Regulation (EU) 2019/787 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 17 Apri... (32019R0787)
EU - Rechtsakte: 15 Environment, consumers and health protection

REGULATION (EU) 2019/787 OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL

of 17 April 2019

on the definition, description, presentation and labelling of spirit drinks, the use of the names of spirit drinks in the presentation and labelling of other foodstuffs, the protection of geographical indications for spirit drinks, the use of ethyl alcohol and distillates of agricultural origin in alcoholic beverages, and repealing Regulation (EC) No 110/2008

THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION,
Having regard to the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, and in particular Articles 43(2) and 114(1) thereof,
Having regard to the proposal from the European Commission,
After transmission of the draft legislative act to the national parliaments,
Having regard to the opinion of the European Economic and Social Committee (1),
Acting in accordance with the ordinary legislative procedure (2),
Whereas:
(1) Regulation (EC) No 110/2008 of the European Parliament and of the Council (3) has proved successful in regulating the spirit drinks sector. However, in the light of recent experience and technological innovation, market developments and evolving consumer expectations, it is necessary to update the rules on the definition, description, presentation and labelling of spirit drinks and to review the ways in which geographical indications for spirit drinks are registered and protected.
(2) The rules applicable to spirit drinks should contribute to attaining a high level of consumer protection, removing information asymmetry, preventing deceptive practices and attaining market transparency and fair competition. They should safeguard the reputation which the Union's spirit drinks have achieved in the Union and on the world market by continuing to take into account the traditional practices used in the production of spirit drinks as well as increased demand for consumer protection and information. Technological innovation should also be taken into account in respect of spirit drinks, where it serves to improve quality, without affecting the traditional character of the spirit drinks concerned.
(3) Spirit drinks represent a major outlet for the Union agricultural sector, and the production of spirit drinks is strongly linked to that sector. That link determines the quality, safety and reputation of the spirit drinks produced in the Union. That strong link to the agri-food sector should therefore be emphasised by the regulatory framework.
(4) The rules applicable to spirit drinks constitute a special case compared with the general rules laid down for the agri-food sector and should also take into account the traditional production methods in use in the different Member States.
(5) This Regulation should set out clear criteria for the definition, description, presentation and labelling of spirit drinks as well as for the protection of geographical indications, and should be without prejudice to the diversity of the official languages and alphabets in the Union. It should also set out rules on the use of ethyl alcohol and distillates of agricultural origin in the production of alcoholic beverages and on the use of the legal names of spirit drinks in the presentation and labelling of foodstuffs.
(6) In order to meet consumer expectations and to conform to traditional practices, ethyl alcohol and distillates used for the production of spirit drinks should be exclusively of agricultural origin.
(7) In the interests of consumers, this Regulation should apply to all spirit drinks placed on the Union market, whether produced in the Member States or in third countries. In order to maintain and improve the reputation on the world market of spirit drinks produced in the Union, this Regulation should also apply to spirit drinks produced in the Union for export.
(8) The definitions of and technical requirements for spirit drinks and the categorisation of spirit drinks should continue to take into account traditional practices. Specific rules for certain spirit drinks that are not included in the list of categories should also be laid down.
(9) Regulations (EC) No 1333/2008 (4) and (EC) No 1334/2008 (5) of the European Parliament and of the Council also apply to spirit drinks. However, it is necessary to lay down additional rules concerning colours and flavourings, which should only apply to spirit drinks. It is also necessary to lay down additional rules concerning the dilution and dissolution of flavourings, colours and other authorised ingredients, which should only apply to the production of alcoholic beverages.
(10) Rules should be laid down regarding the legal names to be used for spirit drinks that are placed on the Union market, in order to ensure that such legal names are used in a harmonised manner throughout the Union and to safeguard the transparency of information to consumers.
(11) Given the importance and complexity of the spirit drinks sector, it is appropriate to lay down specific rules on the description, presentation and labelling of spirit drinks, in particular as regards the use of legal names, geographical indications, compound terms and allusions in the description, presentation and labelling.
(12) Regulation (EU) No 1169/2011 of the European Parliament and of the Council (6) should apply to the description, presentation and labelling of spirit drinks, save as otherwise provided for in this Regulation. In that regard, given the importance and the complexity of the spirit drinks sector, it is appropriate to lay down in this Regulation specific rules on the description, presentation and labelling of spirit drinks that go beyond Regulation (EU) No 1169/2011. Those specific rules should also prevent the misuse of the term ‘spirit drink’ and of the legal names of spirit drinks, as regards products which do not meet the definitions and requirements laid down in this Regulation.
(13) In order to ensure the uniform use of compound terms and allusions in Member States and in order to provide consumers with adequate information, thereby protecting them from being misled, it is necessary to lay down provisions concerning their use for the purpose of presentation of spirit drinks and other foodstuffs. The purpose of such provisions is also to protect the reputation of the spirit drinks used in this context.
(14) In order to provide consumers with adequate information, provisions on the description, presentation and labelling of spirit drinks which qualify as mixtures or blends should be laid down.
(15) While it is important to ensure that in general the maturation period or age stated in the description, presentation and labelling of spirit drinks only refers to the youngest alcoholic component, to take account of traditional ageing processes in Member States, it should be possible to provide, by means of delegated acts, for a derogation from that general rule and for appropriate control mechanisms in relation to
brandies
produced using the traditional dynamic ageing system known as the ‘
criaderas y solera
’ system or ‘
solera e criaderas
’ system.
(16) For reasons of legal certainty and in order to ensure that adequate information is provided to consumers, the use of the names of raw materials or of adjectives as legal names for certain spirit drinks should not preclude the use of the names of such raw materials or of adjectives in the presentation and labelling of other foodstuffs. For the same reasons, the use of the German word ‘-
geist
’ as the legal name of a category of spirit drinks should not preclude the use of that word as a fancy name to supplement the legal name of other spirit drinks or the name of other alcoholic beverages, provided that such use does not mislead the consumer.
(17) In order to ensure that adequate information is provided to consumers and to enhance quality production methods, it should be possible for the legal name of any spirit drink to be supplemented by the term ‘dry’ or ‘
dry
’, that is to say that term either translated in the language or languages of the relevant Member State, or untranslated as indicated in italics in this Regulation, if that spirit drink has not been sweetened. However, in line with the principle that food information is not to be misleading, particularly by suggesting that the food possesses special characteristics despite the fact that all similar foods possess such characteristics, this rule should not apply to spirit drinks that under this Regulation are not to be sweetened, even for rounding off the taste, in particular to
whisky
or
whiskey
. This rule should also not apply to
gin
, distilled
gin
and
London gin
, to which specific sweetening and labelling rules should continue to apply. Furthermore, it should be possible to label liqueurs characterised in particular by a tart, bitter, tangy, acerbic, sour or citrus taste, regardless of their degree of sweetening, as ‘dry’ or ‘
dry
’. Such labelling is not likely to mislead the consumer, since liqueurs are required to have a minimum sugar content. Accordingly, in the case of liqueurs, the term ‘dry’ or ‘
dry
’ should not be understood to indicate that the spirit drink has not been sweetened.
(18) To take into account consumer expectations about the raw materials used for vodka especially in the traditional vodka-producing Member States, adequate information should be provided on the raw material used where vodka is made from raw materials of agricultural origin other than cereals or potatoes or both.
(19) In order to enforce and to check the application of the legislation relating to rules on ageing and labelling, and to combat fraud, the indication of the legal name and the maturation period of any spirit drink in electronic administrative documents should be made mandatory.
(20) In some cases, food business operators wish to indicate the place of provenance of spirit drinks other than geographical indications and trade marks to draw consumers' attention to the qualities of their product. Therefore, specific provisions on the indication of the place of provenance in the description, presentation and labelling of spirit drinks should be laid down. In addition, the obligation, laid down in Regulation (EU) No 1169/2011, to indicate the country of origin or the place of provenance of a primary ingredient, should not apply in the case of spirit drinks, even if the country of origin or the place of provenance of the primary ingredient of a spirit drink is not the same as the place of provenance indicated in the description, presentation or labelling of that spirit drink.
(21) In order to protect the reputation of certain spirit drinks, provisions should be laid down governing the translation, transcription and transliteration of legal names for export purposes.
(22) In order to ensure that this Regulation is applied consistently, Union reference methods should be established for the analysis of spirit drinks and of ethyl alcohol used in the production of spirit drinks.
(23) The use of lead-based capsules and lead-based foil to cover the closing devices of containers of spirit drinks should continue to be banned, in order to avoid any risk of contamination, in particular by accidental contact with such capsules or foil, and of environmental pollution from waste containing lead from such capsules or foil.
(24) Concerning the protection of geographical indications, it is important to have due regard to the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (‘TRIPS Agreement’), and in particular Articles 22 and 23 thereof, and to the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (‘GATT Agreement’) including Article V thereof on freedom of transit, which were approved by Council Decision 94/800/EC (7). Within such legal framework, in order to strengthen geographical indication protection and to combat counterfeiting more effectively, such protection should also apply with regard to goods entering the customs territory of the Union without being released for free circulation, and placed under special customs procedures such as those relating to transit, storage, specific use or processing.
(25) Regulation (EU) No 1151/2012 of the European Parliament and of the Council (8) does not apply to spirit drinks. Rules on the protection of geographical indications of spirit drinks should therefore be laid down. Geographical indications should be registered by the Commission.
(26) Procedures for the registration, modification and possible cancellation of Union or third country geographical indications in accordance with the TRIPS Agreement should be laid down whilst automatically recognising the status of existing geographical indications that are protected in the Union. In order to make procedural rules on geographical indications consistent in all the sectors concerned, such procedures for spirit drinks should be modelled on the more exhaustive and well tested procedures for agricultural products and foodstuffs laid down in Regulation (EU) No 1151/2012, while taking into account specificities of spirit drinks. In order to simplify the registration procedures and to ensure that information for food business operators and consumers is electronically available, an electronic register of geographical indications should be established. Geographical indications protected under Regulation (EC) No 110/2008 should automatically be protected under this Regulation and listed in the electronic register. The Commission should complete the verification of geographical indications contained in Annex III to Regulation (EC) No 110/2008, in accordance with Article 20 of that Regulation.
(27) For reasons of consistency with the rules applicable to geographical indications for food, wine and aromatised wine products, the name of the file setting out the specifications for spirit drinks which are registered as a geographical indication should be changed from ‘technical file’ to ‘product specification’. Technical files submitted as part of any application under Regulation (EC) No 110/2008 should be deemed to be product specifications.
(28) The relationship between trade marks and geographical indications of spirit drinks should be clarified in relation to criteria for refusal, invalidation and coexistence. Such clarification should not affect rights acquired by holders of geographical indications at national level or that exist by virtue of international agreements concluded by Member States for the period before the establishment of the Union protection system pursuant to Council Regulation (EEC) No 1576/89 (9).
(29) Preserving a high standard of quality is essential if the spirit drinks sector's reputation and value are to be maintained. Member State authorities should be responsible for ensuring that that standard of quality is preserved through compliance with this Regulation. The Commission should be able to monitor and verify such compliance in order to ascertain that this Regulation is being uniformly enforced. Therefore the Commission and the Member States should be required to share relevant information with each other.
(30) In applying a quality policy and in particular to attain a high level of quality of spirit drinks and diversity in the spirit drinks sector, Member States should be allowed to adopt rules on the production, description, presentation and labelling of spirit drinks produced in their territory that are stricter than those laid down in this Regulation.
(31) In order to take into account evolving consumer demands, technological progress, developments in the relevant international standards, the need to improve the economic conditions of production and marketing, traditional ageing processes, and the law of the importing third countries, and in order to safeguard the legitimate interests of producers and food business operators as regards the protection of geographical indications, the power to adopt acts in accordance with Article 290 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (‘the Treaty’) should be delegated to the Commission in respect of: amendments to and derogations from the technical definitions and requirements for spirit drinks; authorising new sweetening products; derogations related to the specification of maturation period or age for
brandy
and the setting up of the public register of bodies in charge of supervising ageing processes; the establishment of an electronic register of geographical indications of spirit drinks, and detailed rules on the form and content of that register; further conditions in relation to applications for the protection of a geographical indication and preliminary national procedures, scrutiny by the Commission, the opposition procedure and cancellation of geographical indications; conditions and requirements for the procedure concerning amendments to product specifications; and amendments to and derogations from certain definitions and rules on description, presentation and labelling. It is of particular importance that the Commission carry out appropriate consultations during its preparatory work, including at expert level, and that those consultations be conducted in accordance with the principles laid down in the Interinstitutional Agreement of 13 April 2016 on Better Law-Making (10). In particular, to ensure equal participation in the preparation of delegated acts, the European Parliament and the Council receive all documents at the same time as Member States' experts, and their experts systematically have access to meetings of Commission expert groups dealing with the preparation of delegated acts.
(32) In order to ensure uniform conditions for the implementation of this Regulation, implementing powers should be conferred on the Commission regarding the publication of the single document in the
Official Journal of the European Union
; and regarding decisions on registration of names as geographical indications where there is no notice of opposition or no admissible reasoned statement of opposition, or where there is an admissible reasoned statement of opposition and an agreement has been reached.
(33) In order to ensure uniform conditions for the implementation of this Regulation, implementing powers should be conferred on the Commission regarding: the rules on the use of new sweetening products; the information to be provided by Member States with regard to the bodies appointed to supervise ageing processes; the indication of the country of origin or place of provenance in the description, presentation or labelling of spirit drinks; the use of the Union symbol for protected geographical indications; detailed technical rules on the Union reference methods for the analysis of ethyl alcohol, distillates of agricultural origin and spirit drinks; granting a transitional period for the use of geographical indications and extensions of such periods; rejections of applications where the conditions for registration are not already fulfilled before the publication for opposition; registrations or rejections of geographical indications published for opposition where an opposition has been submitted and no agreement has been reached; approvals or rejections of Union amendments to a product specification; approvals or rejections of requests for cancellation of the registration of a geographical indication; the form of the product specification and measures concerning the information to be provided in the product specification with regard to the link between the geographical area and the final product; the procedures for, form and presentation of applications, of oppositions, of applications for amendments and communications concerning amendments, and of the cancellation process with regard to geographical indications; the checks and verifications to be carried out by the Member States; as well as the necessary information to be exchanged for the application of this Regulation. Those powers should be exercised in accordance with Regulation (EU) No 182/2011 of the European Parliament and of the Council (11).
(34) In order to ensure the implementation of the Agreement between the European Union and Japan for an Economic Partnership (12), it was necessary to provide for a derogation from the nominal quantities set out in the Annex to Directive 2007/45/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council (13) for spirit drinks in order to allow single distilled
shochu
produced by pot still and bottled in Japan to be placed on the Union market in traditional Japanese bottle sizes. That derogation was introduced by Regulation (EU) 2018/1670 of the European Parliament and of the Council (14) and should continue to apply.
(35) Given the nature and extent of the modifications which need to be made to Regulation (EC) No 110/2008, there is a need for a new legal framework in this area to enhance legal certainty, clarity and transparency. Regulation (EC) No 110/2008 should therefore be repealed.
(36) In order to protect the legitimate interests of producers or stakeholders concerned as regards benefitting from the publicity given to single documents under the new legal framework, it should be made possible that single documents concerning geographical indications registered in accordance with Regulation (EC) No 110/2008 are published at the request of the Member States concerned.
(37) Since the rules on geographical indications enhance protection for operators, those rules should apply two weeks from the entry into force of this Regulation. However, provision should be made for appropriate arrangements to facilitate a smooth transition from the rules provided for in Regulation (EC) No 110/2008 to the rules laid down in this Regulation.
(38) As regards rules not relating to geographical indications, provision should be made to ensure that there is sufficient time to facilitate a smooth transition from the rules provided for in Regulation (EC) No 110/2008 to the rules laid down in this Regulation.
(39) The marketing of existing stocks of spirit drinks should be allowed to continue after the dates of application of this Regulation, until those stocks are exhausted,
HAVE ADOPTED THIS REGULATION:

CHAPTER I

SCOPE, DEFINITIONS AND CATEGORIES OF SPIRIT DRINKS

Article 1

Subject matter and scope

1.   This Regulation lays down rules on:
— the definition, description, presentation and labelling of spirit drinks, as well as on the protection of geographical indications of spirit drinks;
— the ethyl alcohol and distillates used in the production of alcoholic beverages; and
— the use of legal names of spirit drinks in the presentation and labelling of foodstuffs other than spirit drinks.
2.   This Regulation applies to products referred to in paragraph 1 that are placed on the Union market, whether produced in the Union or in third countries, as well as to those produced in the Union for export.
3.   As regards the protection of geographical indications, Chapter III of this Regulation also applies to goods entering the customs territory of the Union without being released for free circulation there.

