UK-EU SPS negotiations: Plant health

04 Rhagfyr 2025

As part of the UK and EU's trade negotiations, the UK has committed to 'dynamically align', which means the UK will follow EU rules on many aspects of agricultural production, including regulation of pesticides. We look at the issues this raises for your business.

UK-EU negotiations are underway to determine how ‘dynamic alignment’ with EU rules will work under an SPS (Sanitary and Phytosanitary) agreement. 

A common UK-EU SPS area should remove routine plant health border checks, which will provide relief from associated delays, damage and biosecurity risk for British growers importing young plants. Reduced friction for agri-food goods at the border will be enabled by the UK following EU requirements, including on pesticide availability and pesticide residues, known as MRLs (maximum residue levels).

Last August, the Minister for the Cabinet Office said he aimed for the SPS agreement to be implemented by 2027. In November, officials asked industry to consider a scenario where the UK follows EU requirements on pesticide availability and MRLs from June 2027, and highlight where this would and wouldn’t be possible.

How we have diverged from the EU

To understand what this could mean for British farmers, we need to look at how we’ve diverged from the EU since Brexit, and how this could impact pesticides currently being used.

Benefits of alignment

In addition to reduced friction at the border, dynamic alignment with the EU could provide potential crop protection benefits for British farmers and growers:

  • Potential access to more than 20 new active substances, mainly biopesticides, not available in Great Britain, and access to other EU pesticide products through a process called ‘mutual recognition’. The efficacy of these products has yet to be demonstrated in UK crops.
  • Access to ‘level playing-field’ measures enjoyed by EU farmers, including free movement of seeds treated with pesticides, and parallel trade in pesticide products.

Risks of alignment

On the flip side, the NFU is building evidence of what negative impacts potential full alignment with EU requirements in June 2027 could have on the crop protection toolbox and crops. 

The NFU does not support the potential ‘hard stop’ to Great Britain’s decisions, and alignment with EU requirements, in June 2027. While we see the end goal is alignment, we believe the transition should be phased, so Great Britain’s decisions on pesticide availability are retained, until the UK government has the chance to represent UK farming in the EU decision-shaping process.

We also expect any pesticides being withdrawn to be given reasonable use-up periods – the regulation normally allows 18 months. The NFU has been lobbying government hard on both these issues. 

Crop protection areas at potential risk under a sudden alignment include: 

  • Loss of four new actives – cereal fungicides isoflucypram (eg, Vimoy) and pydiflumetofen (eg, Miravis Plus), and herbicides cinmethylin (eg, Luxinum Plus) and bixlozone (eg, Fundatis, Zimeri).
  • Loss of 18 actives, no longer allowed in the EU, which are in more than 100 GB products for major crops, and 100 extensions of authorisation for many horticultural crops.

These actives (and some key uses) include:  

Active substance Uses (O = can be used in organic production)
Adoxophyes orana GV strain BV-0001 Capex - Viral pathogen of summer fruit tortrix moth in tree fruit O               
Bacillus firmus strain I-1582 VOTiVO – nematicide seed treatment for fodder & sugar beet, forage & grain maize  O
Bacillus pumilus strain QST 2808 Sonata - fungicide for protected soft, cane & bush fruit, endive, tomato, pepper, aubergine, cucumber O
Benthiavalicarb eg, Versilus and Zorvec Endavia – potato & onion fungicide 
Clofentezine eg, Apollo 50 SC – soft, cane and tree fruit, ornamentals, hops (propagation) acaricide
Dimethomorph Many products – soft and cane fruit, lettuce, potato, onion family, herbs, ornamentals, grapes, hops – downy mildew fungicide
Dimoxystrobin Pictor – oilseed rape fungicide
Fenpyrazamine eg, Prolectus – protected tomato, pepper, aubergine, cucumber, courgette, squashes, strawberry, grapes & ornamentals fungicide
Flufenacet Many products – cereals, bush fruit, ornamentals , asparagus, soya bean & hemp herbicide
Ipconazole eg, Conima and Rancona - cereals fungicide seed treatment
Isopyrazam eg, Prizm, Reflect – cereals, carrots & root veg, ornamentals, protected tomato, pepper, aubergine, cucumber, courgette, squashes & hemp (pharmaceutical) fungicide
Mepanipyrim Frupica SC – strawberry, ornamentals, courgette, protected tomato, aubergine & cucumber fungicide
Metribuzin Many products - potato, cereals, root veg, asparagus, ornamentals & bush fruit herbicide
Plant oils / Citronella oil Amenity grassland herbicide
Prochloraz eg, Artemis, Mirage, Monkey – cereals fungicide
S-Metolachlor eg, Camix, Dual Gold – field veg, baby leaf, herbs, peas, beans, strawberry, ornamentals, sweetcorn, forage and grain maize herbicide
Spirotetramat eg, Batavia, Movento – soft, bush and tree fruit, protected edibles, outdoor veg, grapes, ornamentals, sweetcorn, baby leaf and herbs insecticide
Triflusulfuron-methyl eg, Debut, Safari, Shiro – sugar, fodder and red beet, chicory, ornamentals herbicide

 

There is also the risk of further losses of actives from ongoing EU reviews, eg, the potato fungicide seed treatment flutolanil (eg, Moncut, Rhino); the protected ornamentals whitefly control buprofezin (Applaud); the fungicide fludioxonil – widely used as a cereals seed treatment and for many outdoor and protected horticultural crops; the sugar and fodder beet, outdoor ornamentals and herbs, and strawberry herbicide phenmedipham.

Having to follow the EU glyphosate approval, which prohibits pre-harvest use as a desiccant (but allows pre-harvest use for weed control), and restricts the total amount you can use in agriculture to 1.44 kg per ha, per year, is another potential risk, particularly for cereals and oilseed rape.

Many GB and EU MRLs have diverged since Brexit. EU MRLs would apply to both UK crop for export (to EU) and for domestic use. This could result in some current UK pesticide uses no longer being possible.

We also have serious concerns about potential situations where:

  • Growers may have used pesticides on crops in autumn 2026/spring 2027, in full compliance with GB requirements, which then have residues of those pesticides not compliant with the EU MRLs we’re required to meet after June 2027.
  • Crop still in store in June 2027, or crop that has been processed into long shelf-life food and drink goods, not meeting EU MRLs requirements after June 2027. 

We’ve also questioned how government would support farmers to manage the pesticides in stores that no longer met requirements after June 2027.

How can you help?

The NFU wants a managed transition and is lobbying to prevent these negative impacts and unintended consequences of a potential sudden alignment in June 2027. We continue to gather evidence of these impacts and look for ways to minimise or mitigate them.

You can help us to do this – if any of these issues affect you, email details to [email protected] and we’ll make sure your concerns are taken into account.

More on the UK-EU SPS negotiations

This page was first published on 30 Gorffennaf 2025. It was updated on 04 Rhagfyr 2025.


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