Baltimore Sun

Europe’s specialty food makers face tariffs on $7.5B in goods

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MILAN — European producers of specialty agricultur­al products like French wine, Italian Parmesan and Spanish olives are facing a U.S. tariff hike due Friday with a mix of trepidatio­n and indignatio­n at being dragged into a trade war they feel they have little to do with.

The tariffs on $7.5 billion worth of European goods were approved by the World Trade Organizati­on as compensati­on for illegal EU subsidies to plane maker Airbus.

The U.S. has some leeway in deciding what goods it puts tariffs on. So while it is taxing European aircraft 10% more, it is walloping agricultur­al products an extra 25%.

The punitive taxes take particular aim at European agricultur­al products that have a “protected name status.” Those are goods that can be sold under a name — like Scotch whisky or manchego cheese — only if they are from a particular region and follow specific production methods. The result is they fetch premium prices, protect cultural heritage — and are shielded from competitor­s.

U. S.- made Parmesan cheese, for example, is not allowed access to the European market as a copycat of the traditiona­l Parmigiano­Reggiano and Grana Padano — a barrier that the U.S. milk producers lobby are pressuring to bring down.

European producers feel they are collateral damage from a political squabble entirely unrelated to their business.

“We consider that we are hostages of politics. We are very, very far from aeronautic­s, even if our wines are served on planes every day,” said Burgundy wine producer Francois Labet.

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