Article 2

Definition of and requirements for spirit drinks

For the purposes of this Regulation, a spirit drink is an alcoholic beverage which complies with the following requirements:
(a) it is intended for human consumption;
(b) it possesses particular organoleptic qualities;
(c) it has a minimum alcoholic strength by volume of 15 %, except in the case of spirit drinks that comply with the requirements of category 39 of Annex I;
(d) it has been produced either:
(i) directly by using, individually or in combination, any of the following methods:
— distillation, with or without added flavourings or flavouring foodstuffs, of fermented products,
— the maceration or similar processing of plant materials in ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin, distillates of agricultural origin or spirit drinks or a combination thereof,
— the addition, individually or in combination, to ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin, distillates of agricultural origin or spirit drinks of any of the following:
— flavourings used in accordance with Regulation (EC) No 1334/2008,
— colours used in accordance with Regulation (EC) No 1333/2008,
— other authorised ingredients used in accordance with Regulations (EC) No 1333/2008 and (EC) No 1334/2008,
— sweetening products,
— other agricultural products,
— foodstuffs; or
(ii) by adding, individually or in combination, to it any of the following:
— other spirit drinks,
— ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin,
— distillates of agricultural origin,
— other foodstuffs;
(e) it does not fall within CN codes 2203, 2204, 2205, 2206 and 2207;
(f) if water, which may be distilled, demineralised, permuted or softened, has been added in its production:
(i) the quality of that water complies with Council Directive 98/83/EC (15) and Directive 2009/54/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council (16); and
(ii) the alcoholic strength of the spirit drink, after the addition of the water, still complies with the minimum alcoholic strength by volume provided for in point (c) of this Article or under the relevant category of spirit drinks as set out in Annex I.

Article 3

Definitions

For the purposes of this Regulation, the following definitions apply:
(1) ‘legal name’ means the name under which a spirit drink is placed on the market, within the meaning of point (n) of Article 2(2) of Regulation (EU) No 1169/2011;
(2) ‘compound term’ means, in relation to the description, presentation and labelling of an alcoholic beverage, the combination of either a legal name provided for in the categories of spirit drinks set out in Annex I or the geographical indication for a spirit drink, from which all the alcohol of the final product originates, with one or more of the following:
(a) the name of one or more foodstuffs other than an alcoholic beverage and other than foodstuffs used for the production of that spirit drink in accordance with Annex I, or adjectives deriving from those names;
(b) the term ‘liqueur’ or ‘cream’;
(3) ‘allusion’ means the direct or indirect reference to one or more legal names provided for in the categories of spirit drinks set out in Annex I or to one or more geographical indications for spirit drinks, other than a reference in a compound term or in a list of ingredients as referred to in Article 13(2), (3) and (4), in the description, presentation or labelling of:
(a) a foodstuff other than a spirit drink, or
(b) a spirit drink that complies with the requirements of categories 33 to 40 of Annex I;
(4) ‘geographical indication’ means an indication which identifies a spirit drink as originating in the territory of a country, or a region or locality in that territory, where a given quality, reputation or other characteristic of that spirit drink is essentially attributable to its geographical origin;
(5) ‘product specification’ means a file attached to the application for the protection of a geographical indication, in which the specifications with which the spirit drink has to comply are set out, and which was referred to as a ‘technical file’ under Regulation (EC) No 110/2008;
(6) ‘group’ means any association, irrespective of its legal form, that is mainly composed of producers or processors working with the spirit drinks concerned;
(7) ‘generic name’ means a name of a spirit drink that has become generic and that, although it relates to the place or the region where the spirit drink was originally produced or marketed, has become the common name of that spirit drink in the Union;
(8) ‘visual field’ means field of vision as defined in point (k) of Article 2(2) of Regulation (EU) No 1169/2011;
(9) ‘to mix’ means to combine a spirit drink that either belongs to a category of spirit drinks set out in Annex I or to a geographical indication with one or more of the following:
(a) other spirit drinks which do not belong to the same category of spirit drinks set out in Annex I;
(b) distillates of agricultural origin;
(c) ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin;
(10) ‘mixture’ means a spirit drink that has undergone mixing;
(11) ‘to blend’ means to combine two or more spirit drinks of the same category that are distinguishable only by minor differences in composition due to one or more of the following factors:
(a) the method of production;
(b) the stills employed;
(c) the period of maturation or ageing;
(d) the geographical area of production;
the spirit drink so produced belongs to the same category of spirit drinks as the original spirit drinks before blending;
(12) ‘blend’ means a spirit drink that has undergone blending.

Article 4

Technical definitions and requirements

For the purposes of this Regulation, the following technical definitions and requirements apply:
(1) ‘description’ means the terms used in the labelling, in the presentation and on the packaging of a spirit drink, on the documents accompanying the transport of a spirit drink, on the commercial documents, particularly the invoices and delivery notes, and in the advertising of a spirit drink;
(2) ‘presentation’ means the terms used in the labelling and on the packaging, as well as in advertising and sales promotion of a product, in images or such like, as well as on the container, including on the bottle or the closure;
(3) ‘labelling’ means any word, particulars, trade marks, brand name, pictorial matter or symbol relating to a product and placed on any packaging, document, notice, label, ring or collar accompanying or referring to such product;
(4) ‘label’ means any tag, brand, mark, pictorial or other descriptive matter, written, printed, stencilled, marked, embossed or impressed on, or attached to the packaging or container of food;
(5) ‘packaging’ means the protective wrappings, cartons, cases, containers and bottles used in the transport or sale of spirit drinks;
(6) ‘distillation’ means a thermal separation process involving one or more separation steps intended to achieve certain organoleptic properties or a higher alcoholic concentration or both, regardless of whether such steps take place under normal pressure or under vacuum, due to the distilling device used; and can be single or multiple distillation or re-distillation;
(7) ‘distillate of agricultural origin’ means an alcoholic liquid which is the result of the distillation, after alcoholic fermentation, of agricultural products listed in Annex I to the Treaty, which does not have the properties of ethyl alcohol and which retains the aroma and taste of the raw materials used;
(8) ‘to sweeten’ means to use one or more sweetening products in the production of spirit drinks;
(9) ‘sweetening products’ means:
(a) semi-white sugar, white sugar, extra-white sugar, dextrose, fructose, glucose syrup, sugar solution, invert sugar solution and invert sugar syrup, as defined in Part A of the Annex to Council Directive 2001/111/EC (17);
(b) rectified concentrated grape must, concentrated grape must and fresh grape must;
(c) burned sugar which is the product obtained exclusively from the controlled heating of sucrose without bases, mineral acids or other chemical additives;
(d) honey as defined in point 1 of Annex I to Council Directive 2001/110/EC (18);
(e) carob syrup;
(f) any other natural carbohydrate substances having a similar effect as the products referred to in points (a) to (e);
(10) ‘addition of alcohol’ means the addition of ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin or distillates of agricultural origin or both to a spirit drink; such addition does not include the use of alcohol for dilution or dissolution of colours, flavourings or any other authorised ingredients used in the production of spirit drinks;
(11) ‘maturation’ or ‘ageing’ means the storage of a spirit drink in appropriate receptacles for a period of time for the purpose of allowing that spirit drink to undergo natural reactions that impart specific characteristics to that spirit drink;
(12) ‘to flavour’ means to add flavourings or flavouring foodstuffs in the production of a spirit drink by means of one or more of the following processes: addition, infusion, maceration, alcoholic fermentation, or distillation of alcohol in the presence of the flavourings or flavouring foodstuffs;
(13) ‘flavourings’ mean flavourings as defined in point (a) of Article 3(2) of Regulation (EC) No 1334/2008;
(14) ‘flavouring substance’ means flavouring substance as defined in point (b) of Article 3(2) of Regulation (EC) No 1334/2008;
(15) ‘natural flavouring substance’ means natural flavouring substance as defined in point (c) of Article 3(2) of Regulation (EC) No 1334/2008;
(16) ‘flavouring preparation’ means flavouring preparation as defined in point (d) of Article 3(2) of Regulation (EC) No 1334/2008;
(17) ‘other flavouring’ means other flavouring as defined in point (h) of Article 3(2) of Regulation (EC) No 1334/2008;
(18) ‘flavouring foodstuffs’ mean foodstuffs as defined in Article 2 of Regulation (EC) No 178/2002 of the European Parliament and of the Council (19) and that are used in the production of spirit drinks with the main purpose of flavouring the spirit drinks;
(19) ‘to colour’ means to use one or more colours in the production of a spirit drink;
(20) ‘colours’ mean colours as defined in point 2 of Annex I to Regulation (EC) No 1333/2008;
(21) ‘caramel’ means a food additive corresponding to E-numbers E 150a, E 150b, E 150c or E 150d and relating to products of a more or less intense brown colour which are intended for colouring, as referred to in Part B of Annex II to Regulation (EC) No 1333/2008; it does not correspond to the sugary aromatic product obtained from heating sugars and which is used for flavouring purposes;
(22) ‘other authorised ingredients’ means food ingredients with flavouring properties authorised under Regulation (EC) No 1334/2008 and food additives other than colours authorised under Regulation (EC) No 1333/2008;
(23) ‘alcoholic strength by volume’ means the ratio of the volume of pure alcohol present in a product at 20 
o
C to the total volume of that product at the same temperature;
(24) ‘volatile substances content’ means the quantity of volatile substances, other than ethyl alcohol and methanol, contained in a spirit drink produced exclusively by distillation.

Article 5

Definition of and requirements for ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin

For the purposes of this Regulation, ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin is a liquid which complies with the following requirements:
(a) it has been obtained exclusively from products listed in Annex I to the Treaty;
(b) it has no detectable taste other than that of the raw materials used in its production;
(c) its minimum alcoholic strength by volume is 96,0 %;
(d) its maximum levels of residues do not exceed the following:
(i) total acidity (expressed in acetic acid): 1,5 grams per hectolitre of 100 % vol. alcohol;
(ii) esters (expressed in ethyl acetate): 1,3 grams per hectolitre of 100 % vol. alcohol;
(iii) aldehydes (expressed in acetaldehyde): 0,5 grams per hectolitre of 100 % vol. alcohol;
(iv) higher alcohols (expressed in 2-methyl-1-propanol): 0,5 grams per hectolitre of 100 % vol. alcohol;
(v) methanol: 30 grams per hectolitre of 100 % vol. alcohol;
(vi) dry extract: 1,5 grams per hectolitre of 100 % vol. alcohol;
(vii) volatile bases containing nitrogen (expressed in nitrogen): 0,1 grams per hectolitre of 100 % vol. alcohol;
(viii)
furfural: not detectable.

Article 6

Ethyl alcohol and distillates used in alcoholic beverages

1.   The ethyl alcohol and distillates used in the production of spirit drinks shall be exclusively of agricultural origin, within the meaning of Annex I to the Treaty.
2.   No alcohol other than ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin, distillates of agricultural origin or spirit drinks of categories 1 to 14 of Annex I shall be used to dilute or dissolve colours, flavourings or any other authorised ingredients used in the production of alcoholic beverages. Such alcohol used to dilute or dissolve colours, flavourings or any other authorised ingredients shall only be used in the amounts strictly necessary for that purpose.
3.   Alcoholic beverages shall not contain alcohol of synthetic origin or other alcohol of non-agricultural origin, within the meaning of Annex I to the Treaty.

Article 7

Categories of spirit drinks

1.   Spirit drinks shall be categorised in accordance with the general rules laid down in this Article and the specific rules laid down in Annex I.
2.   Without prejudice to the specific rules laid down for each of the categories of spirit drinks 1 to 14 of Annex I, the spirit drinks of those categories shall:
(a) be produced by alcoholic fermentation and distillation, and exclusively obtained from the raw material provided for under the corresponding category of spirit drinks in Annex I;
(b) have no addition of alcohol, whether diluted or not;
(c) not be flavoured;
(d) not be coloured with anything except caramel used exclusively for adjusting the colour of those spirit drinks;
(e) not be sweetened, except to round off the final taste of the product; the maximum content of sweetening products, expressed as invert sugar, shall not exceed the thresholds set out for each category in Annex I;
(f) not contain adjuncts other than whole unprocessed items of the raw material from which the alcohol is obtained, and which are mainly used for decorative purposes.
3.   Without prejudice to the specific rules laid down for each of the categories of spirit drinks 15 to 44 of Annex I, the spirit drinks of those categories may:
(a) be produced from any agricultural raw material listed in Annex I to the Treaty;
(b) have addition of alcohol;
(c) contain flavouring substances, natural flavouring substances, flavouring preparations and flavouring foodstuffs;
(d) be coloured;
(e) be sweetened.
4.   Without prejudice to the specific rules laid down in Annex II, spirit drinks which do not comply with the specific rules laid down for each of the categories set out in Annex I may:
(a) be produced from any agricultural raw material listed in Annex I to the Treaty or from any foodstuff or both;
(b) have addition of alcohol;
(c) be flavoured;
(d) be coloured;
(e) be sweetened.

Article 8

Delegated and implementing powers

1.   The Commission is empowered to adopt delegated acts in accordance with Article 46 amending this Regulation by introducing amendments to the technical definitions and requirements laid down in point (f) of Article 2, and in Articles 4 and 5.
The delegated acts referred to in the first subparagraph shall be strictly limited to meeting demonstrated needs resulting from evolving consumer demands, technological progress or the need for product innovation.
The Commission shall adopt a separate delegated act in respect of each technical definition or requirement referred to in the first subparagraph.
2.   The Commission is empowered to adopt delegated acts in accordance with Article 46 supplementing this Regulation by laying down, in exceptional cases, where the law of the importing third country so requires, derogations from the requirements set out in point (f) of Article 2, and in Articles 4 and 5, the requirements under the categories of spirit drinks set out in Annex I and the specific rules concerning certain spirit drinks set out in Annex II.
3.   The Commission is empowered to adopt delegated acts in accordance with Article 46 supplementing this Regulation by specifying which other natural substances or agricultural raw materials having a similar effect to the products referred to in points (a) to (e) of Article 4(9) are authorised across the Union as sweetening products in the production of spirit drinks.
4.   The Commission may, by means of implementing acts, adopt uniform rules for the use of other natural substances or agricultural raw materials authorised by delegated acts as sweetening products in the production of spirit drinks as referred to in paragraph 3, determining in particular the respective sweetening conversion factors. Those implementing acts shall be adopted in accordance with the examination procedure referred to in Article 47(2).

