Canyon, the direct-to-consumer bike brand based in Germany, has paused shipments to customers in Great Britain and has stopped accepting orders entirely from those in Northern Ireland, citing uncertainty caused by Brexit. The company, headquartered in Koblenz, says that the move is a temporary one and insists that it has been taken “to avoid delays to your orders,” although in practice it seems that is exactly what will happen.
Since the southeast of England entered Tier 4 measures on Sunday morning, both print and broadcast media have shown huge queues of lorries building up in Kent after France closed its borders to traffic from the UK.
While that is primarily affecting goods leaving these shores, it does provide an indication of the potential delays to inward goods come the New Year, especially in the event of a no deal Brexit and the associated checks and paperwork involved.
Canyon, which has prepared an FAQ on its website for customers, said: “The UK’s Brexit transition period ends on 31st December, so we’ve put extra processes in place to ensure your bike can be ordered and shipped without any issues.
“Due to the uncertainty and potential bottlenecks at the border, we are temporarily halting shipment of all bikes from 19th December until at least 11th January. We want your order to be tracked accurately and any hold-up at the border will challenge our ability to do this.”
However, notwithstanding the pause in shipping bikes to customers in the UK, people here can still shop through the brand’s website.
Canyon said: “Despite stopping shipment, we will be taking orders throughout the transitional period. Once you have placed your order, you will receive confirmation by email.
“As soon as we’re able to ship your order, we will again notify you by email along with payment details. Bikes that have a dispatch date beyond 11th January will be unaffected by the temporary pause on shipments.”
It also reassured customers that they would not incur surprise additional costs, saying: “All duties and tariffs are included in the price of your bike which means you’ll never have to pay any hidden fees when your bike arrives on British soil.
“Canyon will handle all customs and import documentation further easing the process for you and getting you riding as soon as possible.”
It cautioned, however, that “E-Bikes are affected due to the battery’s classification of dangerous goods as well as the heavier weight and increased dimensions of the box.
“It may take us beyond the 11th January to work through the additional process for these bikes and we apologise for the extended lead time to your order. We will keep you updated on the progress in our FAQs.”
Canyon continued: “As we make these adjustments, we regret that orders and shipments from our valued customers in Northern Ireland cannot be placed at this time. We are working hard to implement processes that will enable you to order your new bike as soon as possible. Updates about this can be found in our FAQs and in the meantime, deliveries to Ireland and Great Britain are still possible.”
Canyon added: “Our dedicated UK customer service team are on standby to take your questions throughout this transitional period, so please feel free to reach out using our live chat feature or browse our FAQs. The team will also be taking care of all aftersales care including guarantee and warranty related queries as well as crash replacement and servicing. We continually strive to offer the best service levels in-house within the UK and we look forward to seeing you out on your new bike as soon as possible.”
Aaron Budd, UK head of sales and marketing at Canyon, explained in an email to road.cc the background to the decision to pause shipments from last Saturday until 11 January, saying that it was “to safeguard our customers from any ambiguity or doubt on the shipping process and ensure we could still get their bikes to them with confidence. A small window of disruption is necessary to make sure we can make some changes at our end to any open orders and we are all set to get this actioned very quickly in the New Year.
“For any customers who have an order in that was expected to ship before the 11th of January we are working to process these as a priority to minimise the lead time for their order, and our dedicated UK customer service team are on hand to answer any more queries in detail, should the customers need it,” he added.
“We have an excellent well-planned strategy in place and we’re extremely confident that as the situation becomes clearer we’ll be able to service the UK consumer better than ever.”
Rose Bikes puts complete stop on orders from UK and cancels existing ones
Meanwhile, another German brand, Rose Bikes, has said that it can no longer accept any orders at all from customers in the UK, and will cancel existing orders that had not been shipped prior to last Sunday.
It said: “Due to the Brexit and the withdrawal from the EU domestic market without a Free Trade Agreement from the 01.01.2021, we can no longer fulfil any orders from the UK. Already ordered goods, that can be shipped until 20.12.2020 will be send out. Orders that cannot be shipped until this date will be cancelled.
