Brexit issues: Canceled deliveries send warning signals

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Photographer: Ben Stansall / AFP / Getty Images

Grizzly’s Custom Bikes provides services and upgrades to Harley-Davidson motorcycles, importing seats, exhaust systems and other parts from Germany.

This week, the owner of the company in Folkestone, England, received a two-line e-mail with bad news: his German supplier stops all deliveries to the UK indefinitely due to Brexit.

“I was deflated,” said Paul Hayes-Watkins. His business is now struggling to find alternative sources of parts. “If that is the future,” he said, “I might as well close the doors.”

The Grizzly bear experience is a sign of how Britain’s departure from the European Union’s single market on 31 December is already wreaking havoc on companies’ supply chains. Firms of all sizes are trying to avoid getting caught up in delays, probably at the border, when new controls and documents come into force – even if the UK and the EU manage to reach a trade agreement.

Specac Ltd., a laboratory equipment manufacturer in the London suburb of Orpington, imports metal subassemblies from the Czech Republic and exports about 15% of its products to the EU. The company put a embargo to all imports and exports by 15 January to avoid any early disruption of Brexit.

Wrong papers

“There will be people who will put things on the road that will not have wrong documents,” said David Smith, CEO of Specac. His company placed its orders early to beat the winter crisis. “If we weren’t ours embargo, companies like us might find themselves behind the queue. “

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