With whisky boosting the UK economy by about £5 billion a year, Scottish Secretary David Mundell said ministers are keen to open up new markets around the world for the iconic drink. He spoke out ahead of a meeting on the island of Islay, in the Hebrides, which is home to several distilleries.
Mr Mundell will have talks with representatives of the Scotch Whisky Association (SWA) and drinks manufacturers Diageo at the Caol Ila distillery. Export tariffs on Scotch range from zero to more than 150%, with the UK Government now looking at how future trade agreements with other nations could reduce these for products such as whisky, smoked salmon and gin
The Scottish Secretary said: Scotch whisky is a world-class product, globally recognized for its quality and heritage, and the industry employs thousands of people in Scotland and around the rest of the UK.
We are determined to open up new markets around the world for the very best whisky our distillers have to offer - and to drive down any tariffs they face.
By strengthening ties with key partners, identifying new markets and tackling tariffs, the UK Government is paving the way towards an even brighter future for Scotland's whisky industry.
Scotch whisky accounts for about a third of Scottish food and drink exports, with a report by the SWA estimating the industry directly contributes £3.2 billion a year to the UK economy, with a further £1.7 billion of indirect benefits. Meanwhile, 10,800 people are employed in the sector, while it also supports 29,300 jobs indirectly, according to the research
SWA chief executive Karen Betts said: The Scotch whisky industry is delighted that the Scottish Secretary, David Mundell, is visiting Islay.
He'll see the fascinating Islay distilleries, famous for their smokey malts. He'll see too the importance of the Scotch Whisky industry to Islay's local communities, and how whisky production there contributes more broadly to the Scottish and British economies.
Holyrood Brexit minister Mike Russell hit out at the Scottish Secretary, saying: David Mundell's record during the whole Brexit debate is a catalogue of contradictions - in the space of little over a year he has gone from warning about the threats that Brexit poses to Scottish jobs and our economy to being a hard Brexit cheerleader.
The Scottish Government minister added: The Scottish Secretary should not be travelling round Scotland trying to 'sell' Brexit to businesses and communities - he should in fact be listening carefully to their views, understanding their fears and their annoyance at the lack of information and lack of a Tory UK Government plan, and then raising them at the Cabinet table.
He added: David Mundell and his Tory colleagues spend a lot of time peddling false reassurances which have no evidential backing, whilst avoiding taking about the inevitably difficult consequences of Brexit.
People across Scotland's rural communities are increasingly of the view that the UK Government is merely looking for ways to placate opposition whilst they attempt to deliver the hardest of Tory hard Brexit agendas. Mundell's job is to argue Scotland's case at Westminster, not try and sell Westminster's case to the most fragile communities in Scotland
The Scottish Secretary said: Scotch whisky is a world-class product, globally recognized for its quality and heritage, and the industry employs thousands of people in Scotland and around the rest of the UK.
We are determined to open up new markets around the world for the very best whisky our distillers have to offer - and to drive down any tariffs they face.
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Disclaimer & comment rulesThe question is why is this piece appearing in Mercopenguin, a British government propaganda organ supposedly devoted to America, South America and the South Atlantic?
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