“If your goods can not be shipped, our customer support will contact you via e-mail. Unfortunately we feel compelled to not fulfil UK orders currently, we hope to be able to ship to our UK customers soon again. Thank you very much for understanding and for your loyalty and support.”
The company had said in September that it would only sell parts and accessories, rather than complete bikes, to customers here, although at that point it blamed the fact that “In the UK, bicycles are constructed differently than in the rest of Europe: The market standards and laws in Great Britain, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland clearly convey that the front brake lever must be mounted on the right-hand side of the handlebar and the rear brake lever on the left-hand side. For the rest of Europe, it is the exact opposite.”
> Rose Bikes publish statement explaining why they have stopped selling to the UK
At the time, it added: “With the technical complexity of our bikes increasing, we are facing the ever-growing challenge of being able to offer affordable Rose bikes with a high level of quality and safety. And because we want to shorten our delivery times for our customers, this summer we decided to gradually shut down the configuration of bikes, so that we are able to maintain our usual standards. Installing the brake cables and brake levers on the opposite side would require the type of special solution for the UK that we simply can’t realise right now.”
As we reported earlier this month, the uncertainty surrounding the UK’s future relationship with the EU, as well as global logistics issues resulting from the coronavirus pandemic, is already causing concern within the UK cycling industry, with Brompton warning that it may have to temporarily halt production at its West London factory due to parts being held up in the supply chain.
> UK port delays hit Brompton production as parts for its bikes get held up or cancelled
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122 comments
Fair point, but this works both ways. I don't hear much to actually inform me of what is so good about the E.U. and never have in my entire adult life (all 38 years of it). I don't have any links. I don't feel the need to justify my thoughts and feelings to anyone else. I do not say this with any animosity at all, it's just the way it is. If we met in person, then perhaps I would be happy to discuss my thoughts on the matter, but not here. I'm a bit tired of the whole thing now, but (unfortunately) do allow myself to get wound up sometimes by the insults directed at Pro Brexit folks by those who (on the face of it) seem so full of themselves and their 'right on' views that they come across as just arrogant and naive fools (this is not directed at you, by the way). My problems with the E.U. are probably more to do with the organisation itself rather than anything else. I am a great believer in free trade and friendly cooperation wherever possible, but do not seee the need for a huge political body to 'look after' this. More politicians = more lies and corruption; they are simply not needed. Have a happy Christmas and healthy and prosperous New Year.
The simplest pro-EU argument is to keep frictionless trade with our nearest neighbours which is not really an endorsement of the EU per se (I have mixed feelings about the EU as an organisation).
My simplistic way of looking at it was that we faced a choice between "keep things as they are" and "change things" and the public reasons behind wanting to "change things" seemed to be hidden or based on made up facts designed to ellicit an emotional response (e.g. giving money to the NHS) though I'm not going to sing the praises of the pro-EU campaign either. I (naively) would expect that a campaign to change things would have clear, measurable outcomes so that people could discuss the advantages.
Also:
1. Having a human rights framework that even the UK government couldn't ignore, thus giving us more rights than we'd likely have had without.
2. Funding and EU wide cooperation on scientific and medical research (declaration of interest: I used to work on some of it).
3. The opportunity to travel and work throughout the EU, with reciprocal rights on benefits and healthcare, without having to arrange visas etc.
4. An invisible-enough border that was a huge help in the peace deal in Northern Ireland.
There are counter-arguments, of course:
1. Whilst the human rights framework is broadly positive, it was designed for and has been more useful to citizens of former European dictatorships rather than the UK whose criminal laws evolved from the principle of habaeus corpus long before many of Europe's current nation states took on their current guises. Within my political lifetime these countries have included Spain, Portugal, Greece, the Visegrad states, and then the Baltic States...
