The executive director of the Canadian Pork Council says a constitutional challenge has helped reshape American attitudes on U.S. Mandatory Country of Origin Labelling.
In may, in response to a World Trade Organization order to amend Mandatory Country of Origin Labelling to bring it into compliance with American treaty obligations, the U.S. added additional labelling requirements for red meat and prohibited the mixing of product from different countries.
In response, a coalition of eight American, Canadian and Mexican livestock and meat industry organizations challenged the new rules citing provisions in the U.S. Constitution pertaining to Freedom of Speech.
Canadian Pork Council executive director Martin Rice says that challenge has helped reshape attitudes in the U.S. toward Mandatory COOL.
Martin Rice-Canadian Pork Council:
That case was brought quickly after the new rule to seek an injunction against the implementation of the new rule to hold it back from going into effect.
That has not been successful but an appeal is underway and we'll see developments on that in the new year.
It's obliviously something that has generated additional industry opposition in the United States and in our view has changed the views of a lot of participants, a lot of parties in the U.S. that now see COOL as something which has really brought unnecessary and considerable costs and regulatory compliance burden without offsetting benefits while there are substantial analysis showing that there has not been any benefit in terms of increasing the prices of livestock to producers which was probably the original motivating factor for them to pursue this legislation.
Rice says the hope remains that the labelling issue can be resolved through the U.S. Farm Bill or some other legislative mechanism without the need for further action through the U.S. courts or through the WTO.
Source: Farmscape