MILAN/FRANKFURT: European shares fell on Tuesday on fears that Britain was in danger of leaving the European Union without a trade agreement, with energy firms and technology stocks among the biggest decliners.

The oil & gas sub-index tumbled 3.7% marking its worst day in nearly 11 weeks, as oil prices plunged over 8% on demand worries.

As tech firms on Wall Street deepened a selloff from last week, European tech stocks slipped 2.1%, giving back a chunk of the previous session's gain.

The pan-European STOXX 600 slid 1.2%, with declines in French energy group Total and German enterprise software maker SAP SE dragging down the index.

The STOXX 600 has traded in a limited range since June, but markets are bracing for the European Central Bank's (ECB) policy meeting on Thursday, which could act as the next catalyst.

French electricity giant EDF sank 8% after announcing its nuclear output fell 17.6% in August due to the effects of the pandemic and reactor outages.

Britain's Royal Mail surged 25% after raising its revenue target for the current year.

Data showed German exports rose in July, however, remained far below pre-crisis levels. Separately, figures showed the euro zone economy declined slightly less than estimated in the second quarter but was still the sharpest ever fall.

"Stocks in Europe had free rein yesterday as the US exchanges remained closed because it was Labour Day. The weakness that we saw in big US tech names last week, is still in play, and that is driving sentiment over here," said David Madden, market analyst at CMC Markets UK.

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