2. UK R&D through it's network of world-class universities* has always been strong, and I'd argue that we gave at least as much as we benefitted from. I doubt that t his will stop. It will be done outside the framework of the EU. BTW, I don't see too many EU universities in the global top 100 - and less in the top 50 (*one of the few things in the UK which are genuinely world class);
3. Agreed. I'm all for the free movement of labour, but since Lisbon and the aborted European Constitution this has been the free movement of people and Britain and latterly and to a lesser extent Germany became the safety valve for rampant, Euro inflicted unemployment in the EU's peripheries. Of course, the UK benefits from this and many of the brightest and best head this way for work, but successive UK governments have not created the housing, school-places, built enough hospitals and increased the capacity of our infrastructure to house 3-400,000 extra citizens every year for the past decade of so. That's a city the size of Newcastle every year - and in this respect those Governments must take their share of the responsibility for the outcome of the 2016 referendum;
4. Agree on the Irish border too. But it was only Theresa May's agreement to sequencing; i.e. signing a withdrawal agreement before a trade deal that out this border in any doubt. This was foreseen at the time and May ignored it. If the two had been negotiated in parallel, this would could have been avoided.
Wow...politics, cycling and a few post ride and dinner beers don't mix - and I don't entirely disagree with you....it's a shame it had to come to this. I studied history and latterly political science and learned from the mid-1990s referendums held throughout Europe that referendums don't solve anything: they divide societies more or less down the middle on issues where there is no common ground - opening what political scientists call cleavages. Some of these cleavages lie atop other cleavages and run very deep and take a long time to heal.
Right...where are the mince pies...
Also a strong EU is a worthwhile counterbalance to significant less benign superpowers in the world.
You can certainly make enviromental arguments against global business and the endless transporting of stuff and arguably even against persuing economic growth as this is generally supported by ever increasing consumerism, which is not environmentally sustainable. It's amazing that the economy was always more important than the certain effects of climate change which will have a substantial impact on their entire population, but that a disease which kills approximately 1% of the population, and those mainly in the old is enough to stop the economy everywhere.
Against this I would say there are a number of multinational corporations strong enough to ignore most individual countires but the strength of the EU is sufficient to take action against them. Weaker international cooperation by governments gives greater power to these businesses which care primarily about their shareholders.
However environmental concerns as raised above and relating to ever expanding consumerism were not the central pillar of the leave campagin, instead it was soveriegnty (the UK being on the winning side in somewhere around 90% of EU votes), freedom of movement and fish.
I'm not sure that the preservation of our environment requires the federal, political, and fiscal union of Europe's nation states to achieve it.
Okay - Europe speaking as one would give it greater volume on the world stage, but it rarely speaks as one and when it does it is in the language of lowest common denominator platitudes. And this is because Europe's member states do not agree with each other on key issues such as power supply, with certain countries eschewing lower carbon forms of energy such as nuclear (controvertial, I admit) in favour of coal-and-gas-fired power: nothwithstanding that the gas is supplied by a beligerent Russia.
The UK has been at the forefront of on environmental issues - both globally and within Europe. It has adopted solar and offshore wind enthusiastically and with great effect - backed by - indeed financed by it's world-leading finance sector. I do not see this changing because we're losing our yellow star on a blue flag.
....Lastly, when it comes to multinationals - the EU would need increased political and fiscal integration to present a more united front against multinationals. At the moment multinationals treaty shop between EU member states to ensure their goods and services have low fiscal friction - Ireland, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands being favoured destinations. It goes without saying that a common rate of corporation and other taxes throws these states under the bus - not that I care about that and nor should you. The German constitutional courts are the major brake on monetary and fiscal union - ironically.
Interestingly, one of the biggest environmental scandals of late involving a multinational was over VWAG vehicle emissions - and I can't recall any significant sanction from the EU - yet. They have, of course, bolted the door a little belatedly by introducing emissions criteria with fines for non-compliance starting in 2021-2, I think - but the most vociferous response to VWAG's cheating came from the US - it's government hammered VWAG and its consumers have responded with class actions: good old Anglo-Saxon law!
Why don't you just list your top ten reasons for leaving the EU - and the benefits. There must be some?
Why don't you try addressing people in a civil manner and stop assuming your opinions are correct. That is all they are after all, opinions. I do not have to justify anything to you, or anyone else. Moreover, I couldn't give a monkey's whether you agree or not. My opinions are based on research and hard won experience , hopefully the same applies to yours.
Have you genuinely encountered anyone like this? I've only ever heard it from brexit voters accusingly to anyone expressing that they are worried about the consequences of Brexit.
