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The state council said there existed ‘a serious doubt over the legality of such a ban’. Photograph: NatashaPhoto/Getty Images/iStockphoto
The state council said there existed ‘a serious doubt over the legality of such a ban’. Photograph: NatashaPhoto/Getty Images/iStockphoto

Top French court suspends ban on using word ‘steak’ on plant-based foods

This article is more than 4 months old

Government had issued decree to stop the word – used to describe a burger in France – being used for ‘veggie steaks’

France’s top administrative court has waded back into a battle over the labelling of veggie burgers, suspending a decree banning plant-based products from being described as meat.

In February, the French government issued a decree to ban the term “steak” on the label of vegetarian products from 1 May, saying it was reserved for meat alone.

A veggie burger is called a veggie “steak” in French.

The decree listed 21 terms usually used by butchers – including “escalope”, “ham”, “filet” and “prime rib” – that it said were not allowed for plant-based products.

The ruling was a response to a longstanding complaint by the meat industry that terms such as “vegetarian ham” or “vegan sausage” were confusing for consumers.

It was based on a 2020 law before the country’s top administrative court – called the state council – suspended application of the decree in 2022 after a complaint from French companies selling plant-based food.

On Wednesday, the state council suspended a second decree to implement the same labelling law, saying there existed “a serious doubt over the legality of such a ban”.

It would remain suspended until the court of justice of the European Union responded to a query over whether the measure was legal under EU law, it said.

In 2020, the European parliament rejected a move to ban the use of terms of animal origin for plant products – except when words such as “yoghurt”, “cream” or “cheese” are applied to products without animal milk.

France issued its second decree as farmers protested against environmental rules and competition from cheap imports.

More on this story

More on this story

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