CHAPTER II

DESCRIPTION, PRESENTATION AND LABELLING OF SPIRIT DRINKS AND USE OF THE NAMES OF SPIRIT DRINKS IN THE PRESENTATION AND LABELLING OF OTHER FOODSTUFFS

Article 9

Presentation and labelling

Spirit drinks placed on the Union market shall comply with the presentation and labelling requirements set out in Regulation (EU) No 1169/2011, unless otherwise provided for in this Regulation.

Article 10

Legal names of spirit drinks

1.   The name of a spirit drink shall be its legal name.
Spirit drinks shall bear legal names in their description, presentation and labelling.
Legal names shall be shown clearly and visibly on the label of the spirit drink and shall not be replaced or altered.
2.   Spirit drinks that comply with the requirements of a category of spirit drinks set out in Annex I shall use the name of that category as their legal name, unless that category permits the use of another legal name.
3.   A spirit drink that does not comply with the requirements laid down for any of the categories of spirit drinks set out in Annex I shall use the legal name ‘spirit drink’.
4.   A spirit drink that complies with the requirements for more than one category of spirit drinks set out in Annex I may be placed on the market under one or more of the legal names provided for under those categories in Annex I.
5.   Notwithstanding paragraphs 1 and 2 of this Article, the legal name of a spirit drink may be:
(a) supplemented or replaced by a geographical indication referred to in Chapter III. In this case, the geographical indication may be supplemented further by any term permitted by the relevant product specification, provided that this does not mislead the consumer; and
(b) replaced by a compound term that includes the term ‘liqueur’ or ‘cream’, provided that the final product complies with the requirements of category 33 of Annex I.
6.   Without prejudice to Regulation (EU) No 1169/2011 and to the specific rules laid down for the categories of spirit drinks in Annex I to this Regulation, the legal name of a spirit drink may be supplemented by:
(a) a name or geographical reference provided for in the laws, regulations and administrative provisions applicable in the Member State in which the spirit drink is placed on the market, provided that this does not mislead the consumer;
(b) a customary name as defined in point (o) of Article 2(2) of Regulation (EU) No 1169/2011, provided that this does not mislead the consumer;
(c) a compound term or an allusion in accordance with Articles 11 and 12;
(d) the term ‘blend’, ‘blending’ or ‘blended’, provided that the spirit drink has undergone blending;
(e) the term ‘mixture’, ‘mixed’ or ‘mixed spirit drink’, provided that the spirit drink has undergone mixing; or
(f) the term ‘dry’ or ‘
dry
’, except in the case of spirit drinks that comply with the requirements of category 2 of Annex I, without prejudice to the specific requirements laid down in categories 20 to 22 of Annex I, and provided that the spirit drink has not been sweetened, not even for rounding off the taste. By way of derogation from the first part of this point, the term ‘dry’ or ‘
dry
’ may supplement the legal name of spirit drinks that comply with the requirements of category 33 and have therefore been sweetened.
7.   Without prejudice to Articles 11 and 12 and Article 13(2), (3) and (4), the use of the legal names referred to in paragraph 2 of this Article or geographical indications in the description, presentation or labelling of any beverage not complying with the requirements of the relevant category set out in Annex I or of the relevant geographical indication shall be prohibited. That prohibition shall also apply where such legal names or geographical indications are used in conjunction with words or phrases such as ‘like’, ‘type’, ‘style’, ‘made’, ‘flavour’ or any other similar terms.
Without prejudice to Article 12(1), flavourings that imitate a spirit drink or their use in the production of a foodstuff other than a beverage may bear, in their presentation and labelling, references to the legal names referred to in paragraph 2 of this Article, provided that such legal names are supplemented by the term ‘flavour’ or any other similar terms. Geographical indications shall not be used to describe such flavourings.

Article 11

Compound terms

1.   In the description, presentation and labelling of an alcoholic beverage, the use in a compound term of either a legal name provided for in the categories of spirit drinks set out in Annex I or a geographical indication for spirit drinks shall be authorised on condition that:
(a) the alcohol used in the production of the alcoholic beverage originates exclusively from the spirit drink referred to in the compound term, except for the alcohol that may be present in flavourings, colours or other authorised ingredients used for the production of that alcoholic beverage; and
(b) the spirit drink has not been diluted by addition of water only, so that its alcoholic strength is below the minimum strength provided for under the relevant category of spirit drinks set out in Annex I.
2.   Without prejudice to the legal names provided for in Article 10, the terms ‘alcohol’, ‘spirit’, ‘drink’, ‘spirit drink’ and ‘water’ shall not be part of a compound term describing an alcoholic beverage.
3.   Compound terms describing an alcoholic beverage shall:
(a) appear in uniform characters of the same font, size and colour;
(b) not be interrupted by any textual or pictorial element which does not form part of them; and
(c) not appear in a font size which is larger than the font size used for the name of the alcoholic beverage.

Article 12

Allusions

1.   In the presentation and labelling of a foodstuff other than an alcoholic beverage, an allusion to legal names provided for in one or more categories of spirit drinks set out in Annex I, or to one or more geographical indications for spirit drinks, shall be authorised on condition that the alcohol used in the production of the foodstuff originates exclusively from the spirit drink or the spirit drinks referred to in the allusion, except as regards the alcohol that may be present in flavourings, colours or other authorised ingredients used for the production of that foodstuff.
2.   By way of derogation from paragraph 1 of this Article and without prejudice to Regulations (EU) No 1308/2013 (20) and (EU) No 251/2014 (21) of the European Parliament and of the Council, an allusion in the presentation and labelling of an alcoholic beverage other than a spirit drink to legal names provided for in one or more categories of spirit drinks set out in Annex I to this Regulation or to one or more geographical indications for spirit drinks shall be authorised on condition that:
(a) the added alcohol originates exclusively from the spirit drink or spirit drinks referred to in the allusion; and
(b) the proportion of each alcoholic ingredient is indicated at least once in the same visual field as the allusion, in descending order of quantities used. That proportion shall be equal to the percentage by volume of pure alcohol it represents in the total pure alcohol content by volume of the final product.
3.   By way of derogation from paragraph 1 of this Article and from Article 13(4), in the description, presentation and labelling of a spirit drink that complies with the requirements of categories 33 to 40 of Annex I, the allusion to legal names provided for under one or more categories of spirit drinks set out in that Annex or to one or more geographical indications for spirit drinks shall be authorised on condition that:
(a) the added alcohol originates exclusively from the spirit drink or spirit drinks referred to in the allusion;
(b) the proportion of each alcoholic ingredient is indicated at least once in the same visual field as the allusion, in descending order of quantities used. That proportion shall be equal to the percentage by volume of pure alcohol it represents in the total pure alcohol content by volume of the final product; and
(c) the term ‘
cream
’ does not appear in the legal name of a spirit drink that complies with the requirements of categories 33 to 40 of Annex I or in the legal name of the spirit drink or spirit drinks referred to in the allusion.
4.   The allusions referred to in paragraphs 2 and 3 shall:
(a) not be on the same line as the name of the alcoholic beverage; and
(b) appear in a font size which is no larger than half the font size used for the name of the alcoholic beverage and, where compound terms are used, in a font size which is no larger than half the font size used for such compound terms, in accordance with point (c) of Article 11(3).

Article 13

Additional rules on description, presentation and labelling

1.   The description, presentation or labelling of a spirit drink may refer to the raw materials used to produce the ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin or distillates of agricultural origin used in the production of that spirit drink only where that ethyl alcohol or those distillates have been obtained exclusively from those raw materials. In such a case, each type of ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin or distillate of agricultural origin shall be mentioned in descending order of quantity by volume of pure alcohol.
2.   The legal names referred to in Article 10 may be included in a list of ingredients for foodstuffs, provided that the list is in accordance with Articles 18 to 22 of Regulation (EU) No 1169/2011.
3.   In the case of a mixture or a blend, the legal names provided for in the categories of spirit drinks set out in Annex I or geographical indications for spirit drinks may be indicated only in a list of the alcoholic ingredients appearing in the same visual field as the legal name of the spirit drink.
In the case referred to in the first subparagraph, the list of alcoholic ingredients shall be accompanied by at least one of the terms referred to in points (d) and (e) of Article 10(6). Both the list of alcoholic ingredients and the accompanying term shall appear in the same visual field as the legal name of the spirit drink, in uniform characters of the same font and colour and in a font size which is no larger than half the font size used for the legal name.
In addition, the proportion of each alcoholic ingredient in the list of alcoholic ingredients shall be expressed at least once as a percentage, in descending order of quantities used. That proportion shall be equal to the percentage by volume of pure alcohol it represents in the total pure alcohol content by volume of the mixture.
This paragraph shall not apply to blends made of spirit drinks belonging to the same geographical indication or blends of which none of the spirit drinks belongs to a geographical indication.
4.   By way of derogation from paragraph 3 of this Article, if a mixture complies with the requirements for one of the categories of spirit drinks set out in Annex I, that mixture shall bear the legal name provided for in the relevant category.
In the case referred to in the first subparagraph, the description, presentation or labelling of the mixture may show the legal names set out in Annex I or geographical indications corresponding to the spirits drinks that were mixed, provided that those names appear:
(a) exclusively in a list of all the alcoholic ingredients contained in the mixture which shall appear in uniform characters of the same font and colour and in a font size which is no larger than half the font size used for the legal name; and
(b) in the same visual field as the legal name of the mixture at least once.
In addition, the proportion of each alcoholic ingredient in the list of alcoholic ingredients shall be expressed at least once as a percentage, in descending order of quantities used. That proportion shall be equal to the percentage by volume of pure alcohol it represents in the total pure alcohol content by volume of the mixture.
5.   The use of the names of plant raw materials which are used as the legal names of certain spirit drinks shall be without prejudice to the use of the names of those plant raw materials in the presentation and labelling of other foodstuffs. The names of such raw materials may be used in the description, presentation or labelling of other spirit drinks, provided that such use does not mislead the consumer.
6.   A maturation period or age may only be specified in the description, presentation or labelling of a spirit drink where it refers to the youngest alcoholic component of the spirit drink and in any case provided that all the operations to age the spirit drink took place under revenue supervision of a Member State or supervision providing equivalent guarantees. The Commission shall set up a public register listing the bodies appointed by each Member State to supervise ageing processes.
7.   The legal name of a spirit drink shall be indicated in the electronic administrative document referred to in Commission Regulation (EC) No 684/2009 (22). Where a maturation period or age is indicated in the description, presentation or labelling of the spirit drink, it shall also be mentioned in that administrative document.

Article 14

Indication of place of provenance

1.   Where the place of provenance of a spirit drink, other than a geographical indication or trade mark, is indicated in its description, presentation or labelling, it shall correspond to the place or region where the stage in the production process which conferred on the finished spirit drink its character and essential definitive qualities took place.
2.   The indication of the country of origin or place of provenance of the primary ingredient as referred to in Regulation (EU) No 1169/2011 shall not be required for spirit drinks.

Article 15

Language used for the names of spirit drinks

1.   The terms in italics in Annexes I and II and geographical indications shall not be translated either on the label or in the description and presentation of spirit drinks.
2.   By way of derogation from paragraph 1, in the case of spirit drinks produced in the Union and destined for export, the terms referred to in paragraph 1 and geographical indications may be accompanied by translations, transcriptions or transliterations, provided that such terms and geographical indications in the original language are not hidden.

Article 16

Use of a Union symbol for geographical indications

The Union symbol for protected geographical indications established pursuant to Article 12(7) of Regulation (EU) No 1151/2012 may be used in the description, presentation and labelling of spirit drinks the names of which are geographical indications.

Article 17

Prohibition of lead-based capsules and lead-based foil

Spirit drinks shall not be held with a view to sale or be placed on the market in containers fitted with closing devices covered by lead-based capsules or lead-based foil.

Article 18

Union reference methods of analysis

1.   Where ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin, distillates of agricultural origin or spirit drinks are to be analysed to verify that they comply with this Regulation, such analysis shall be in accordance with Union reference methods of analysis for the determination of their chemical and physical composition and organoleptic properties.
Other methods of analysis shall be permitted, under the responsibility of the director of the laboratory, on condition that the accuracy, repeatability and reproducibility of the methods are at least equivalent to those of the relevant Union reference methods of analysis.
2.   Where Union methods of analysis are not laid down for the detection and quantification of substances contained in a particular spirit drink, one or more of the following methods shall be used:
(a) methods of analysis that have been validated by internationally recognised procedures and that, in particular, meet the criteria set out in Annex III to Regulation (EC) No 882/2004 of the European Parliament and of the Council (23);
(b) methods of analysis conforming to the recommended standards of the International Organisation for Standardisation (ISO);
(c) methods of analysis recognised and published by the International Organisation of Vine and Wine (OIV); or
(d) in the absence of a method as referred to in points (a), (b) or (c), by reason of its accuracy, repeatability and reproducibility:
— a method of analysis approved by the Member State concerned;
— where necessary, any other suitable method of analysis.

Article 19

Delegated powers

1.   In order to take into account the traditional dynamic ageing process for
brandy
in Member States which is known as the ‘
criaderas y solera
’ system or ‘
solera e criaderas
’ system as set out in Annex III, the Commission is empowered to adopt delegated acts in accordance with Article 46 supplementing this Regulation by:
(a) laying down derogations from Article 13(6) concerning the specification of a maturation period or age in the description, presentation or labelling of such
brandy
; and
(b) establishing appropriate control mechanisms for such
brandy
.
2.   The Commission is empowered to adopt delegated acts in accordance with Article 46 supplementing this Regulation concerning the setting up of a public register listing the bodies appointed by each Member State to supervise ageing processes as provided for in Article 13(6).

Article 20

Implementing powers

The Commission may, by means of implementing acts, adopt:
(a) the rules necessary for communications to be made by Member States with regard to the bodies appointed to supervise ageing processes in accordance with Article 13(6);
(b) uniform rules for indicating the country of origin or the place of provenance in the description, presentation or labelling of spirit drinks referred to in Article 14;
(c) rules on the use of the Union symbol referred to in Article 16 in the description, presentation and labelling of spirit drinks;
(d) detailed technical rules on the Union reference methods of analysis referred to in Article 18.
Those implementing acts shall be adopted in accordance with the examination procedure referred to in Article 47(2).