Sunlit upland
Taking back control
Fed up of experts
Sovrinty
Blue pass ports
Vacuum cleaners
NHS
Aren't you feeling the benefits yet?.....
Nearly four years on it still confounds me why Brexiteers still think this is in any way a valid argument. When we joined (with a far higher pro vote), did they say, "we've joined, we'll get over it and get on with it?" No, they whined about it for over forty years and turned it into a fatal distraction for several governments. I've yet to find the section in my "How Democracy Works" handbook where it says that after a single non-bindng narrow vote one has to accept the outcome as set in stone for eternity.
We did not join with a vote, but were taken in illegally by Edward Heath. The vote occurred afterwards. I am sure you will have an answer that disagrees though. Please look up the English (latterly UK) Bill of Rights of 1689 and how it relates to Britain's initial entry into the Common Market. I suggest you study your handbooks a little more closely and get your facts right before criticizing others.
Silly man, you know nothing of the law of the UK. There is a convention that a constitutional change should be ratified by referendum or election, but there is no law, as we do not have a written constitution, and therefore it was not illegal. A lot of very stupid people have tried to claim it was illegal, but the Eurpoean Communities Act 1972 was passed by both houses of Parliament and given Royal Assent by Her Majesty on October 17th 1972. That's not illegal, sorry.
This is exactly what I was referring to with my earlier posts. The arrogance is breath-taking. You have now stooped to personal insults because you believe you know it all. I can assure you that I am not a 'silly man', nor am I stupid. At no point did I say joining was illegal because of the lack of a precursor vote. I pointed out that the vote you quoted as taking us into the Common Market was actually held after we had joined and was not held to ask whether the UK should join. I did ask you to look at the Bill of Rights, which you don't appear to have done. If you do examine the Bill of Rights you will find that joining the Common Market contravenes it. There is also the matter of the 'bribe' paid to Edward Heath. I don't suppose you have the decency to apologise for insulting me. I am now finished with this sorry 'debate'. You have simply confirmed what I described earlier. Bye, bye.
I certainly will not apologise for insulting you, you deserve all the insults coming your way. You claimed that the decision to join the Common Market was illegal, I have shown you that it was entirely legal under the law of the UK, i.e. it was ratified by both Houses of Parliament and given Royal Assent, and yet you persist in claiming that it contravenes UK law. It didn't, and doesn't. If it's ratified by both houses and Her Majesty, it cannot be. Do you actually ride a bike by the way, or are you just an insane person who spews drivel over any site that dares disagree with your ill-informed and entirely erroneous opinion? You are a silly man and very stupid. Hope you stick to your promise to stay away now, it would be much appreciated.
I will make just a couple more comments, then uphold my promise to say no more. As you would appreciate me staying away, it seems only right to not do so immediately. Please do not take my next remark as a threat - it is not. I would be willing to bet a substantial sum that you would not speak to me (or probably anyone else) in the manner you have here in 'real life'. You seem to be represenative of the intolerant, self-obsessed and self-appointed 'intelligent elite' and obviously the crticism you make of me for 'spewing drivel' over anyone who disagrees with me is quite acceptable as a trait in yourself. It is not possible to have an 'erroneous opinion' - BY THE WAY.
The Bill of Rights - you still have no idea what it says have you?
I knew you wouldn't keep your promise, your sort never can. Just for your information, yes I have read the 1689 Bill of Rights and its primary requirement is that laws may not be enacted without the consent of the people through their duly elected Parliament. It's not difficult to understand if you engage whatever brain you may have. Now please do "uphold your promise to say no more", there's a good chap.
You don't have to accept it for eternity but you do have to accept it initially.
Loser's consent is an integral part of a functioning democracy.
"There could be unstoppable demand for a re-run of the EU referendum if Remain wins by a narrow margin on 23 June, UKIP leader Nigel Farage has said. 'In a 52-48 referendum this would be unfinished business by a long way. If the Remain campaign win two-thirds to one-third that ends it.'" - BBC News, May 17th, 2016
So your side wouldn't have accepted a 52-48 loss against them, but as you won by 52-48, the losers must consent? Jesus, do you people actually listen to yourselves?
