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French cheese-makers win EU battle over Camembert boxes

French cheese-makers have been granted an exemption after a furious reaction to new EU rules on packaging which it was feared would outlaw the traditional wooden boxes of Camembert cheese.

French cheese-makers win EU battle over Camembert boxes
Camembert cheese in its traditional wooden box. Photo: AFP

Lawmakers in the European Parliament have adopted new laws on packaging which aim to reduce the volume of waste per household by 10 percent by 2030 – the law is similar to the ‘anti-waste’ laws already in place in France.

But among the regulations was one that stipulated that certain materials which cannot be recycled would no longer be able to be used in packaging for food and drink.

Among the items mentioned was wood – which sparked a furious reaction from artisans in France who make Camembert cheese.

The creamy, smelly soft cheese – made with grass-fed cows from the Normandy region – is traditionally sold in a small wooden box, and cheese-makers feared they could be forced to alter the appearance of their cheese.

Law-makers and the media took up their cause, and eventually France Europe Minister Laurence Boone got involved, telling journalists that the measure could inflame the rural electorate ahead of EU elections in June next year.

“If you want to caricature Europe before the election, you start by annoying camembert producers and their wooden packaging… that makes everybody sit up,” she said, adding “there needs to be some pragmatic realism and not annoying camembert makers”. 

Eventually, however, a compromise was reached and the European Commission felt it necessary to put out a press release titled Non, la Commission européenne ne veut pas interdire les boîtes à camembert ! (No, the European Commission does not want to ban camembert boxes). 

The final text includes an exemption for AOP products where the packaging forms part of the traditional recipe or serving of the product. 

European Commissioner for the Environment, Virginijus Sinkevicius, said that the EU would ensure that non-industrial camemberts using unpasteurised milk – those with a registered designation of origin (AOP) – would be exempt from any regulation.

“In fact, in the EU, certain wooden, textile or ceramic food packaging is placed on the market in very small quantities, and many of them are protected by food quality legislation”, said Virginijus Sinkevicius.

“Such packaging may be difficult to recycle on a large scale and can be subject to specific exemptions”.

The Appellation d’Origine Protégée (AOP) label is the EU’s version of France’s Appellation d’Origine Contrôlée (AOC) designation – both indicate that a product is either made in a specific area or made according to a particular traditional technique.

READ ALSO What do France’s AOC and AOP labels really mean?

Camembert cheese-makers have already been involved in a 12-year legal battle over the type of milk that can be used – traditional camembert is made only with unpasteurised milk, produced by cows that graze on Normandy grass.

However industrial camembert makers say this is impractical as it does not allow them to export the cheese to the United States – which bans unpasteurised milk.

A compromise was agreed in 2018, but it is not accepted by all cheese-makers.

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POLITICS

France’s Le Pen sues to stop Belgian far-right using her image

France's far-right standard-bearer Marine Le Pen has sued a Belgian party to stop it using her face on election pamphlets to drum up votes, her lawyer said on Wednesday.

France's Le Pen sues to stop Belgian far-right using her image

Le Pen never gave permission for her image to be used by Belgium’s extreme-right Chez Nous (Our Home) party, Belgian lawyer Ghislain Dubois told AFP.

Two letters ordering Chez Nous to stop and a court complaint asking for daily fines to be imposed were needed before the party complied, he said.

The head of Chez Nous, Jerome Munier, confirmed to AFP the party had withdrawn the Le Pen pamphlets and told members to avoid using images subject to copyright.

He expressed regret that some members had distributed pamphlets bearing Le Pen’s face.

Chez Nous, founded in 2021, is fielding candidates in Belgium’s June 9th national elections. The party is active in the country’s southern, French-speaking region.

Le Pen has handed over the day-to-day running of the Rassemblement National party, previously known as the National Front, to a 28-year-old protege, Jordan Bardella, but remains an MP and the presidential candidate for the party.

The daughter of National Front founder Jean-Marie Le Pen, she has strived to remake both her image and that of her party to make them more acceptable to mainstream French voters.

Voter surveys put it ahead of President Emmanuel Macron’s party in EU elections also to be held on June 9th in France.

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