East Bay Times

Veggie burgers pass the sniff test in Europe.

Farmers group had argued the labeling was misleading

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BRUSSELS >> It’s a meaty issue but the EU has taken a stance: veggie burgers are in fact burgers.

European lawmakers said Friday that plant-based products that do not contain meat, including veggie burgers, soy steaks and vegan sausages, can continue to be sold as such in restaurant­s and shops across the European Union’s 27 countries.

Europe’s largest farmers’ associatio­n, Copa- Cogeca, had supported a ban, arguing that labelling vegetarian substitute­s with designatio­ns bringing meat to mind was misleading for consumers.

On the opposite side

of the debate, a group of 13 organizati­ons including Greenpeace and WWF urged lawmakers to reject the proposed amendments, arguing that a ban would have not only exposed the EU “to ridicule,” but also damaged its environmen­tal credibilit­y.

They said promoting a shift toward more plant

based diet is in line with the EU Commission’s ambition to tackle global warming. Losing the ability to use the terms steak or sausage might make those plantbased products more obscure for consumers.

After the vote, the European Consumer Organizati­on, an umbrella group bringing together consumers’ associatio­ns, praised the MEPs for their “common sense.”

“Consumers are in no way confused by a soy steak or chickpea-based sausage, so long as it is clearly labelled as vegetarian or vegan,” the group said in a statement. “Terms such as ‘ burger’ or ‘steak’ on plant-based items simply make it much easier for consumers to know how to integrate these products within a meal.”

Together with Greenpeace, the group regretted that lawmakers accepted further restrictio­ns on the naming of alternativ­e products containing no dairy. Terms like ‘almond milk’ and ‘soy yogurt’ are already banned in Europe after the bloc’s top court ruled in 2017 that purely plant- based products can’t be marketed using terms such as milk, butter or cheese, which are reserved for animal products.

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 ?? PHOTOS: FRANCISCO SECO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? European lawmakers rejected proposals that could have prevented plant-based products without meat from being labeled sausages or burgers. The so-called veggie products can continue to be sold as such in restaurant­s and shops.
PHOTOS: FRANCISCO SECO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS European lawmakers rejected proposals that could have prevented plant-based products without meat from being labeled sausages or burgers. The so-called veggie products can continue to be sold as such in restaurant­s and shops.
 ??  ?? A store clerk shows a plant-based burger chimihurri product at a supermarke­t chain in Brussels.
A store clerk shows a plant-based burger chimihurri product at a supermarke­t chain in Brussels.

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