Official figures released yesterday show that seven of the top 10 destinations for British exports in 2017 were EU countries.
Selling everything from cars to pharmaceuticals and gin, British firms exported some 37.7 billion pounds (USD 53 billion) worth of goods to Germany in 2017, around 13 per cent more than the year before.
Germany accounted for 11 percent of British exports, up a tad on the year before, and second overall behind the United States.
Overall, EU countries accounted for 48.8 percent of British goods exports to the EU in 2017, up from 48.2 per cent the year before.
The increasing importance of the EU as a destination for British goods is largely due to the fact that Britain remains a member of the EU until March 2019. Exporters also enjoying a boon from the fall in the value of the British pound after the country's 2016 vote to leave the bloc.
The euro, which is used by 19 EU countries, is now worth 0.89 pound, compared with around 0.75 pound before the referendum.
But Brexit is happening and no one, it seems, quite knows what it will mean. That's a particular problem for businesses that have enjoyed tariff-free trade with the EU for decades thanks to the bloc's single market and its customs union.
No one is sure how that can happen and discussions this week within the British government failed to clarify its vision of the post-Brexit relationship.
A deep split within the Conservative party has emerged in recent months. Some lawmakers in Prime Minister Theresa May's party want close ties with the remaining 27 EU nations and a period of transition after Brexit day.
May hopes to agree soon on the terms of a transition deal that would see Britain remain in the single market and customs union for a period after the Brexit exit. That would give firms and households time to adjust.
Carney has argued repeatedly that the outlines of a transition deal need should be in place by the end of the first quarter of this year so businesses can plan ahead.
"As we move through the Brexit process, more needs to be done to provide clarity on what the future trading relationship with the EU will look like," said Suren Thiru, head of economics at the British Chambers of Commerce.
For its part, the EU has been relatively clear.
Michel Barnier, the EU's chief Brexit negotiator, said yesterday the transition is "not yet sealed" and that barriers to trade, such as border checks, would be inevitable if Britain opts out of the single market and the customs union. Barriers can also include everything from tariffs to legal red tape.
Proponents of Brexit say Britain would be able to thrive even in that environment as the country could have more freedom in trade discussions with countries like China, India and even the United States.
There's clearly room for growth in British exports to China: in 2017, Britain sold 18.2 billion pounds worth of goods there, representing only 5.3 per cent of its total exports, according to the Office for National Statistics.
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