CHAPTER III

GEOGRAPHICAL INDICATIONS

Article 21

Protection of geographical indications

1.   Geographical indications protected under this Regulation may be used by any operator marketing a spirit drink produced in conformity with the corresponding product specification.
2.   Geographical indications protected under this Regulation shall be protected against:
(a) any direct or indirect commercial use of a registered name in respect of products not covered by the registration where those products are comparable to the products registered under that name or where using the name exploits the reputation of the protected name, including where those products are used as an ingredient;
(b) any misuse, imitation or evocation, even if the true origin of the products or services is indicated or if the protected name is translated or accompanied by an expression such as ‘style’, ‘type’, ‘method’, ‘as produced in’, ‘imitation’, ‘flavour’, ‘like’ or similar, including when those products are used as an ingredient;
(c) any other false or misleading indication as to the provenance, origin, nature or essential qualities of the product in the description, presentation or labelling of the product liable to convey a false impression as to the origin of the product;
(d) any other practice liable to mislead the consumer as to the true origin of the product.
3.   Geographical indications protected under this Regulation shall not become generic in the Union.
4.   The protection referred to in paragraph 2 shall also apply with regard to goods entering the customs territory of the Union without being released for free circulation there.

Article 22

Product specification

1.   A geographical indication protected under this Regulation shall comply with a product specification which shall include at least:
(a) the name to be protected as a geographical indication, as it is used, whether in trade or in common language, only in the languages which are or were historically used to describe the specific product in the defined geographical area, in the original script and in Latin transcription if different;
(b) the category of the spirit drink or the term ‘spirit drink’ if the spirit drink does not comply with the requirements laid down for the categories of spirit drinks set out in Annex I;
(c) a description of the characteristics of the spirit drink, including the raw materials from which it is produced, if appropriate, as well as the principal physical, chemical or organoleptic characteristics of the product and the specific characteristics of the product compared to spirit drinks of the same category;
(d) the definition of the geographical area delimited with regard to the link referred to in point (f);
(e) a description of the method of producing the spirit drink and, where appropriate, the authentic and unvarying local production methods;
(f) details establishing the link between a given quality, reputation or other characteristic of the spirit drink and its geographical origin;
(g) the names and addresses of the competent authorities or, if available, the names and addresses of the bodies that verify compliance with the provisions of the product specification pursuant to Article 38 and their specific tasks;
(h) any specific labelling rule for the geographical indication in question.
Where applicable, requirements regarding packaging shall be included in the product specification, accompanied by a justification showing why the packaging must take place in the defined geographical area to safeguard quality, to ensure the origin or to ensure control, taking into account Union law, in particular Union law on the free movement of goods and the free provision of services.
2.   Technical files submitted as part of any application before 8 June 2019 under Regulation (EC) No 110/2008 shall be deemed to be product specifications under this Article.

Article 23

Content of application for registration of a geographical indication

1.   An application for registration of a geographical indication pursuant to Article 24(5) or (8) shall include at least:
(a) the name and address of the applicant group and of the competent authorities or, if available, the bodies that verify compliance with the provisions of the product specification;
(b) the product specification provided for in Article 22;
(c) a single document setting out the following:
(i) the main points of the product specification, including the name to be protected, the category to which the spirit drink belongs or the term ‘spirit drink’, the production method, a description of the characteristics of the spirit drink, a concise definition of the geographical area, and, where appropriate, specific rules concerning packaging and labelling;
(ii) a description of the link between the spirit drink and its geographical origin as referred to in point (4) of Article 3, including, where appropriate, the specific elements of the product description or production method justifying the link.
An application as referred to in Article 24(8) shall also include the publication reference of the product specification and proof that the name of the product is protected in its country of origin.
2.   An application dossier as referred to in Article 24(7) shall include:
(a) the name and address of the applicant group;
(b) the single document referred to in point (c) of paragraph 1 of this Article;
(c) a declaration by the Member State that it considers that the application meets the requirements of this Regulation and the provisions adopted pursuant thereto;
(d) the publication reference of the product specification.

Article 24

Application for registration of a geographical indication

1.   Applications for the registration of a geographical indication under this Chapter may only be submitted by groups who work with the spirit drink, the name of which is proposed for registration.
2.   An authority designated by a Member State may be deemed to be a group for the purposes of this Chapter if it is not feasible for the producers concerned to form a group by reason of their number, geographical locations or organisational characteristics. In such case, the application dossier referred to in Article 23(2) shall state those reasons.
3.   A single natural or legal person may be deemed to be a group for the purpose of this Chapter if both of the following conditions are fulfilled:
(a) the person concerned is the only producer willing to submit an application; and
(b) the defined geographical area possesses characteristics which differ appreciably from those of neighbouring areas, the characteristics of the spirit drink are different from those produced in neighbouring areas or the spirit drink has a special quality, reputation or other characteristic which is clearly attributable to its geographical origin.
4.   In the case of a geographical indication that designates a cross-border geographical area, several groups from different Member States or third countries may submit a joint application for registration.
Where a joint application is submitted, it shall be submitted to the Commission by a Member State concerned, or by an applicant group in a third country concerned, directly or through the authorities of that third country after consultation of all the authorities and applicant groups concerned. The joint application shall include the declaration referred to in point (c) of Article 23(2) from all the Member States concerned. The requirements laid down in Article 23 shall be fulfilled in all Member States and third countries concerned.
In the case of joint applications, the related national opposition procedures shall be carried out in all the Member States concerned.
5.   Where the application relates to a geographical area in a Member State, the application shall be submitted to the authorities of that Member State.
The Member State shall scrutinise the application by appropriate means in order to check that it is reasoned and meets the requirements of this Chapter.
6.   As part of the scrutiny referred to in the second subparagraph of paragraph 5, the Member State shall initiate a national opposition procedure that ensures adequate publication of the application referred to in paragraph 5 and that provides for a reasonable period within which any natural or legal person having a legitimate interest and resident or established on its territory may submit an opposition to the application.
The Member State shall examine the admissibility of any opposition received in accordance with the criteria referred to in Article 28.
7.   If, after assessment of any opposition received, the Member State considers that the requirements of this Chapter are met, it may take a favourable decision and submit an application dossier to the Commission. In such a case, it shall inform the Commission of admissible oppositions received from a natural or legal person that has legally marketed the products in question, using the names concerned continuously for at least five years preceding the date of the publication referred to in paragraph 6. Member States shall also keep the Commission informed of any national judicial proceedings that may affect the registration procedure.
The Member State shall ensure that where it takes a favourable decision pursuant to the first subparagraph, that decision is made public and that any natural or legal person having a legitimate interest has an opportunity to appeal.
The Member State shall ensure that the version of the product specification on which its favourable decision is based is published, and shall provide electronic access to the product specification.
The Member State shall also ensure adequate publication of the version of the product specification on which the Commission takes its decision pursuant to Article 26(2).
8.   Where the application relates to a geographical area in a third country, the application shall be submitted to the Commission, either directly or via the authorities of the third country concerned.
9.   The documents referred to in this Article which are sent to the Commission shall be in one of the official languages of the Union.

Article 25

Provisional national protection

1.   On a provisional basis only, a Member State may grant protection to a name under this Chapter at national level, with effect from the date on which an application is submitted to the Commission.
2.   Such national protection shall cease on the date on which either a decision on registration under this Chapter is taken or the application is withdrawn.
3.   Where a name is not registered under this Chapter, the consequences of such national protection shall be the sole responsibility of the Member State concerned.
4.   The measures taken by Member States under paragraph 1 shall produce effects at national level only, and shall have no effect on intra-Union or international trade.

Article 26

Scrutiny by the Commission and publication for opposition

1.   The Commission shall scrutinise by appropriate means any application that it receives pursuant to Article 24, in order to check that it is reasoned, that it meets the requirements of this Chapter, and that the interests of stakeholders outside the Member State of application have been taken into account. Such scrutiny shall be based on the single document referred to in point (c) of Article 23(1), shall consist of a check that there are no manifest errors in the application, and, as a general rule, shall not exceed a period of six months. However, where this period is exceeded, the Commission shall immediately indicate in writing to the applicant the reasons for the delay.
The Commission shall, at least each month, make public the list of names for which registration applications have been submitted to it, as well as their date of submission. The list shall also contain the name of the Member State or third country from which the application came.
2.   Where, based on the scrutiny carried out pursuant to the first subparagraph of paragraph 1, the Commission considers that the requirements of this Chapter are met, it shall publish in the
Official Journal of the European Union
the single document referred to in point (c) of Article 23(1) and the publication reference of the product specification.

Article 27

Opposition procedure

1.   Within three months from the date of publication in the
Official Journal of the European Union
, the authorities of a Member State or of a third country, or a natural or legal person having a legitimate interest and resident or established in a third country may submit a notice of opposition to the Commission.
Any natural or legal person having a legitimate interest and resident or established in a Member State other than that from which the application was submitted, may submit a notice of opposition to the Member State in which that person is resident or established within a time limit permitting an opposition to be submitted pursuant to the first subparagraph.
A notice of opposition shall contain a declaration that the application might infringe the requirements of this Chapter.
A notice of opposition that does not contain such a declaration shall be void.
The Commission shall forward the notice of opposition without delay to the authority or body that submitted the application.
2.   If a notice of opposition is submitted to the Commission and is followed within two months by a reasoned statement of opposition, the Commission shall check the admissibility of this reasoned statement of opposition.
3.   Within two months from the receipt of an admissible reasoned statement of opposition, the Commission shall invite the authority or person that submitted the opposition and the authority or body that submitted the application to engage in appropriate consultations for a period that shall not exceed three months. That deadline shall start on the date when the invitation to the interested parties is delivered by electronic means.
The authority or person that submitted the opposition and the authority or body that submitted the application shall start such appropriate consultations without undue delay. They shall provide each other with the relevant information to assess whether the application for registration complies with the requirements of this Chapter. If no agreement is reached, that information shall also be provided to the Commission.
When the interested parties reach an agreement, the authorities of the Member State or of the third country from which the application was submitted shall notify the Commission of all the factors which enabled that agreement to be reached, including the opinions of the applicant and of the authorities of a Member State or of a third country, or of other natural and legal persons having submitted an opposition.
Irrespective of whether an agreement has been reached or not, the notification to the Commission shall be made within one month from the end of the consultations.
At any time during those three months, the Commission may, at the request of the applicant extend the deadline for the consultations by a maximum of three months.
4.   Where, following the appropriate consultations referred to in paragraph 3 of this Article, the details published in accordance with Article 26(2) have been substantially amended, the Commission shall repeat the scrutiny referred to in Article 26.
5.   The notice of opposition, the reasoned statement of opposition and the related documents which are sent to the Commission in accordance with paragraphs 1 to 4 shall be in one of the official languages of the Union.

Article 28

Grounds for opposition

1.   A reasoned statement of opposition as referred to in Article 27(2) shall be admissible only if it is received by the Commission within the time limit set out in that Article and if it shows that:
(a) the proposed geographical indication does not comply with the definition in point (4) of Article 3 or with the requirements referred to in Article 22;
(b) the registration of the proposed geographical indication would be contrary to Article 34 or 35;
(c) the registration of the proposed geographical indication would jeopardise the existence of an entirely or partly identical name or of a trade mark or the existence of products which have been legally on the market for at least five years preceding the date of the publication provided for in Article 26(2); or
(d) the requirements referred to in Articles 31 and 32 are not complied with.
2.   The grounds for opposition shall be assessed in relation to the territory of the Union.

Article 29

Transitional periods for use of geographical indications

1.   The Commission may adopt implementing acts granting a transitional period of up to five years to enable spirit drinks originating in a Member State or a third country, and the name of which contravenes Article 21(2), to continue to use the designation under which they were marketed on condition that an admissible statement of opposition under Article 24(6) or Article 27 shows that the registration of the name would jeopardise the existence of:
(a) an entirely identical name or of a compound name, one term of which is identical to the name to be registered; or
(b) other names similar to the name to be registered which refer to spirit drinks which have been legally on the market for at least five years preceding the date of the publication provided for in Article 26(2).
Those implementing acts shall be adopted in accordance with the examination procedure referred to in Article 47(2).
2.   Without prejudice to Article 36, the Commission may adopt implementing acts extending the transitional period granted under paragraph 1 up to 15 years, or allowing continued use for up to 15 years in duly justified cases, provided it is shown that:
(a) the designation referred to in paragraph 1 has been in legal use consistently and fairly for at least 25 years before the application for protection was submitted to the Commission;
(b) the purpose of using the designation referred to in paragraph 1 has not, at any time, been to profit from the reputation of the registered geographical indication; and
(c) the consumer has not been nor could have been misled as to the true origin of the product.
Those implementing acts shall be adopted in accordance with the examination procedure referred to in Article 47(2).
3.   When using a designation referred to in paragraphs 1 and 2, the indication of the country of origin shall clearly and visibly appear on the labelling.

Article 30

Decision on registration

1.   Where, on the basis of the information available to the Commission from the scrutiny carried out pursuant to the first subparagraph of Article 26(1), the Commission considers that the conditions for the registration of a proposed geographical indication are not fulfilled, it shall inform the Member State or third country applicant concerned of the reasons for rejection and shall give it two months to submit observations. If the Commission receives no observations or if, despite the observations received, it still considers that the conditions for registration are not fulfilled it shall, by means of implementing acts, reject the application unless the application is withdrawn. Those implementing acts shall be adopted in accordance with the examination procedure referred to in Article 47(2).
2.   If the Commission receives no notice of opposition or no admissible reasoned statement of opposition under Article 27, it shall adopt implementing acts, without applying the procedure referred to in Article 47(2), to register the name.
3.   If the Commission receives an admissible reasoned statement of opposition, it shall, following the appropriate consultations referred to in Article 27(3), and taking into account the results thereof, either:
(a) if an agreement has been reached, register the name by means of implementing acts adopted without applying the procedure referred to in Article 47(2), and, if necessary, amend the information published pursuant to Article 26(2) provided such amendments are not substantial; or
(b) if an agreement has not been reached, adopt implementing acts deciding on the registration. Those implementing acts shall be adopted in accordance with the examination procedure referred to in Article 47(2).
4.   Acts of registration and decisions on rejection shall be published in the
Official Journal of the European Union
.
The act of registration shall grant the protection referred to in Article 21 to the geographical indication.

Article 31

Amendment to a product specification

1.   Any group having a legitimate interest may apply for approval of an amendment to a product specification.
Applications shall describe and give reasons for the amendments requested.
2.   Amendments to a product specification shall be classified into two categories as regards their importance:
(a) Union amendments requiring an opposition procedure at Union level;
(b) standard amendments to be dealt with at Member State or third country level.
3.   An amendment shall be considered a Union amendment if it:
(a) includes a change in the name or any part of the name of the geographical indication registered under this Regulation;
(b) consists of a change of the legal name or the category of the spirit drink;
(c) risks voiding the given quality, reputation or other characteristic of the spirit drink that is essentially attributable to its geographical origin; or
(d) entails further restrictions on the marketing of the product.
Any other amendments shall be considered standard amendments.
A standard amendment shall also be considered a temporary amendment when it concerns a temporary change in the product specification resulting from the imposition of obligatory sanitary and phytosanitary measures by the public authorities or is linked to natural disasters or adverse weather conditions formally recognised by the competent authorities.
4.   Union amendments shall be approved by the Commission. The approval procedure shall follow,
mutatis mutandis
, the procedure laid down in Article 24 and Articles 26 to 30. Applications for Union amendments submitted by a third country or by third country producers shall contain proof that the requested amendment complies with the laws applicable in that third country to the protection of geographical indications.
5.   Standard amendments shall be approved by the Member State in whose territory the geographical area of the product concerned is located. As regards third countries, amendments shall be approved in accordance with the law applicable in the third country concerned.
6.   The scrutiny of the application for amendment shall only address the proposed amendment.

