THE UK's trade deal with Australia will be a "huge opportunity" for the food and drink industry in Scotland, according to Scottish Secretary Alister Jack.

His remarks came after a number of organisations in the sector signed a joint letter expressing their concern about the negotiations, claiming they have been rushed and could set a bad precedent.

Jack said he has been involved in discussions around the post-Brexit trade deal, which he said are nearing completion.

He said safeguards against the UK market being "swamped" with imports will be put in place.

Jack told BBC Scotland's Sunday Show: "We're very close and it's going to be a very good deal for the UK.

"I think it will also take us into the Trans-Pacific Partnership, it's gateway deal into that, which is a huge, huge opportunity for Scotland's food and drink industry."

He said an assessment from the Department for International Trade has shown Scotland will "benefit more than any other part of the UK" from the deal.

Jack said the UK Government will not discuss the details of the negotiation in public, but added: "We won't be taking chlorinated chicken in any trade deal we do, that's illegal in the UK.

"We won't be taking hormone-induced beef, that's illegal. We will have safeguards in around the amount of product coming, so we won't see the market swamped."

UK International Trade Secretary Liz Truss has previously suggested the 5% whisky tariff could be scrapped under the agreement.

Earlier this week, Scottish Rural Affairs Secretary Mairi Gougeon wrote to Truss seeking an urgent meeting on the deal.

She said: "In their letter, industry representatives have raised concerns at the lack of consultation and have asked that you publish an assessment of the cumulative impact of FTAs with Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the United States.

"The Scottish Government would echo their ask.

"It is also clear that industry representatives share the same concerns that I raised in my earlier correspondence on animal welfare, environmental and food safety standards."

SNP spokesperson for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, Deidre Brock, said: "The Tory Government has sidelined Scotland's farming and crofting communities, and dismissed their serious concerns, throughout the negotiation of the Australian trade deal.
"The viability of many farms will be put in danger if the UK government signs a post-Brexit deal that undercuts the price and standards of Scottish beef, lamb and other produce.
"Yet again, Scotland's interests are being thrown under the Brexit bus – just as they were when the Tories sold our fishing communities out.
"Scotland is increasingly vulnerable under Westminster control. The SNP will continue to stand up for our farming communities but it is clearer than ever that the only way to keep Scotland safe from the long-term damage of a hard Brexit and Tory trade deals is to become an independent country."