrain.com . Keller International Publishing . Bloomberg News.
  11. Web site: Jobs and investment boost for Liverpool and East Anglia as Freeports given green light . 10 January 2023.
  12. Web site: Freeports . 9 December 2023.
  13. Web site: THAMES FREEPORT - ALL TAX SITES AND FREEPORT BOUNDARY . 9 December 2023.
  14. Web site: HMRC UK Freeports Induction Pack . November 2023.
  15. Web site: The best things in life are free(ports)? . 14 March 2023.
  16. Web site: Freeports: What are they? What do we know? And what will we know? . 10 March 2023.
  17. Web site: Thames Freeport . 9 December 2023.
  18. Web site: 4 October 2018. Labour Conference Sees Free Port Opposition. 7 March 2021. portstrategy.com.
  19. Web site: 3 March 2021. Keir Starmer responds to the Budget. 8 March 2021. Labour Party.
  20. News: O'Donoghue . Daniel . 16 September 2019 . Lib Dems accused of 'economic vandalism' after conference attack on free ports . . 2632-1165 . Aberdeen . DC Thomson. 7 March 2021.
  21. Web site: East Midlands: England's only inland freeport gets green light . 30 March 2023.
  22. Web site: East Midlands Airport begins £120m modernisation works . 9 January 2024.
  23. Web site: Freeport East to benefit from new £150m UK-wide fund to boost economy . 30 December 2023.
  24. Web site: Freeport East will boost local communities across the region . 18 December 2023.
  25. Web site: Turley helps secure green light for an 807,000 sq ft all-electric industrial space in Liverpool City Region’s Freeport . 6 December 2023.
  26. Web site: A NEW CROSS-DOCKED LOGISTICS / INDUSTRIAL FACILITY UNDER CONSTRUCTION NOW . 10 January 2024.
  27. Web site: Devon freeport to get £3.5m of land for jobs . 18 December 2023.
  28. Web site: Solent Freeport’s customs site in Portsmouth gets the go-ahead . 21 June 2023.
  29. Web site: First UK Freeport Activity As Steel Consignment Arrives In Teesside . 28 September 2022.
  30. Web site: THE KEY DETAILS ABOUT STEELMAKING RETURNING TO TEESSIDE . 7 November 2023.
  31. Web site: P&O Ferries strengthens North Sea presence with new London – Rotterdam freight route . 9 January 2024.