Article 32

Cancellation

1.   The Commission may, on its own initiative or at the request of any natural or legal person having a legitimate interest, adopt implementing acts to cancel the registration of a geographical indication in either of the following cases:
(a) where compliance with the requirements for the product specification can no longer be ensured;
(b) where no product has been placed on the market under the geographical indication for at least seven consecutive years.
Articles 24, 26, 27, 28 and 30 shall apply
mutatis mutandis
to the cancellation procedure.
2.   Notwithstanding paragraph 1, the Commission may, at the request of the producers of the spirit drink marketed under the registered geographical indication, adopt implementing acts cancelling the corresponding registration.
3.   In the cases referred to in paragraphs 1 and 2, before adopting the implementing act, the Commission shall consult the authorities of the Member State, the authorities of the third country or, where possible, the third country producer which had originally applied for the registration of the geographical indication concerned, unless the cancellation is directly requested by those original applicants.
4.   The implementing acts referred to in this Article shall be adopted in accordance with the examination procedure referred to in Article 47(2).

Article 33

Register of geographical indications of spirit drinks

1.   The Commission shall adopt, by 8 June 2021, delegated acts in accordance with Article 46 supplementing this Regulation by establishing a publicly accessible electronic register, which is kept up to date, of geographical indications of spirit drinks recognised under this scheme (‘the register’).
2.   The name of a geographical indication shall be registered in its original script. Where the original script is not in Latin characters, a transcription or transliteration in Latin characters shall be registered together with the name in its original script.
For geographical indications registered under this Chapter, the register shall provide direct access to the single documents and shall also contain the publication reference of the product specification.
For geographical indications registered before 8 June 2019, the register shall provide direct access to the main specifications of the technical file as set out in Article 17(4) of Regulation (EC) No 110/2008.
The Commission shall adopt delegated acts in accordance with Article 46 supplementing this paragraph by laying down further detailed rules on the form and content of the register.
3.   Geographical indications of spirit drinks produced in third countries that are protected in the Union pursuant to an international agreement to which the Union is a contracting party may be entered in the register as geographical indications.

Article 34

Homonymous geographical indications

1.   If a name for which an application is submitted is a whole or partial homonym of a name already registered under this Regulation, the name shall be registered with due regard to local and traditional usage and any risk of confusion.
2.   A homonymous name which misleads the consumer into believing that products come from another territory shall not be registered even if the name is accurate as far as the actual territory, region or place of origin of those products is concerned.
3.   The use of a registered homonymous geographical indication shall be subject to there being a sufficient distinction in practice between the homonym registered subsequently and the name already in the register, having regard to the need to treat the producers concerned in an equitable manner and not to mislead the consumer.
4.   The protection of geographical indications of spirit drinks referred to in Article 21 of this Regulation shall be without prejudice to the protected geographical indications and designations of origin of products under Regulations (EU) No 1308/2013 and (EU) No 251/2014.

Article 35

Specific grounds for refusal of protection

1.   A generic name shall not be protected as a geographical indication.
To establish whether or not a name has become a generic name, account shall be taken of all relevant factors, in particular:
(a) the existing situation in the Union, in particular in areas of consumption;
(b) the relevant Union or national legislation.
2.   A name shall not be protected as a geographical indication where, in the light of a trade mark's reputation and renown, protection could mislead the consumer as to the true identity of the spirit drink.
3.   A name shall only be protected as a geographical indication if the production steps which give the spirit drink the quality, reputation or other characteristic that is essentially attributable to its geographical origin, take place in the relevant geographical area.

Article 36

Relationship between trade marks and geographical indications

1.   The registration of a trade mark the use of which corresponds or would correspond to one or more of the situations referred to in Article 21(2) shall be refused or invalidated.
2.   A trade mark the use of which corresponds to one or more of the situations referred to in Article 21(2), which has been applied for, registered, or established by use, if that possibility is provided for by the legislation concerned, in good faith within the territory of the Union, before the date on which the application for protection of the geographical indication was submitted to the Commission, may continue to be used and renewed notwithstanding the registration of a geographical indication, provided that no grounds for its invalidity or revocation exist under Directive (EU) 2015/2436 of the European Parliament and of the Council (24) or Regulation (EU) 2017/1001 of the European Parliament and of the Council (25).

Article 37

Existing registered geographical indications

Geographical indications of spirit drinks registered in Annex III to Regulation (EC) No 110/2008 and thus protected under that Regulation shall automatically be protected as geographical indications under this Regulation. The Commission shall list them in the register referred to in Article 33 of this Regulation.

Article 38

Verification of compliance with the product specification

1.   Member States shall draw up and keep up to date a list of operators that produce spirit drinks with a geographical indication registered under this Regulation.
2.   In respect of the geographical indications that designate spirit drinks originating within the Union registered under this Regulation, verification of compliance with the product specification referred to in Article 22, before placing the product on the market, shall be carried out by:
(a) one or more competent authorities referred to in Article 43(1); or
(b) control bodies within the meaning of point 5 of the second subparagraph of Article 2 of Regulation (EC) No 882/2004, operating as a product certification body.
Where a Member State applies Article 24(2), verification of compliance with the product specification shall be ensured by an authority other than that deemed to be a group under that paragraph.
Notwithstanding the national law of Member States, the costs of such verification of compliance with the product specification may be borne by the operators which are subject to those controls.
3.   In respect of the geographical indications that designate spirit drinks originating within a third country registered under this Regulation, verification of compliance with the product specification, before placing the product on the market, shall be carried out by:
(a) a public competent authority designated by the third country; or
(b) a product certification body.
4.   Member States shall make public the names and addresses of the competent authorities and bodies referred to in paragraph 2, and update that information periodically.
The Commission shall make public the name and address of the competent authorities and bodies referred to in paragraph 3 and update that information periodically.
5.   The control bodies referred to in point (b) of paragraph 2 and the product certification bodies referred to in point (b) of paragraph 3 shall comply with and be accredited in accordance with European standard ISO/IEC 17065:2012 or any applicable future revision or amended version thereof.
6.   The competent authorities referred to in paragraphs 2 and 3 that verify compliance of the geographical indication protected under this Regulation with the product specification shall be objective and impartial. They shall have at their disposal the qualified staff and resources necessary to carry out their tasks.

Article 39

Surveillance of the use of names in the market place

1.   Member States shall carry out checks, based on a risk analysis, as regards the use, in the market place, of the geographical indications registered under this Regulation and shall take all necessary measures in the event of breaches of the requirements of this Chapter.
2.   Member States shall take appropriate administrative and judicial steps to prevent or stop the unlawful use of the names of products or services that are produced or marketed in their territory and that are covered by geographical indications registered under this Regulation.
To that end, Member States shall designate the authorities that are responsible for taking those steps, in accordance with procedures determined by each individual Member State.
Those authorities shall offer adequate guarantees of objectivity and impartiality, and shall have at their disposal the qualified staff and resources necessary to carry out their tasks.
3.   Member States shall inform the Commission of the names and addresses of the competent authorities responsible for controls as regards the use of names in the market place, and designated in accordance with Article 43. The Commission shall make public the names and addresses of those authorities.

Article 40

Procedure and requirements, and planning and reporting of control activities

1.   The procedures and requirements laid down in Regulation (EC) No 882/2004 shall apply
mutatis mutandis
to the checks provided for in Articles 38 and 39 of this Regulation.
2.   Member States shall ensure that activities for the control of obligations under this Chapter are specifically included in a separate section within the multi-annual national control plans in accordance with Articles 41 to 43 of Regulation (EC) No 882/2004.
3.   The annual reports referred to in Article 44(1) of Regulation (EC) No 882/2004 shall include in a separate section the information referred to in that provision concerning the control of the obligations established by this Regulation.

Article 41

Delegated powers

1.   The Commission is empowered to adopt delegated acts in accordance with Article 46 supplementing this Regulation by setting out further conditions to be followed, including in cases where a geographical area includes more than one country, in respect of:
(a) an application for the registration of a geographical indication as referred to in Articles 23 and 24; and
(b) preliminary national procedures as referred to in Article 24, scrutiny by the Commission, the opposition procedure, and the cancellation of geographical indications.
2.   The Commission is empowered to adopt delegated acts in accordance with Article 46 supplementing this Regulation by establishing conditions and requirements for the procedure concerning the Union amendments and standard amendments, including temporary amendments, to product specifications as referred to in Article 31.

Article 42

Implementing powers

1.   The Commission may adopt implementing acts laying down detailed rules concerning:
(a) the form of the product specification referred to in Article 22, and measures on the information to be provided in the product specification with regard to the link between the geographical area and the final product as referred to in point (f) of Article 22(1);
(b) the procedures for, form and presentation of, oppositions as referred to in Articles 27 and 28;
(c) the form and presentation of applications for Union amendments and of communications concerning standard and temporary amendments as referred to in Article 31(4) and (5) respectively;
(d) the procedures for and form of the cancellation process referred to in Article 32, as well as on the presentation of the requests for cancellation; and
(e) the checks and verifications to be carried out by the Member States, including testing, as referred to in Article 38.
2.   The Commission shall adopt, by 8 June 2021, implementing acts laying down detailed rules concerning the procedures for, form and presentation of, applications as referred to in Articles 23 and 24, including for applications concerning more than one national territory.
3.   The implementing acts referred to in paragraphs 1 and 2 shall be adopted in accordance with the examination procedure referred to in Article 47(2).

CHAPTER IV

CHECKS, EXCHANGE OF INFORMATION, MEMBER STATES' LEGISLATION

Article 43

Checks on spirit drinks

1.   Member States shall be responsible for checks on spirit drinks. They shall take the measures necessary to ensure compliance with this Regulation and designate the competent authorities responsible for ensuring this Regulation is complied with.
2.   The Commission shall ensure the uniform application of this Regulation and, where necessary, shall, by means of implementing acts, adopt the rules concerning administrative and physical checks to be conducted by the Member States with regard to the respect of the obligations resulting from the application of this Regulation. Those implementing acts shall be adopted in accordance with the examination procedure referred to in Article 47(2).

Article 44

Exchange of information

1.   Member States and the Commission shall communicate to each other the information necessary for the application of this Regulation.
2.   The Commission may adopt implementing acts concerning the nature and the type of the information to be exchanged and the methods for exchanging information.
Those implementing acts shall be adopted in accordance with the examination procedure referred to in Article 47(2).

Article 45

Member States' legislation

1.   In applying a quality policy for spirit drinks produced in their own territory and in particular for geographical indications listed in the register or for the protection of new geographical indications, Member States may lay down rules on production, description, presentation and labelling that are stricter than those set out in Annexes I and II in so far as they are compatible with Union law.
2.   Notwithstanding paragraph 1, Member States shall not prohibit or restrict the import, sale or consumption of spirit drinks produced in other Member States or third countries which comply with this Regulation.

CHAPTER V

DELEGATION OF POWER, IMPLEMENTING PROVISIONS, TRANSITIONAL AND FINAL PROVISIONS

SECTION 1

Delegation of power and implementing provisions

Article 46

Exercise of the delegation

1.   The power to adopt delegated acts is conferred on the Commission subject to the conditions laid down in this Article.
2.   The power to adopt delegated acts referred to in Articles 8 and 19 shall be conferred on the Commission for a period of seven years from 24 May 2019. The Commission shall draw up a report in respect of the delegation of power not later than nine months before the end of the seven-year period. The delegation of power shall be tacitly extended for periods of an identical duration, unless the European Parliament or the Council opposes such extension not later than three months before the end of each period.
3.   The power to adopt delegated acts referred to in Articles 33 and 41 shall be conferred on the Commission for a period of five years from 24 May 2019. The Commission shall draw up a report in respect of the delegation of power not later than nine months before the end of the five-year period. The delegation of power shall be tacitly extended for periods of an identical duration, unless the European Parliament or the Council opposes such extension not later than three months before the end of each period.
4.   The power to adopt delegated acts referred to in Article 50 shall be conferred on the Commission for a period of six years from 24 May 2019.
5.   The delegation of power referred to in Articles 8, 19, 33, 41 and 50 may be revoked at any time by the European Parliament or by the Council. A decision to revoke shall put an end to the delegation of power specified in that decision. It shall take effect the day following the publication of the decision in the
Official Journal of the European Union
or at a later date specified therein. It shall not affect the validity of any delegated acts already in force.
6.   Before adopting a delegated act, the Commission shall consult experts designated by each Member State in accordance with the principles laid down in the Interinstitutional Agreement of 13 April 2016 on Better Law-Making.
7.   As soon as it adopts a delegated act, the Commission shall notify it simultaneously to the European Parliament and to the Council.
8.   A delegated act adopted pursuant to Articles 8, 19, 33, 41 and 50 shall enter into force only if no objection has been expressed either by the European Parliament or by the Council within a period of two months of notification of that act to the European Parliament and the Council or if, before the expiry of that period, the European Parliament and the Council have both informed the Commission that they will not object. That period shall be extended by two months at the initiative of the European Parliament or of the Council.

Article 47

Committee procedure

1.   The Commission shall be assisted by the Committee for Spirit Drinks established by Regulation (EEC) No 1576/89. That committee shall be a committee within the meaning of Regulation (EU) No 182/2011.
2.   Where reference is made to this paragraph, Article 5 of Regulation (EU) No 182/2011 shall apply.

SECTION 2

Derogation, transitional and final provisions

Article 48

Derogation from nominal quantities requirements in Directive 2007/45/EC

By way of derogation from Article 3 of Directive 2007/45/EC, and from the sixth row of section 1 of the Annex to that Directive, single distilled
shochu
 (26), produced by pot still and bottled in Japan, may be placed on the Union market in nominal quantities of 720 ml and 1 800 ml.

Article 49

Repeal

1.   Without prejudice to Article 50, Regulation (EC) No 110/2008 is repealed with effect from 25 May 2021. However, Chapter III thereof is repealed with effect from 8 June 2019.
2.   By way of derogation from paragraph 1:
(a) Article 17(2) of Regulation (EC) No 110/2008 shall continue to apply until 25 May 2021;
(b) Article 20 of Regulation (EC) No 110/2008 and, without prejudice to the applicability of the other provisions of Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) No 716/2013 (27), Article 9 of that Implementing Regulation shall continue to apply until the completion of the procedures provided for in Article 9 of that Implementing Regulation but, in any event, no later than 25 May 2021; and
(c) Annex III to Regulation (EC) No 110/2008 shall continue to apply until the register referred to in Article 33 of this Regulation has been established.
3.   References to Regulation (EC) No 110/2008 shall be construed as references to this Regulation and be read in accordance with the correlation table set out in Annex IV to this Regulation.

