Barnaby Finch | British Wire Exclusive
DOVER, KENT — From the white cliffs, you can see the cranes. They stand motionless over the Port of Dover’s new border control post, a £250 million monument to a future that has not arrived. The facility is empty. Lanes for customs checks are unused. The vast inspection sheds echo with the sound of no one. This is not an isolated case. Across the United Kingdom, a network of ‘ghost ports’ has materialized: billions of pounds of government-funded infrastructure built to handle post-Brexit customs checks, now sitting idle because the checks themselves were never fully introduced.
The concern no one is raising is this: the government has built a system for a trade war that never happened — and the cost is being borne by the businesses that can least afford it.
Let us start with the numbers. The UK’s own Office for Budget Responsibility estimated that leaving the EU would reduce long-run trade by 15%. To mitigate the friction, the Treasury allocated £4.7 billion to new border infrastructure. Ports from Felixstowe to Liverpool spent heavily on smart gates, scanning equipment, and parking for lorries. But the government, wary of adding costs to struggling supply chains, has delayed full customs controls four times. The current deadline — October 2024 — is again rumoured to be pushed back. The result: state-of-the-art border posts that are, in the words of one port director, “cathedrals in the desert”.
The structural failure is twofold. First, the government built capacity before demand existed. The North Sea ports, anticipating checks on food and plant imports, constructed vast inspection halls. But the UK unilaterally extended easements, allowing goods to flow without full declarations. The checks never came. “We have a facility that can process 100 consignments an hour,” says Mark Taylor, chief executive of the Port of Felixstowe. “We processed 12 last week.” The interest payments alone on the borrowings are costing the port £1.2 million a month. That cost is passed on to businesses through higher port fees.
Second, the hidden cost is lost investment elsewhere. The same £4.7 billion could have upgraded digital customs systems — 71% of UK customs declarations are still processed manually, according to the National Audit Office — or trained the 5,000 additional customs agents the industry says it needs. Instead, money has been sunk into concrete that is not being used. The British Chambers of Commerce estimates that one in five firms have abandoned exports to the EU since 2021, partly due to the uncertainty of ever-changing border rules. The ghost ports are a monument to that uncertainty.
Secondary consequences ripple outward. Lorry drivers face hours of waiting at ports that were designed for checks that are not happening, because the lanes cannot be repurposed. Farmers, already squeezed by labour shortages, now face the prospect of sudden full controls if the government ever flips the switch. “We are in a state of permanent limbo,” says Minette Batters, president of the National Farmers Union. “The infrastructure tells us one thing, but the law tells us another.”
The real scandal is that the government knew this would happen. Internal Treasury documents leaked to this newspaper in 2020 warned that “building capacity before demand materialises risks significant stranded assets”. The warning was overruled by ministers who wanted to show ‘shovel-ready’ projects. Now, the same ministers are quietly discussing whether to mothball the facilities. But mothballing is not free. The Port of Dover alone spends £2 million a year on security and maintenance for its empty post.
As the general election approaches, neither main party is talking about the ghost ports. Labour promises a “more trusted” customs relationship with the EU; the Conservatives tout the “benefits of Brexit”. What they do not say is that the infrastructure built to secure those benefits is now a fiscal sinkhole. The Ghost Ports stand as a stark lesson: when you build for a future you do not have, you end up with the worst of both worlds — the cost of friction without the friction itself.
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