The UK expects to secure about six trade deals with US states by the end of the year, as discussions with President Joe Biden’s administration over a wider free trade agreement remain frozen.

The lower-level accords will likely aim to loosen barriers through memorandums of understanding covering measures such as mutual recognition of professional qualifications and improved access to procurement contracts, UK Trade Secretary Anne-Marie Trevelyan said on Wednesday in an interview.

“There will be about half a dozen probably across the course of the year as we crystallize what the different states are looking to release with us through MOUs,” Trevelyan said. “It’s mostly around services but there will be some opportunities for procurement to access.”

UK Trade Secretary Anne-Marie Trevelyan
UK Trade Secretary Anne-Marie Trevelyan

While Trevelyan declined to specify which states deals may be struck with, her ministerial team has been in talks with states including California, Georgia, Tennessee, Oklahoma, Indiana and South Carolina. Last month, trade minister Penny Mordaunt said she hopes to do a state-level agreement with Texas by October.

The UK has focused its attention on liberalizing trade with the US on a state-by-state-level since federal-level trade negotiations were frozen when Biden became president. Prime Minister Boris Johnson had held up a US deal as one of the great prizes of Brexit, and Trevelyan signaled she still thinks a wider deal is possible.

“In terms of how we pull the FTA together, the wider piece, that’s a conversation that we will hopefully be able to have by the end of the year,” Trevelyan said. “Don’t say we can’t do the US—of course we can do it, there’s so much opportunity and we’re really looking at it piece by piece.”

In a a question-and-answer session and interview after delivering a speech on green trade at Bloomberg’s London headquarters, Trevelyan also:

  • Expressed concern about rising prices, saying inflation tends to have two bumps: the initial energy spike and then “the long-term impact through food production”
  • Reiterated Chancellor Rishi Sunak’s stance on a windfall tax on energy companies that the measure remains possible if they don’t show commitment to long-term investments in the UK
  • Emphasized green trade’s importance to help “de-putinise” the global economy and end the world’s reliance on Russian fossil fuels