Article 50

Transitional measures

1.   Spirit drinks which do not meet the requirements of this Regulation but which meet the requirements of Regulation (EC) No 110/2008 and were produced before 25 May 2021 may continue to be placed on the market until stocks are exhausted.
2.   Notwithstanding paragraph 1 of this Article, spirit drinks the description, presentation or labelling of which is not in conformity with Articles 21 and 36 of this Regulation but complies with Articles 16 and 23 of Regulation (EC) No 110/2008 and which were labelled before 8 June 2019 may continue to be placed on the market until stocks are exhausted.
3.   Until 25 May 2025, the Commission is empowered to adopt delegated acts in accordance with Article 46 amending Article 3(2), (3), (9), (10), (11) and (12), Article 10(6) and (7), and Articles 11, 12 and 13 or supplementing this Regulation by derogating from those provisions.
The delegated acts referred to in the first subparagraph shall be strictly limited to meeting demonstrated needs that result from market circumstances.
The Commission shall adopt a separate delegated act in respect of each definition, technical definition or requirement in the provisions referred to in the first subparagraph.
4.   Articles 22 to 26, 31 and 32 of this Regulation shall not apply to applications for registration or for amendment or to requests for cancellation, which are pending on 8 June 2019. Articles 17(4), (5) and (6), 18 and 21 of Regulation (EC) No 110/2008 shall continue to apply to such applications and requests for cancellation.
The provisions on the opposition procedure referred to in Articles 27, 28 and 29 of this Regulation shall not apply to the applications for registration or to the applications for amendment, in relation to which the main specifications of the technical file or an application for amendment, respectively, have already been published for opposition in the
Official Journal of the European Union
on 8 June 2019. Article 17(7) of Regulation (EC) No 110/2008 shall continue to apply to such applications.
The provisions on the opposition procedure referred to in Articles 27, 28 and 29 of this Regulation shall not apply to a request for cancellation which is pending on 8 June 2019. Article 18 of Regulation (EC) No 110/2008 shall continue to apply to such requests for cancellation.
5.   For the geographical indications registered under Chapter III of this Regulation and of which the application for registration was pending on the date of application of the implementing acts laying down detailed rules on the procedures for, form and presentation of, applications as referred to in Article 23 provided for in Article 42(2) of this Regulation, the register may provide direct access to the main specifications of the technical file within the meaning of Article 17(4) of Regulation (EC) No 110/2008.
6.   In respect of geographical indications registered in accordance with Regulation (EC) No 110/2008 the Commission shall, at the request of a Member State, publish a single document submitted by that Member State in the
Official Journal of the European Union
. That publication shall be accompanied by the publication reference of the product specification and shall not be followed by an opposition procedure.

Article 51

Entry into force and application

1.   This Regulation shall enter into force on the seventh day following that of its publication in the
Official Journal of the European Union
.
It shall apply from 25 May 2021.
2.   Nothwithstanding paragraph 1, Article 16, point (c) of Article 20, Articles 21, 22 and 23, Article 24(1), (2) and (3), the first and second subparagraphs of Article 24(4), Article 24(8) and (9), Articles 25 to 42, Articles 46 and 47, Article 50(1), (4) and (6), points 39(d) and 40(d) of Annex I and the definitions set out in Article 3 relating to those provisions shall apply from 8 June 2019.
3.   The delegated acts provided for in Articles 8, 19 and 50, adopted in accordance with Article 46, and the implementing acts provided for in Article 8(4) and Articles 20, 43 and 44, adopted in accordance with Article 47, shall apply from 25 May 2021.
This Regulation shall be binding in its entirety and directly applicable in all Member States.
Done at Strasbourg, 17 April 2019.
For the European Parliament
The President
A. TAJANI
For the Council
The President
G. CIAMBA
(1)  
OJ C 209, 30.6.2017, p. 54
.
(2)  Position of the European Parliament of 13 March 2019 (not yet published in the Official Journal) and decision of the Council of 9 April 2019.
(3)  Regulation (EC) No 110/2008 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 15 January 2008 on the definition, description, presentation, labelling and the protection of geographical indications of spirit drinks and repealing Council Regulation (EEC) No 1576/89 (
OJ L 39, 13.2.2008, p. 16
).
(4)  Regulation (EC) No 1333/2008 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 16 December 2008 on food additives (
OJ L 354, 31.12.2008, p. 16
).
(5)  Regulation (EC) No 1334/2008 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 16 December 2008 on flavourings and certain food ingredients with flavouring properties for use in and on foods and amending Council Regulation (EEC) No 1601/91, Regulations (EC) No 2232/96 and (EC) No 110/2008 and Directive 2000/13/EC (
OJ L 354, 31.12.2008, p. 34
).
(6)  Regulation (EU) No 1169/2011 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 25 October 2011 on the provision of food information to consumers, amending Regulations (EC) No 1924/2006 and (EC) No 1925/2006 of the European Parliament and of the Council, and repealing Commission Directive 87/250/EEC, Council Directive 90/496/EEC, Commission Directive 1999/10/EC, Directive 2000/13/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council, Commission Directives 2002/67/EC and 2008/5/EC and Commission Regulation (EC) No 608/2004 (
OJ L 304, 22.11.2011, p. 18
).
(7)  Council Decision 94/800/EC of 22 December 1994 concerning the conclusion on behalf of the European Community, as regards matters within its competence, of the agreements reached in the Uruguay Round multilateral negotiations (1986-1994) (
OJ L 336, 23.12.1994, p. 1
).
(8)  Regulation (EU) No 1151/2012 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 21 November 2012 on quality schemes for agricultural products and foodstuffs (
OJ L 343, 14.12.2012, p. 1
).
(9)  Council Regulation (EEC) No 1576/89 of 29 May 1989 laying down general rules on the definition, description and presentation of spirit drinks (
OJ L 160, 12.6.1989, p. 1
).
(10)  
OJ L 123, 12.5.2016, p. 1
.
(11)  Regulation (EU) No 182/2011 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 16 February 2011 laying down the rules and general principles concerning mechanisms for control by Member States of the Commission's exercise of implementing powers (
OJ L 55, 28.2.2011, p. 13
).
(12)  
OJ L 330, 27.12.2018, p. 3
.
(13)  Directive 2007/45/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 5 September 2007 laying down rules on nominal quantities for prepacked products, repealing Council Directives 75/106/EEC and 80/232/EEC, and amending Council Directive 76/211/EEC (
OJ L 247, 21.9.2007, p. 17
).
(14)  Regulation (EU) 2018/1670 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 23 October 2018 amending Regulation (EC) No 110/2008 as regards nominal quantities for the placing on the Union market of single distilled
shochu
produced by pot still and bottled in Japan (
OJ L 284, 12.11.2018, p. 1
).
(15)  Council Directive 98/83/EC of 3 November 1998 on the quality of water intended for human consumption (
OJ L 330, 5.12.1998, p. 32
).
(16)  Directive 2009/54/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 18 June 2009 on the exploitation and marketing of natural mineral waters (
OJ L 164, 26.6.2009, p. 45
).
(17)  Council Directive 2001/111/EC of 20 December 2001 relating to certain sugars intended for human consumption (
OJ L 10, 12.1.2002, p. 53
).
(18)  Council Directive 2001/110/EC of 20 December 2001 relating to honey (
OJ L 10, 12.1.2002, p. 47
).
(19)  Regulation (EC) No 178/2002 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 28 January 2002 laying down the general principles and requirements of food law, establishing the European Food Safety Authority and laying down procedures in matters of food safety (
OJ L 31, 1.2.2002, p. 1
).
(20)  Regulation (EU) No 1308/2013 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 17 December 2013 establishing a common organisation of the markets in agricultural products and repealing Council Regulations (EEC) No 922/72, (EEC) No 234/79, (EC) No 1037/2001 and (EC) No 1234/2007 (
OJ L 347, 20.12.2013, p. 671
).
(21)  Regulation (EU) No 251/2014 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 26 February 2014 on the definition, description, presentation, labelling and the protection of geographical indications of aromatised wine products and repealing Council Regulation (EEC) No 1601/91 (
OJ L 84, 20.3.2014, p. 14
).
(22)  Commission Regulation (EC) No 684/2009 of 24 July 2009 implementing Council Directive 2008/118/EC as regards the computerised procedures for the movement of excise goods under suspension of excise duty (
OJ L 197, 29.7.2009, p. 24
).
(23)  Regulation (EC) No 882/2004 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 29 April 2004 on official controls performed to ensure the verification of compliance with feed and food law, animal health and animal welfare rules (
OJ L 165, 30.4.2004, p. 1
).
(24)  Directive (EU) 2015/2436 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 16 December 2015 to approximate the laws of the Member States relating to trade marks (
OJ L 336, 23.12.2015, p. 1
).
(25)  Regulation (EU) 2017/1001 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 14 June 2017 on the European Union trade mark (
OJ L 154, 16.6.2017, p. 1
).
(26)  As referred to in Annex 2-D to the Agreement between the European Union and Japan for an Economic Partnership.
(27)  Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) No 716/2013 of 25 July 2013 laying down rules for the application of Regulation (EC) No 110/2008 of the European Parliament and of the Council on the definition, description, presentation, labelling and the protection of geographical indications of spirit drinks (
OJ L 201, 26.7.2013, p. 21
).

ANNEX I

CATEGORIES OF SPIRIT DRINKS

1.   

Rum

(a) Rum is a spirit drink produced exclusively by the distillation of the product obtained by the alcoholic fermentation of molasses or syrup produced in the manufacture of cane sugar or of sugar-cane juice itself, distilled at less than 96 % vol., so that the distillate has the discernible specific organoleptic characteristics of rum.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of rum shall be 37,5 %.
(c) No addition of alcohol, diluted or not, shall take place.
(d) Rum shall not be flavoured.
(e) Rum may only contain added caramel as a means of adjusting the colour.
(f) Rum may be sweetened in order to round off the final taste. However, the final product may not contain more than 20 grams of sweetening products per litre, expressed as invert sugar.
(g) In the case of geographical indications registered under this Regulation, the legal name of rum may be supplemented by:
(i) the term ‘
traditionnel
’ or ‘
tradicional
’, provided that the rum in question:
— has been produced by distillation at less than 90 % vol., after alcoholic fermentation of alcohol-producing materials originating exclusively from the place of production considered, and
— has a volatile substances content equal to or exceeding 225 grams per hectolitre of 100 % vol. alcohol, and
— is not sweetened;
(ii) the term ‘agricultural’, provided that the rum in question complies with the requirements under point (i) and has been produced exclusively by distillation after alcoholic fermentation of sugar-cane juice. The term ‘agricultural’ may only be used in the case of a geographical indication of a French Overseas Department or the Autonomous Region of Madeira.
This point shall be without prejudice to the use of the term ‘agricultural’, ‘
traditionnel
’ or ‘
tradicional
’ in connection with any product not covered by this category, in accordance with their own specific criteria.

2.   

Whisky

or

whiskey

(a) Whisky
or
whiskey
is a spirit drink produced exclusively by carrying out all of the following production operations:
(i) distillation of a mash made from malted cereals, with or without whole grains of unmalted cereals, which has been:
— saccharified by the diastase of the malt contained therein, with or without other natural enzymes,
— fermented by the action of yeast;
(ii) each and every distillation is carried out at less than 94,8 % vol., so that the distillate has an aroma and taste derived from the raw materials used;
(iii) maturation of the final distillate for at least three years in wooden casks not exceeding 700 litres capacity.
The final distillate, to which only water and plain caramel (for colouring) may be added, shall retain the colour, aroma and taste it derived from the production process referred to in points (i), (ii) and (iii).
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of
whisky
or
whiskey
shall be 40 %.
(c) No addition of alcohol, diluted or not, shall take place.
(d) Whisky
or
whiskey
shall not be sweetened, even for rounding off the taste, or flavoured, or contain any additives other than plain caramel (E 150a) used for adjusting the colour.
(e) The legal name of ‘
whisky
’ or ‘
whiskey
’ may be supplemented by the term ‘single malt’ only if it has been distilled exclusively from malted barley at a single distillery.

3.   

Grain spirit

(a) Grain spirit is a spirit drink produced exclusively by the distillation of a fermented mash of whole grain cereals and having organoleptic characteristics derived from the raw materials used.
(b) With the exception of
Korn
, the minimum alcoholic strength by volume of grain spirit shall be 35 %.
(c) No addition of alcohol, diluted or not, shall take place.
(d) Grain spirit shall not be flavoured.
(e) Grain spirit may only contain added caramel as a means of adjusting the colour.
(f) Grain spirit may be sweetened in order to round off the final taste. However, the final product may not contain more than 10 grams of sweetening products per litre, expressed as invert sugar.
(g) A grain spirit may bear the legal name ‘grain brandy’ if it has been produced by distillation at less than 95 % vol. from a fermented mash of whole grain cereals, presenting organoleptic features deriving from the raw materials used.
(h) In the legal name ‘grain spirit’ or ‘grain brandy’, the word ‘grain’ may be replaced with the name of the cereal used exclusively in the production of the spirit drink.

4.   

Wine spirit

(a) Wine spirit is a spirit drink which meets the following requirements:
(i) it is produced exclusively by the distillation at less than 86 % vol. of wine, wine fortified for distillation or wine distillate distilled at less than 86 % vol.;
(ii) it has a volatile substances content equal to or exceeding 125 grams per hectolitre of 100 % vol. alcohol;
(iii) it has a maximum methanol content of 200 grams per hectolitre of 100 % vol. alcohol.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of wine spirit shall be 37,5 %.
(c) No addition of alcohol, diluted or not, shall take place.
(d) Wine spirit shall not be flavoured. This shall not preclude traditional production methods.
(e) Wine spirit may only contain added caramel as a means of adjusting the colour.
(f) Wine spirit may be sweetened in order to round off the final taste. However, the final product may not contain more than 20 grams of sweetening products per litre, expressed as invert sugar.
(g) Where wine spirit has been matured, it may continue to be placed on the market as ‘wine spirit’ provided that it has been matured for as long as, or longer than, the maturation period provided for in respect of the spirit drink defined under category 5.
(h) This Regulation shall be without prejudice to the use of the term ‘
Branntwein
’ in combination with the term ‘
essig
’ in the presentation and labelling of vinegar.

5.   

Brandy

or

Weinbrand

(a) Brandy
or
Weinbrand
is a spirit drink which meets the following requirements:
(i) it is produced from wine spirit to which wine distillate may be added, provided that that wine distillate has been distilled at less than 94,8 % vol. and does not exceed a maximum of 50 % of the alcoholic content of the finished product;
(ii) it has matured for at least:
— one year in oak receptacles with a capacity of at least 1 000 litres each; or
— six months in oak casks with a capacity of less than 1 000 litres each;
(iii) it has a volatile substances content equal to or exceeding 125 grams per hectolitre of 100 % vol. alcohol, and derived exclusively from the distillation of the raw materials used;
(iv) it has a maximum methanol content of 200 grams per hectolitre of 100 % vol. alcohol.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of
brandy
or
Weinbrand
shall be 36 %.
(c) No addition of alcohol, diluted or not, shall take place.
(d) Brandy
or
Weinbrand
shall not be flavoured. This shall not preclude traditional production methods.
(e) Brandy
or
Weinbrand
may only contain added caramel as a means of adjusting the colour.
(f) Brandy
or
Weinbrand
may be sweetened in order to round off the final taste. However, the final product may not contain more than 35 grams of sweetening products per litre, expressed as invert sugar.

6.   

