techUK Supports House of Lords Call for Data Adequacy

19 Jul 2017 02:51 PM

The House of Lords EU Home Affairs Sub-Committee report has acknowledged the importance of maintaining unhindered data flows between the UK and EU.

Following an inquiry into the EU Data Protection Package, the House of Lords EU Home Affairs Sub-Committee has acknowledged the importance of maintaining unhindered data flows between the UK and EU.

The House of Lords EU Home Affairs Sub-Committee yesterday published its report into Brexit and the EU Data Protection Package. The inquiry looked into four elements of EU Data Protection rules: The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), the Police and Criminal Justice Directive (PCJ), the EU-US Privacy Shield and the EU-US Umbrella Agreement.

techUK’s Deputy CEO, Antony Walker, provided evidence to the Committeeduring its inquiry and is heavily quoted in the Committee’s report.

The report sets out key changes ahead in EU Data Protection rules and the consequences Brexit will have for the UK and EU’s relationship on data protection matters. Most importantly the report looks at the impact Brexit will have on data flows between the UK and the EU. The Committee also looks into the impact on data sharing agreements with other third countries, such as the US.

The Government has already confirmed a desire to see continued unhindered data flows between the UK and EU post-Brexit and have committed to implement GDPR through the Data Protection Bill to help achieve this. The House of Lords report, following evidence from techUK, has called for that to be achieved through an adequacy agreement, recognising the burdensome and expensive nature of the alternatives.

In assessing the implications of Brexit on data protection, the Committee has also considered the possibility of future divergence from GDPR in the UK and the future role of the ICO on the international stage.

Some of the key conclusions and recommendations from the report are:

Commenting on the publication of the report, Antony Walker, Deputy CEO techUK, said:

“We welcome the Committee’s report and assessment that an adequacy decision is the best option available to achieve the Government’s aim of unhindered data flows between the UK and the EU post-brexit. As the Committee has recognised the importance of cross-border data flows to the UK cannot be overstated, and they matter to organisations of every size and sector. As the UK embarks on ambitious plans to establish trade deals across the globe, the ability of data to flow in a frictionless way will be crucial. The free flow of data is fundamental to the UK and EU’s modern digital economy and ensuring a robust and secure mechanism is in place to allow data flows to continue from the moment the UK leaves the EU must be a priority in Brexit negotiations.

“We also welcome the Committee’s recognition of the important role the ICO plays in Europe and support the Committee’s recommendation that the ICO should be able to continue to participate in the European Data Protection Board once it is established.

“techUK was pleased to provide evidence to the Committee’s inquiry and stands ready to assist as these importance issues are negotiated.”