
Last-ditch negotiations between Paris and London over continued British financing of France’s coastal surveillance network have broken down, according to French officials quoted by Le Monde on 29 March. The current three-year support package, worth €541 million, expires at midnight on 31 March. Without a renewal, the network of drones, thermal-imaging cameras, patrol vehicles and hundreds of gendarmes that Britain has been paying for since the Sandhurst Treaty could be scaled back within days, raising fears of a sharp rise in small-boat crossings. Under successive agreements the UK has gradually increased its financial contribution in exchange for tighter French patrols on the beaches between Calais and Boulogne. Yet Home Office sources say Westminster wants measurable reductions in crossings before signing off on a requested €750 million for the 2026-29 cycle. France counters that the growth in departures—from 29 000 people in 2023 to more than 41 000 in 2025—shows the scale of the challenge and requires even greater resources, not less. Business groups are watching closely. Logistics companies that rely on just-in-time supply chains through Dover fear that any spike in migrant landings could prompt emergency security checks or temporary port closures similar to those seen after the 2024 ferry terminal fire, when imports were delayed for up to 48 hours. Employers with cross-Channel assignees are also worried about reputational risk if images of overcrowded boats and beach stand-offs dominate Easter headlines.
Companies looking for contingency visa solutions or last-minute travel documentation updates should also remember that specialist providers like VisaHQ can streamline applications in the event that rerouted staff need fresh entry clearance. Their online portal for the UK market (https://www.visahq.com/united-kingdom/) offers real-time status tracking and expedited processing, giving mobility teams an extra layer of resilience if border disruptions force sudden changes to assignee itineraries.
If no deal is struck, Border Force may be forced to redeploy officers from UK airports to the south-east coast. That, unions warn, would exacerbate existing staffing pressures at Heathrow and Gatwick just as the Easter getaway begins. Immigration advisers are therefore urging corporates to review travel schedules for internationally-mobile staff in the first week of April and to brief travellers on the possibility of short-notice delays at the Channel ports. Long-term, failure to renew the agreement could undermine the wider Franco-British migration agenda, including information-sharing on organised smuggling networks and joint returns flights to third countries. For mobility managers the message is clear: political funding rows far from the boardroom can still produce very practical consequences for moving people and goods across borders.
Companies looking for contingency visa solutions or last-minute travel documentation updates should also remember that specialist providers like VisaHQ can streamline applications in the event that rerouted staff need fresh entry clearance. Their online portal for the UK market (https://www.visahq.com/united-kingdom/) offers real-time status tracking and expedited processing, giving mobility teams an extra layer of resilience if border disruptions force sudden changes to assignee itineraries.
If no deal is struck, Border Force may be forced to redeploy officers from UK airports to the south-east coast. That, unions warn, would exacerbate existing staffing pressures at Heathrow and Gatwick just as the Easter getaway begins. Immigration advisers are therefore urging corporates to review travel schedules for internationally-mobile staff in the first week of April and to brief travellers on the possibility of short-notice delays at the Channel ports. Long-term, failure to renew the agreement could undermine the wider Franco-British migration agenda, including information-sharing on organised smuggling networks and joint returns flights to third countries. For mobility managers the message is clear: political funding rows far from the boardroom can still produce very practical consequences for moving people and goods across borders.