Grape marc spirit or grape marc

(a) Grape marc spirit or grape marc is a spirit drink which meets the following requirements:
(i) it is produced exclusively from grape marc fermented and distilled either directly by water vapour or after water has been added and both of the following conditions are fulfilled:
— each and every distillation is carried out at less than 86 % vol.;
— the first distillation is carried out in the presence of the marc itself;
(ii) a quantity of lees may be added to the grape marc that does not exceed 25 kg of lees per 100 kg of grape marc used;
(iii) the quantity of alcohol derived from the lees shall not exceed 35 % of the total quantity of alcohol in the finished product;
(iv) it has a volatile substances content equal to or exceeding 140 grams per hectolitre of 100 % vol. alcohol and has a maximum methanol content of 1 000 grams per hectolitre of 100 % vol. alcohol.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of grape marc spirit or grape marc shall be 37,5 %.
(c) No addition of alcohol, diluted or not, shall take place.
(d) Grape marc spirit or grape marc shall not be flavoured. This shall not preclude traditional production methods.
(e) Grape marc spirit or grape marc may only contain added caramel as a means of adjusting the colour.
(f) Grape marc spirit or grape marc may be sweetened in order to round off the final taste. However, the final product may not contain more than 20 grams of sweetening products per litre, expressed as invert sugar.

7.   

Fruit marc spirit

(a) Fruit marc spirit is a spirit drink which meets the following requirements:
(i) it is produced exclusively by fermentation and distillation of fruit marc other than grape marc and both of the following conditions are fulfilled:
— each and every distillation is carried out at less than 86 % vol.;
— the first distillation is carried out in the presence of the marc itself;
(ii) it has a minimum volatile substances content of 200 grams per hectolitre of 100 % vol. alcohol;
(iii) the maximum methanol content shall be 1 500 grams per hectolitre of 100 % vol. alcohol;
(iv) the maximum hydrocyanic acid content shall be 7 grams per hectolitre of 100 % vol. alcohol in the case of stone-fruit marc spirit.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of fruit marc spirit shall be 37,5 %.
(c) No addition of alcohol, diluted or not, shall take place.
(d) Fruit marc spirit shall not be flavoured.
(e) Fruit marc spirit may only contain added caramel as a means of adjusting the colour.
(f) Fruit marc spirit may be sweetened in order to round off the final taste. However, the final product may not contain more than 20 grams of sweetening products per litre, expressed as invert sugar.
(g) The legal name shall consist of the name of the fruit followed by ‘marc spirit’. If marc of several different fruits is used, the legal name shall be ‘fruit marc spirit’ and may be supplemented by the name of each fruit in decreasing order of the quantity used.

8.   

Raisin spirit or

raisin brandy

(a) Raisin spirit or
raisin brandy
is a spirit drink produced exclusively by the distillation of the product obtained by the alcoholic fermentation of extract of dried grapes of the ‘Corinth Black’ or ‘Moscatel of Alexandria’ varieties, distilled at less than 94,5 % vol., so that the distillate has an aroma and taste derived from the raw materials used.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of raisin spirit or
raisin brandy
shall be 37,5 %.
(c) No addition of alcohol, diluted or not, shall take place.
(d) Raisin spirit or
raisin brandy
shall not be flavoured.
(e) Raisin spirit or
raisin brandy
may only contain added caramel as a means of adjusting the colour.
(f) Raisin spirit or
raisin brandy
may be sweetened in order to round off the final taste. However, the final product may not contain more than 20 grams of sweetening products per litre, expressed as invert sugar.

9.   

Fruit spirit

(a) Fruit spirit is a spirit drink which meets the following requirements:
(i) it is produced exclusively by the alcoholic fermentation and distillation, with or without stones, of fresh and fleshy fruit, including bananas, or the must of such fruit, berries or vegetables;
(ii) each and every distillation shall be carried out at less than 86 % vol. so that the distillate has an aroma and taste derived from the raw materials distilled;
(iii) it has a volatile substances content equal to or exceeding 200 grams per hectolitre of 100 % vol. alcohol;
(iv) in the case of stone-fruit spirits, it has a hydrocyanic acid content not exceeding 7 grams per hectolitre of 100 % vol. alcohol.
(b) The maximum methanol content of fruit spirit shall be 1 000 grams per hectolitre of 100 % vol. alcohol, except:
(i) in the case of fruit spirits produced from the following fruits or berries, and in respect of which the maximum methanol content shall be 1 200 grams per hectolitre of 100 % vol. alcohol:
— apple (
Malus domestica
Borkh.),
— apricots (
Prunus armeniaca
L.),
— plum (
Prunus domestica
L.),
— quetsch (
Prunus domestica
L.),
— mirabelle (
Prunus domestica
L. subsp. 
syriaca
(Borkh.) Janch. ex Mansf.),
— peach (
Prunus persica
(L.) Batsch),
— pear (
Pyrus communis
L.), except for Williams pears (
Pyrus communis
L. cv ‘Williams’),
— blackberry (
Rubus
sect.
Rubus
),
— raspberry (
Rubus idaeus
L.).
(ii) in the case of fruit spirits produced from the following fruits or berries, and in respect of which the maximum methanol content shall be 1 350 grams per hectolitre of 100 % vol. alcohol:
— quince (
Cydonia oblonga
Mill.),
— juniper berry (
Juniperus communis
L. or
Juniperus oxicedrus
L.),
— Williams pear (
Pyrus communis
L. cv ‘Williams’),
— blackcurrant (
Ribes nigrum
L.),
— redcurrant (
Ribes rubrum
L.),
— rosehip (
Rosa canina
L.),
— elderberry (
Sambucus nigra
L.),
— rowanberry (
Sorbus aucuparia
L.),
— sorb apple (
Sorbus domestica
L.),
— wild service tree (
Sorbus torminalis
(L.) Crantz).
(c) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of fruit spirit shall be 37,5 %.
(d) Fruit spirit shall not be coloured.
(e) Notwithstanding point (d) of this category and by way of derogation from food category 14.2.6 of Part E of Annex II to Regulation (EC) No 1333/2008, caramel may be used to adjust the colour of fruit spirits that have been aged at least one year in contact with wood.
(f) No addition of alcohol, diluted or not, shall take place.
(g) Fruit spirit shall not be flavoured.
(h) Fruit spirit may be sweetened in order to round off the final taste. However, the final product may not contain more than 18 grams of sweetening products per litre, expressed as invert sugar.
(i) The legal name of fruit spirit shall be ‘spirit’ supplemented by the name of the fruit, berry or vegetable. In the Bulgarian, Czech, Greek, Croatian, Polish, Romanian, Slovak and Slovenian languages, the legal name may be expressed by the name of the fruit, berry or vegetable, supplemented by a suffix.
Alternatively:
(i) the legal name referred to in the first subparagraph may be ‘
wasser
’, used together with the name of the fruit; or
(ii) the following legal names may be used in the following cases:
— ‘
kirsch
’ for cherry spirit (
Prunus avium
(L.) L.);
— ‘plum’, ‘quetsch’ or ‘slivovitz’ for plum spirit (
Prunus domestica
L.);
— ‘mirabelle’ for mirabelle spirit (
Prunus domestica
L. subsp.
syriaca
(Borkh.) Janch. ex Mansf.);
— ‘fruit of arbutus’ for fruit of arbutus spirit (
Arbutus unedo
L.);
— ‘Golden Delicious’ for apple spirit (
Malus domestica
var. ‘Golden Delicious’);
— ‘
Obstler
’ for a fruit spirit produced from fruits, with or without berries, provided that at least 85 % of the mash is derived from different varieties of apples, pears or both.
The name ‘
Williams
’ or ‘williams’ may be used only to place on the market pear spirit produced solely from pears of the ‘Williams’ variety.
If there is a risk that the final consumer does not easily understand one of the legal names not containing the word ‘spirit’ referred to in this point, the description, presentation and labelling shall include the word ‘spirit’, which may be supplemented by an explanation.
(j) Whenever two or more fruits, berries or vegetables are distilled together, the product shall be placed on the market under the legal name:
— ‘fruit spirit’ for spirit drinks exclusively produced by distillation of fruits or berries or both; or
— ‘vegetable spirit’ for spirit drinks exclusively produced by distillation of vegetables; or
— ‘fruit and vegetable spirit’ for spirit drinks produced by distillation of a combination of fruits, berries and vegetables.
The legal name may be supplemented by that of each fruit, berry or vegetable, in decreasing order of the quantity used.

10.   

Cider spirit, perry spirit and cider and perry spirit

(a) Cider spirit, perry spirit and cider and perry spirit are spirit drinks which meet the following requirements:
(i) they are produced exclusively by the distillation at less than 86 % vol. of cider or perry so that the distillate has an aroma and taste derived from the fruits;
(ii) they have a volatile substances content equal to or exceeding 200 grams per hectolitre of 100 % vol. alcohol;
(iii) they have a maximum methanol content of 1 000 grams per hectolitre of 100 % vol. alcohol.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of cider spirit, perry spirit and cider and perry spirit shall be 37,5 %.
(c) No addition of alcohol, diluted or not, shall take place.
(d) Cider spirit, perry spirit and cider and perry spirit shall not be flavoured. This shall not preclude traditional production methods.
(e) Cider spirit, perry spirit and cider and perry spirit may only contain added caramel as a means of adjusting the colour.
(f) Cider spirit, perry spirit and cider and perry spirit may be sweetened in order to round off the final taste. However, the final product may not contain more than 15 grams of sweetening products per litre, expressed as invert sugar.
(g) The legal name shall be:
— ‘cider spirit’ for spirit drinks exclusively produced by the distillation of cider;
— ‘perry spirit’ for spirit drinks exclusively produced by the distillation of perry; or
— ‘cider and perry spirit’ for spirit drinks produced by the distillation of cider and perry.

11.   

Honey spirit

(a) Honey spirit is a spirit drink which meets the following requirements:
(i) it is produced exclusively by fermentation and distillation of honey mash;
(ii) it is distilled at less than 86 % vol. so that the distillate has the organoleptic characteristics derived from the raw materials used.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of honey spirit shall be 35 %.
(c) No addition of alcohol, diluted or not, shall take place.
(d) Honey spirit shall not be flavoured.
(e) Honey spirit may only contain added caramel as a means of adjusting the colour.
(f) Honey spirit may only be sweetened with honey in order to round of the final taste. However, the final product may not contain more than 20 grams of honey per litre, expressed as invert sugar.

12.   

Hefebrand

or lees spirit

(a) Hefebrand
or lees spirit is a spirit drink produced exclusively by the distillation at less than 86 % vol. of lees of wine, lees of beer or lees of fermented fruit.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of
Hefebrand
or lees spirit shall be 38 %.
(c) No addition of alcohol, diluted or not, shall take place.
(d) Hefebrand
or lees spirit shall not be flavoured.
(e) Hefebrand
or lees spirit may only contain added caramel as a means of adjusting the colour.
(f) Hefebrand
or lees spirit may be sweetened in order to round off the final taste. However, the final product may not contain more than 20 grams of sweetening products per litre, expressed as invert sugar.
(g) The legal name ‘
Hefebrand
’ or ‘lees spirit’ shall be supplemented by the name of the raw materials used.

13.   

Beer spirit

(a) Beer spirit is a spirit drink produced exclusively by direct distillation under normal pressure of fresh beer with an alcoholic strength by volume of less than 86 %, so that the resulting distillate has organoleptic characteristics deriving from the beer.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of beer spirit shall be 38 %.
(c) No addition of alcohol, diluted or not, shall take place.
(d) Beer spirit shall not be flavoured.
(e) Beer spirit may only contain added caramel as a means of adjusting the colour.
(f) Beer spirit may be sweetened in order to round off the final taste. However, the final product may not contain more than 20 grams of sweetening products per litre, expressed as invert sugar.

14.   

Topinambur

or Jerusalem artichoke spirit

(a) Topinambur
or Jerusalem artichoke spirit is a spirit drink produced exclusively by fermentation and distillation at less than 86 % vol. of Jerusalem artichoke tubers (
Helianthus tuberosus
L.).
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of
topinambur
or Jerusalem artichoke spirit shall be 38 %.
(c) No addition of alcohol, diluted or not, shall take place.
(d) Topinambur
or Jerusalem artichoke spirit shall not be flavoured.
(e) Topinambur
or Jerusalem artichoke spirit may only contain added caramel as a means of adjusting the colour.
(f) Topinambur
or Jerusalem artichoke spirit may be sweetened in order to round off the final taste. However, the final product may not contain more than 20 grams of sweetening products per litre, expressed as invert sugar.

15.   

Vodka

(a) Vodka is a spirit drink produced from ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin obtained following fermentation with yeast of either:
— potatoes or cereals or both,
— other agricultural raw materials,
distilled so that the organoleptic characteristics of the raw materials used and by-products formed in fermentation are selectively reduced.
This may be followed by additional distillation or treatment with appropriate processing aids or both, including treatment with activated charcoal, to give it special organoleptic characteristics.
Maximum levels of residue for the ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin used to produce vodka shall meet those levels set out in point (d) of Article 5, except that the methanol content shall not exceed 10 grams per hectolitre of 100 % vol. alcohol.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of vodka shall be 37,5 %.
(c) The only flavourings which may be added are natural flavouring substances or flavouring preparations that are present in distillate obtained from the fermented raw materials. In addition, the product may be given special organoleptic characteristics, other than a predominant flavour.
(d) Vodka shall not be coloured.
(e) Vodka may be sweetened in order to round off the final taste. However, the final product may not contain more than 8 grams of sweetening products per litre, expressed as invert sugar.
(f) The description, presentation or labelling of vodka not produced exclusively from potatoes or cereals or both shall prominently bear the indication ‘produced from …’, supplemented by the name of the raw materials used to produce the ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin. This indication shall appear in the same visual field as the legal name.
(g) The legal name may be ‘
vodka
’ in any Member State.

16.   

