Data transfers are essential for both trade and security co-operation. The EU and the UK should not let minor differences obscure the fact that they have more in common than divides them.
The
freedom to move data between the EU and the UK is as important to some
businesses as the freedom to move goods, services and people. And for
European and British security services, the ability to share and access
data about criminals is an essential component of keeping people safe.
The European Commission's decision to propose
two adequacy decisions
for the transfer of personal data to the UK, under the General Data
Protection Regulation (GDPR) and the Law Enforcement Directive (LED),
therefore came as a relief to both EU governments and the UK.
But
this is just the beginning of a long, bumpy road. The Commission’s
adequacy decisions are not final: the European Data Protection Board
(EDPB, an EU privacy oversight body) must issue an opinion and a
committee of representatives from the 27 member-states must green-light
the decisions. While the EDPB’s opinion is not binding, it will indicate
whether there are any grounds for concern amongst national data
protection authorities. And if the adequacy decisions are adopted, the
European Parliament and the Council of Ministers can ask the Commission
to withdraw them at any time, if there are concerns about the way the UK
is applying privacy rules. MEPs are already
suspicious that Britain plans to undercut the EU on data protection in the future, and the threat of legal challenges looms large.
In
2013, Austrian lawyer Max Schrems complained to the Irish data
protection authority about Facebook’s transfers of European citizens’
data to its Californian headquarters, under the EU-US Safe Harbour
agreement. Schrems argued that the EU could not guarantee that its
citizens’ privacy would be respected when their data was transferred to
the US, because surveillance laws there required private companies to
hand data to the government. The case ended up before the European Court
of Justice (ECJ), which eventually
struck down
the Safe Harbour agreement in 2015. In 2016 the EU replaced Safe
Harbour with a data adequacy decision, known as the Privacy Shield. This
too was felled by the ECJ in July 2020, after another case instigated
by Schrems. Now transatlantic personal data transfers can only happen if
the data subject consents or if transfers are needed for the fulfilment
of a contract.
Commission officials are well aware that
the UK adequacy decisions could face similar legal challenges and have
set out in detail how the decisions will deal with some of the issues
raised by the Schrems saga. For example, they will be reviewed every
four years, to ensure compliance. But a review clause does not guarantee
the UK adequacy decisions will continue; the Privacy Shield had to be
re-examined every year and that did not stop it from being annulled
by the ECJ.
An additional problem for the UK is that the
ECJ has already said that UK data retention laws are not in line with EU
standards. In 2016, the Court said that Britain’s 2014 Data Retention
and Investigatory Powers Act
breached EU law
because it allowed for general and indiscriminate retention of
citizens’ data by law enforcement authorities. And in a separate 2017
case, the ECJ
ruled
that the UK government should be more careful when gathering data, as
it was failing to show why bulk data retention was needed for some
investigations. The court has recently confirmed this view in
cases against French and Belgian security services. While the adequacy decisions refer to all these cases, they
do not explain how the ECJ’s concerns may be assuaged.
Eventually
the longevity of the UK data adequacy decisions may depend on
perceptions, and in particular the growing EU suspicion that the UK will
renege on its previous commitments in order to eke out a competitive
advantage for its companies. The UK has already signalled that it
intends to embrace a less defensive attitude to cross-border data
liberalisation than the EU. In its trade agreement with Japan, in
contrast to the EU’s with Japan, the UK accepted provisions preventing
unjustified data localisation measures and restrictions on the free flow
of data between the two countries. The UK also intends to accede to the
Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership
(CPTPP) – an agreement on trade and investment between 11 Pacific
countries – which has liberal commitments on the flow of data.
This
is not to say that the UK intends to rip up its privacy laws. The
British government hopes to be able to retain adequacy decisions with
the EU, while pursuing a more forward-thinking approach to data in its
trade agreements. Technically speaking this should be possible. Both
Japan and New Zealand benefit from EU adequacy decisions, despite being
members of CPTPP, and despite some early EU concerns about onward data
transfers in the case of Japan. And notwithstanding some EU suspicion of
CPTPP’s data provisions, GDPR is arguably covered by the agreement’s
exemptions, which allow for restrictions on data flows so long as they
serve a legitimate public policy objective.
The main
difference between the EU and others such as Japan, the US, and now the
UK, is one of mind-set: whereas the EU presumes the data protection
regimes of other countries are inadequate unless proven otherwise,
others reverse the burden of proof.
On the EU side, the
Commission has found itself in a never-ending struggle to balance its
desire to set global standards on data against the inherent aversion of
some member-states to any measures that could jeopardise the privacy of
their citizens. But the EU will not succeed in setting the global agenda
on data if it only approaches the topic defensively. The pandemic has
changed the way people use and understand data, and the real-time
sharing of open-source data helped scientists to develop COVID-19
vaccines speedily. And citizens’ health data will be more public after
the pandemic: the EU has recently published plans for a ‘vaccine
passport’, which will allow vaccinated and COVID-19-negative people to
travel across the bloc. Such sensitive data sharing would have been
unimaginable a few months ago.
In practice, the EU and
UK are more instinctively aligned on privacy and data flows than some
law-makers think, despite slightly different conceptual frameworks. But
trust between the parties is in short supply, with the UK’s seemingly
cavalier approach to its Withdrawal Agreement commitments, and the EU’s
threats to restrict vaccine exports to Britain. There is a risk that any
and every UK action could be viewed by the EU as an aggressive act, and
an excuse to rescind the adequacy decisions. This would be a mistake.
The
real threat to the EU’s attempts to establish global data protection
norms and protect its citizens’ privacy is not the UK, or even the US,
but digital-authoritarian China. The EU should prioritise reaching a
common understanding with the UK, the US and other like-minded countries
– perhaps by opening up the membership of its proposed EU-US
Trade and Technology Council.
And if legal challenges continue to make it hard for non-EU businesses
and law enforcement agencies to share data with the EU, the bloc should
contemplate alternative routes instead. The EU could consider offering
to sign all-encompassing data treaties with close partners that include
judicial redress and co-ordinated review clauses, to avoid the problems
raised by the Schrems rulings. The 2016 EU-US Umbrella Agreement on law
enforcement data transfers could be a good model to follow, as it is an
overarching treaty that has, for now, escaped legal challenges. Despite
the present acrimony, data sharing between the EU and UK remains vital
for the trade and security of both.
Sam Lowe and Camino Mortera-Martinez are senior research fellows at the Centre for European Reform.
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