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EU court bans calling non-alcoholic drinks gin

Judges in Luxembourg said EU law clearly prohibited the term ‘non-alcoholic gin’, after a case was brought against the makers of Virgin Gin Alkoholfrei

EU court bans calling non-alcoholic drinks gin

The makers of spirits may be raising a toast to the European judges of Luxembourg, after the EU’s court ruled that non-alcoholic drinks cannot be called gin. Only spirit drinks based on ethyl alcohol flavoured by juniper berries with a minimum alcoholic strength of 37.5% by volume can be known as gin, the court said in a judgement issued on Thursday. The case was brought by a German association against unfair competition, Verband Sozialer Wettbewerb, against a company, PB Vi Goods, which sold a drink called Virgin Gin Alkoholfrei. The company behind the drink had argued in court that it was obvious from the name they were selling a non-alcoholic drink. A court in Germany also considered that the name “eliminates the risk of misleading the consumer” and raised the question that European regulation on spirits could be at odds with the freedom to conduct a business under the EU’s charter of fundamental rights. PB Vi Goods did not immediately respond to an emailed request for comment on Thursday. Asked to opine on this question, the Luxembourg judges said EU law was clear that the term “non-alcoholic gin” was prohibited. “The fact that the legal name ‘gin’ is accompanied by the term ‘non-alcoholic’ is irrelevant,” the court said. The 2019 EU regulation states that such provisions protect consumers, prevent deceptive practices, ensure fair competition and safeguard the international reputation of the EU’s spirit drinks. But the ruling could be a setback to the EU’s fast-growing alcohol-free drinks industry. It is not the first time that some of the EU’s top legal minds have been asked to grapple with the names and shapes of food and drink, whether indulgences or everyday staples. In 2018 the ECJ ruled that the makers of KitKat could not trademark the four-fingered wafer shape, ending a decade-long legal battle between chocolate makers over what one court advisor called the “four trapezoidal bars aligned on a rectangular base”. The previous year, the court ruled that only animal-derived products could use names such as milk, butter, cream and yogurt. The European parliament is seeking to tighten up food labelling rules further: last month it voted to outlaw terms such as burger and sausage for plant-based foods. The law is still being negotiated with EU member states, who may yet save veggie burgers and tofu steaks. But for now, an alcohol-free gin and tonic is (officially) off the menu in the EU.

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