Iceland may be able to join the EU while securing exemptions from the Common Fisheries Policy (CFP), EU Fisheries Commissioner Costas Kadis has indicated.
“There is definitely room for flexibility,” Kadis said in a recent Financial Times interview, and indicated that this approach could also be attractive to Norway.
As The Irish Independent reports, the Icelandic parliament has voted to hold a referendum on re-opening EU membership talks.
Any membership deal would have to be put to a second referendum.
There is much greater concern about Arctic security due to US president Donald Trump’s interest in taking over Greenland and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Previous discussions between Iceland and the EU broke down over a decade ago, with fisheries the main stumbling block.
A recent poll showed 42 per cent of Icelanders favoured EU accession, with 39 per cent against, but this percentage may change if an opt out from the CFP is part of any deal.
Read John Downing in The Irish Independent here

















































