//That has rightly been resisted. We will now be able to embrace technologies from artificial intelligence, to driverless cars, flying taxis, lab-grown meat and vertical farms (oh, and vaccines, which the EU seems very slow to approve, even amid a pandemic).' ......//
Do not count your chickens. Nobody (and I mean nobody, apart from those who wrote it) knows what's contained in the agreement. I saw M. Barnier on the telly yesterday with the tome. It was (and I'm not exaggerating) five inches thick. I've seen estimates of its size vary from 500 to 2,000 pages. Quite frankly it's disgraceful that such an important document should be put before Parliament with so little time for proper scrutiny.
Do not be surprised if, over the coming few months when people have had the time to examine it which they should have been granted before it was passed, "small print" emerges that prevents the UK from doing exactly the kind of things that you believe it is now free to do. The EU's main concern in these "negotiations" was not the two pennyworth of fish that was being argued over - that was M. Macron's bargaining ploy to win over a few voters in 2022. Their main concern was that the UK would break free from the stifling regulatory regime you describe (which treats unregulated business almost as criminal activity) and so become more competitive than the EU. They will not have given up that quest so easily and the small print which allows the EU to refer disputes over the "level playing field" to an independent arbitration body (whose independence has not been fully explained) will probably be shown to have deserved a larger font.