Firstly, please don't assume Nigel Farage speaks for all Leave voters.
We have no idea how the Leave campaign would have responded to losing by a mere 1 million votes as it didn't happen.
We know exactly how the Remain campaign reacted, there was a concerted effort to stop Brexit ever happening. That was most certainly not an example of Loser's Consent.
Loser's Consent is an integral part of a functioning democracy. Without it democracy simply does not function. If you want to live in a democracy then Loser's Consent is part of the bargain.
You keep saying "losers' consent" as if this has some legal or philosophical standing, it does not. It implies that after a vote those who were on the losing side should stop campaigning for their beliefs. Can you not see how that would throttle the entire democratic process? In a democracy, those who are outvoted have every right to continue to campaign to reverse whatever vote they lost - just as those who lost a democratic vote in 1975 did for forty tiresome years.
Loser's Consent is a well established democratic principle.
A quick Google should be enough to familiarise yourself with the concept.
It does not imply that you should stop campaigning.
It does require the losing side to accept the result and to allow the result of the vote to take place.
It just isn't a "well established democratic principle" and a quick Google yourself would show you it's something that wasn't even mentioned, in thousands of years of democratic philosophy, before the Bush/Gore election in 2000. Do prove me wrong if you can.
I do enjoy conversing with the 'well informed' Remain voters.
You're wrong.
Here's an article from 1993 which itself references the principle in articles from the 1960s.
Accepting the Election Outcome: The Effect of Participation on Losers' Consent
Richard Nadeau and Andre Blais
British Journal of Political Science
Vol. 23, No. 4 (Oct., 1993), pp. 553-563 (11 pages)
Published By: Cambridge University Press
https://www.jstor.org/stable/194217
References:
'Benjamin Ginsberg and Robert Weissberg. 'Elections and the Mobilization of Group Support', American Journal of Political Science, 22 (1978), 31-55. p. 34.
For similar statements, see E. E. Schattschneider, The Semi Sovereign People: A Realistic's View of Democracy in America (New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1960); David Easton, A System Aalysis of Political Life (New York: Wiley, 1965); Jack Dennis, 'Support for the Institution of Elections in the Mass Public', American Political Science Review, 64 (1970), 819-36; Allan J. Cigler and Russell Getter, 'Confict Reduction in the Post-Election Period: A Test of the Depolarization Thesis, Western Political Quarterly, 30 (1977), 363-76: Steven E. Finkel, "Reciprocal Effects of Participation and Political Eficacy: A Panel Analysis", American Journal of Political Science
You appear to be confusing "a well established principle" with "something someone once said." They're not quite the same thing.
You seem to be backtracking somewhat from your claim that it was never mentioned before the year 2000?
Anyway here is a discussion of the principle of loser's consent in the Federalist Papers.
https://cses.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/LoewenBlais2006.pdf
If the principle has been discussed for over 250 years then I think it can be safely described as 'well established'.
Consider yourself proven wrong.
No, I absolutely concede you are right, it has been discussed prior to 2000, I was wrong. However, the evidence you provide does not show that it has been discussed for 250 years, it shows that some people have applied it to events of 250 years ago. Again, not the same thing. In any event, the fact that some people have said something for any amount of time does not make it a "well established principle." Many Greco-Roman philosophers defended the principles of slavery, does the fact that people have been talking about something for 2000 years mean that we must accept said principles now? I'm afraid you simply cannot support your argument, and it's not one that even the sillest of Brexiteers have raised, as far as I'm aware. But congratulations on being really, really desperate to be right, everyone likes a trier. However, enough time wasted on your nonsense. Cheerio!
The Federalist Papers are a seminal work, they've been continuously discussed since they were published.
They contain the principle of loser's consent so it's entirely safe to assume that principle has been discussed regularly for the last quarter of a century.
Amusingly you seem to have taken being proved wrong quite badly.
Quite fitting really.
"For sure we were on the losing side; not so sure it was the wrong side" - Mal Reynolds (paraphrased)
Seems to be a similar trends with other online retailers. If you try to order anything from Bike24, while there's nothing official on their website all stock that I cared to check is currently being shown as not deliverable to the UK. As someone said, sunlit uplands indeed.
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