<p><a href="https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/retained-eu-law-revocation-reform-bill-rpc-opinion-red-rated"
target="_blank">DBT’s Assimilated Law Dashboard</a> and Reports capture changes to
legislation inherited from the EU when the UK left the EU. The Reports and dashboard
are publicly available and are updated biannually per requirements of the Retained
EU Law (Revocation and Reform) Act 2023.</p><p>The dashboard was last updated in January
2025 alongside the publication of the third Assimilated Law Parliamentary Report and
remains a useful resource for tracking the ongoing status of assimilated law.</p><p>The
Government continues to monitor EU regulatory developments closely, cooperating with
the EU on key regulatory developments via existing TCA structures.</p>
To ask His Majesty's Government, further to the Retained EU Law Parliamentary Report
for the period June 2023–December 2023, published on 22 January, what is the departmental
breakdown for the following categories set out in Table 2 ('HMG roadmap for the stock
of REUL'): (1) 'Propose to revoke in 2024', (2) 'Propose to revoke in 2025–26', (3)
'Propose to reform in 2024', and (4) 'Propose to reform in 2025–26'.
<p>To meet our obligations under Section 17 of the Retained EU Law Revocation and
Reform (REUL) Act, the first REUL report included a comprehensive list of REUL which
has been reformed and revoked and detailed our plans for forthcoming reform SIs. In
addition, and to provide Parliament with further insight, the report provided an indication
of Government's future roadmap for REUL reform for the whole period to June 2026,
informed by reporting from government departments to the Department for Business and
Trade (i.e Table 2). In many cases the reforms in the roadmap for future years, are
still under development and so the full details of these reforms have not been included
in this first report. As details of future reforms are finalised, the Government will
provide updates every 6 months via future reports alongside updating the REUL dashboard.</p>
To ask His Majesty's Government what steps they have taken to determine which European
Union laws will be retained, reformed, or revoked under the plans set out in the Retained
EU Law Parliamentary Report June 2023–December 2023, published on 22 January.
<p>The Department for Business and Trade coordinates Government's ambitious REUL reform
programme. Departments review, assess and if needed consult relevant stakeholders
to determine which pieces of REUL should be retained, reformed, or revoked, informed
by considering what is in the best interests of the UK. In some cases, REUL is already
optimised for the UK or is necessary to uphold our international obligations.</p><p>Over
2000 REUL instruments have been revoked or reformed. Our roadmap includes 500 further
REUL reforms and revocations in 2024. The Government is on track to revoke or reform
over half of all REUL by June 2026.</p>