Spirit (supplemented by the name of the fruit, berries or nuts) obtained by maceration and distillation

(a) Spirit (supplemented by the name of the fruit, berries or nuts) obtained by maceration and distillation is a spirit drink which meets the following requirements:
(i) it has been produced by:
— maceration of fruit, berries or nuts listed under point (ii), whether partially fermented or unfermented, with the possible addition of a maximum of 20 litres of ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin or of a spirit or distillate deriving from the same fruit, berries or nuts, or of a combination thereof, per 100 kg of fermented fruit, berries or nuts,
— followed by distillation; each and every distillation shall be carried out at less than 86 % vol;
(ii) it is produced from the following fruits, berries or nuts:
— chokeberry (
Aronia
Medik. nom cons.),
— black chokeberry (
Aronia melanocarpa
(Michx.) Elliott),
— chestnut (
Castanea sativa
Mill.),
— citrus fruits (
Citrus
spp.),
— hazelnut (
Corylus avellana
L.),
— crowberry (
Empetrum nigrum
L.),
— strawberry (
Fragaria
spp.),
— sea-buckthorn (
Hippophae rhamnoides
L.),
— hollyberry (
Ilex aquifolium
and
Ilex cassine
L.),
— cornel cherry or cornelian cherry (
Cornus mas
),
— walnut (
Juglans regia
L.),
— banana (
Musa
spp.),
— myrtle (
Myrtus communis
L.),
— prickly pear (
Opuntia ficus-indica
(L.) Mill.),
— passion fruit (
Passiflora edulis
Sims),
— bird cherry (
Prunus padus
L.).
— sloe (
Prunus spinosa
L.),
— blackcurrant (
Ribes nigrum
L.),
— white currant (
Ribes niveum
Lindl.),
— redcurrant (
Ribes rubrum
L.),
— gooseberry (
Ribes uva-crispa
L. syn.
Ribes grossularia
),
— rosehip (
Rosa canina
L.),
— arctic bramble (
Rubus arcticus
L.),
— cloudberry (
Rubus chamaemorus
L.),
— blackberry (
Rubus
sect.
Rubus
),
— raspberry (
Rubus idaeus
L.),
— elderberry (
Sambucus nigra
L.),
— rowanberry (
Sorbus aucuparia
L.),
— sorb apple (
Sorbus domestica
L.),
— wild service tree (
Sorbus torminalis
(L.) Crantz),
— ambarella (
Spondias dulcis
Parkinson),
— hog plum (
Spondias mombin
L.),
— high bush blueberry (
Vaccinium corymbosum
L.),
— wild cranberry (
Vaccinium oxycoccos
L.),
— bilberry/blueberry (
Vaccinium myrtillus
L.),
— cowberry (
Vaccinium vitis-idaea
L.).
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of a spirit (supplemented by the name of the fruit, berries or nuts) obtained by maceration and distillation shall be 37,5 %.
(c) Spirit (supplemented by the name of the fruit, berries or nuts) obtained by maceration and distillation shall not be flavoured.
(d) Spirit (supplemented by the name of the fruit, berries or nuts) obtained by maceration and distillation shall not be coloured.
(e) Notwithstanding point (d) and by way of derogation from food category 14.2.6 of Part E of Annex II to Regulation (EC) No 1333/2008, caramel may be used to adjust the colour of spirit (supplemented by the name of the fruit, berries or nuts) obtained by maceration and distillation that has been aged at least one year in contact with wood.
(f) Spirit (supplemented by the name of the fruit, berries or nuts) obtained by maceration and distillation may be sweetened in order to round off the final taste. However, the final product may not contain more than 18 grams of sweetening products per litre, expressed as invert sugar.
(g) As regards the description, presentation and labelling of spirit (supplemented by the name of the fruit, berries or nuts) obtained by maceration and distillation, the wording ‘obtained by maceration and distillation’ shall appear in the description, presentation or labelling in characters of the same font, size and colour and in the same visual field as the wording ‘spirit (supplemented by the name of the fruit, berries or nuts)’ and, in the case of bottles, on the front label.

17.   

Geist

(supplemented by the name of the fruit or the raw materials used)

(a) Geist
(supplemented by the name of the fruit or the raw materials used) is a spirit drink produced by maceration of unfermented fruits and berries listed in point (a)(ii) of category 16 or vegetables, nuts, other plant materials, such as herbs or rose petals, or mushrooms in ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin, followed by distillation at less than 86 % vol.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of
Geist
(supplemented by the name of the fruit or the raw materials used) shall be 37,5 %.
(c) Geist
(supplemented by the name of the fruit or the raw materials used) shall not be flavoured.
(d) Geist
(supplemented by the name of the fruit or the raw materials used) shall not be coloured.
(e) Geist
(supplemented by the name of the fruit or the raw materials used) may be sweetened in order to round off the final taste. However, the final product may not contain more than 10 grams of sweetening products per litre, expressed as invert sugar.
(f) The term ‘-
geist
’ preceded by a term other than the name of a fruit, plant or other raw material may supplement the legal name of other spirit drinks and alcoholic beverages, provided that such use does not mislead the consumer.

18.   

Gentian

(a) Gentian is a spirit drink produced from a distillate of gentian, itself obtained by the fermentation of gentian roots with or without the addition of ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of gentian shall be 37,5 %.
(c) Gentian shall not be flavoured.

19.   

Juniper-flavoured spirit drink

(a) A juniper-flavoured spirit drink is a spirit drink produced by flavouring ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin or grain spirit or grain distillate or a combination thereof with juniper (
Juniperus communis
 L. or
Juniperus oxicedrus
 L.) berries.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of a juniper-flavoured spirit drink shall be 30 %.
(c) Flavouring substances, flavouring preparations, plants with flavouring properties or parts of plants with flavouring properties or a combination thereof may be used in addition to juniper berries, but the organoleptic characteristics of juniper shall be discernible, even if they are sometimes attenuated.
(d) A juniper-flavoured spirit drink may bear the legal name ‘
Wacholder
’ or ‘
genebra
’.

20.   

Gin

(a) Gin
is a juniper-flavoured spirit drink produced by flavouring ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin with juniper berries (
Juniperus communis
L.).
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of
gin
shall be 37,5 %.
(c) Only flavouring substances or flavouring preparations or both shall be used for the production of
gin
so that the taste is predominantly that of juniper.
(d) The term ‘
gin
’ may be supplemented by the term ‘
dry
’ if it does not contain added sweetening exceeding 0,1 grams of sweetening products per litre of the final product, expressed as invert sugar.

21.   

Distilled

gin

(a) Distilled
gin
is one of the following:
(i) a juniper-flavoured spirit drink produced exclusively by distilling ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin with an initial alcoholic strength of at least 96 % vol. in the presence of juniper berries (
Juniperus communis
L.) and of other natural botanicals, provided that the juniper taste is predominant;
(ii) the combination of the product of such distillation and ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin with the same composition, purity and alcoholic strength; flavouring substances or flavouring preparations as specified in point (c) of category 20 or both may also be used to flavour distilled
gin
.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of distilled
gin
shall be 37,5 %.
(c) Gin
produced simply by adding essences or flavourings to ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin shall not be considered distilled
gin
.
(d) The term ‘distilled
gin
’ may be supplemented by or incorporate the term ‘
dry
’ if it does not contain added sweetening exceeding 0,1 grams of sweetening products per litre of the final product, expressed as invert sugar.

22.   

London gin

(a) London gin
is distilled
gin
which meets the following requirements:
(i) it is produced exclusively from ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin, with a maximum methanol content of 5 grams per hectolitre of 100 % vol. alcohol, the flavour of which is imparted exclusively through the distillation of ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin in the presence of all the natural plant materials used;
(ii) the resulting distillate contains at least 70 % alcohol by vol.;
(iii) any further ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin that is added shall comply with the requirements laid down in Article 5 but with a maximum methanol content of 5 grams per hectolitre of 100 % vol. alcohol;
(iv) it is not coloured;
(v) it is not sweetened in excess of 0,1 grams of sweetening products per litre of the final product, expressed as invert sugar;
(vi) it does not contain any other ingredients than the ingredients referred to in points (i), (iii) and (v), and water.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of
London gin
shall be 37,5 %.
(c) The term ‘
London gin
’ may be supplemented by or incorporate the term ‘
dry
’.

23.   

Caraway-flavoured spirit drink or

Kümmel

(a) A caraway-flavoured spirit drink or
Kümmel
is a spirit drink produced by flavouring ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin with caraway (
Carum carvi
L.).
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of a caraway-flavoured spirit drink or
Kümmel
shall be 30 %.
(c) Flavouring substances or flavouring preparations or both may additionally be used but there shall be a predominant taste of caraway.

24.   

Akvavit

or

aquavit

(a) Akvavit
or
aquavit
is a spirit drink flavoured with caraway or dill seeds or both, produced by using ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin flavoured with a distillate of plants or spices.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of
akvavit
or
aquavit
shall be 37,5 %.
(c) Natural flavouring substances or flavouring preparations or both may additionally be used, but the flavour of these drinks shall be largely attributable to distillates of caraway (
Carum carvi
L.) or dill (
Anethum graveolens
L.) seeds or both, the use of essential oils being prohibited.
(d) The bitter substances shall not obviously dominate the taste; the dry extract content shall not exceed 1,5 grams per 100 millilitres.

25.   

Aniseed-flavoured spirit drink

(a) An aniseed-flavoured spirit drink is a spirit drink produced by flavouring ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin with natural extracts of star anise (
Illicium verum
Hook f.), anise (
Pimpinella anisum
L.), fennel (
Foeniculum vulgare
Mill.), or any other plant which contains the same principal aromatic constituent, using one of the following processes or a combination thereof:
(i) maceration or distillation or both;
(ii) distillation of the alcohol in the presence of the seeds or other parts of the plants specified above;
(iii) addition of natural distilled extracts of aniseed-flavoured plants.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of an aniseed-flavoured spirit drink shall be 15 %.
(c) An aniseed-flavoured spirit drink may only be flavoured with flavouring preparations and natural flavouring substances.
(d) Other natural plant extracts or aromatic seed may also be used, but the aniseed taste shall remain predominant.

26.   

Pastis

(a) Pastis
is an aniseed-flavoured spirit drink which also contains natural extracts of liquorice root (
Glycyrrhiza
spp.), which implies the presence of the colorants known as ‘chalcones’ as well as glycyrrhizic acid, the minimum and maximum levels of which shall be 0,05 and 0,5 grams per litre, respectively.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of
pastis
shall be 40 %.
(c) Pastis
may only be flavoured with flavouring preparations and natural flavouring substances.
(d) Pastis
shall contain less than 100 grams of sweetening products per litre, expressed as invert sugar, and have a minimum and maximum anethole level of 1,5 and 2 grams per litre, respectively.

27.   

Pastis de Marseille

(a) Pastis de Marseille
is a
pastis
with a pronounced anise taste with an anethole content between 1,9 and 2,1 grams per litre.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of
pastis de Marseille
shall be 45 %.
(c) Pastis de Marseille
may only be flavoured with flavouring preparations and natural flavouring substances.

28.   

Anis

or

janeževec

(a) Anis
or
janeževec
is an aniseed-flavoured spirit drink whose characteristic flavour is derived exclusively from anise (
Pimpinella anisum
L.), star anise (
Illicium verum
Hook f.) or fennel (
Foeniculum vulgare
Mill.) or a combination of them.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of
anis
or
janeževec
shall be 35 %.
(c) Anis
or
janeževec
may only be flavoured with flavouring preparations and natural flavouring substances.

29.   

Distilled

anis

(a) Distilled
anis
is
anis
which contains alcohol distilled in the presence of the seeds referred to in point (a) of category 28 and, in the case of geographical indications, mastic and other aromatic seeds, plants or fruits, provided such alcohol constitutes at least 20 % of the alcoholic strength of the distilled
anis
.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of distilled
anis
shall be 35 %.
(c) Distilled
anis
may only be flavoured with flavouring preparations and natural flavouring substances.

30.   

Bitter-tasting spirit drink or

bitter

(a) A bitter-tasting spirit drink or
bitter
is a spirit drink with a predominantly bitter taste produced by flavouring ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin or distillate of agricultural origin or both with flavouring substances or flavouring preparations or both.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of a bitter-tasting spirit drink or
bitter
shall be 15 %.
(c) Without prejudice to the use of such terms in the presentation and labelling of foodstuffs other than spirit drinks, a bitter-tasting spirit drink or
bitter
may also be placed on the market under the names ‘bitter’ or ‘
bitter
’ with or without another term.
(d) Notwithstanding point (c), the term ‘bitter’ or ‘
bitter
’ may be used in the description, presentation and labelling of bitter-tasting liqueurs.

31.   

Flavoured vodka

(a) Flavoured vodka is vodka which has been given a predominant flavour other than that of the raw materials used to produce the vodka.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of flavoured vodka shall be 37,5 %.
(c) Flavoured vodka may be sweetened, blended, flavoured, matured or coloured.
(d) When flavoured vodka is sweetened, the final product shall contain less than 100 grams of sweetening products per litre, expressed as invert sugar.
(e) The legal name of flavoured vodka may also be the name of any predominant flavour combined with the word ‘vodka’. The term ‘vodka’ in any official Union language may be replaced by ‘
vodka
’.

32.   

Sloe-aromatised spirit drink or

pacharán

(a) A sloe-aromatised spirit drink or
pacharán
is a spirit drink which has a predominant sloe taste and is produced by the maceration of sloes (
Prunus spinosa
) in ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin, with the addition of natural extracts of anise or distillates of anise or both.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of a sloe-aromatised spirit drink or
pacharán
shall be 25 %.
(c) For the production of a sloe-aromatised spirit drink or
pacharán
, a minimum quantity of 125 grams of sloe fruits per litre of the final product shall be used.
(d) A sloe-aromatised spirit drink or
pacharán
shall have a content of sweetening products, expressed as invert sugar, between 80 and 250 grams per litre of the final product.
(e) The organoleptic characteristics, colour and taste of a sloe-aromatised spirit drink or
pacharán
shall be provided exclusively by the fruit used and the anise.
(f) The term ‘
pacharán
’ may be used as a legal name only when the product is produced in Spain. When the product is produced outside Spain, ‘
pacharán
’ may only be used to supplement the legal name ‘sloe-aromatised spirit drink’, provided that it is accompanied by the words: ‘produced in …’, followed by the name of the Member State or third country of production.

33.   

Liqueur

(a) Liqueur is a spirit drink:
(i) having a minimum content of sweetening products, expressed as invert sugar, of:
— 70 grams per litre for cherry or sour cherry liqueurs, the ethyl alcohol of which consists exclusively of cherry or sour cherry spirit,
— 80 grams per litre for liqueurs which are flavoured exclusively with gentian or a similar plant or wormwood,
— 100 grams per litre in all other cases;
(ii) produced using ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin or a distillate of agricultural origin or one or more spirit drinks or a combination thereof, which has been sweetened and to which one or more flavourings, products of agricultural origin or foodstuffs have been added.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of liqueur shall be 15 %.
(c) Flavouring substances and flavouring preparations may be used in the production of liqueur.
However, the following liqueurs may only be flavoured with flavouring foodstuffs, flavouring preparations and natural flavouring substances:
(i) fruit liqueurs:
— pineapple (
Ananas
),
— citrus fruit (
Citrus
L.),
— sea buckthorn (
Hippophae rhamnoides
L.),
— mulberry (
Morus alba
,
Morus rubra
),
— sour cherry (
Prunus cerasus
),
— cherry (
Prunus avium
),
— blackcurrant (
Ribes nigrum
L.),
— arctic bramble (
Rubus arcticus
L.),
— cloudberry (
Rubus chamaemorus
L.),
— raspberry (
Rubus idaeus
L.),
— wild cranberry (
Vaccinium oxycoccos
L.),
— bilberry/blueberry (
Vaccinium myrtillus
L.),
— cowberry (
Vaccinium vitis-idaea
L.);
(ii) plant liqueurs:
— génépi (
Artemisia genepi
),
— gentian (
Gentiana
L.),
— mint (
Mentha
L.),
— aniseed (
Pimpinella anisum
L.),
(d) The legal name may be ‘
liqueur
’ in any Member State and:
— for liqueurs produced by maceration of sour cherries or cherries (
Prunus cerasus
or
Prunus avium
) in ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin, the legal name may be ‘
guignolet
’ or ‘
češnjevec
’, with or without the term ‘liqueur’;
— for liqueurs produced by maceration of sour cherries (
Prunus cerasus
) in ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin, the legal name may be ‘
ginja
’ or ‘
ginjinha
’ or ‘
višnjevec
’, with or without the term ‘liqueur’;
— for liqueurs for which the alcohol content is provided exclusively by rum, the legal name may be ‘
punch au rhum
’, with or without the term ‘liqueur’;
— without prejudice to point (2) of Article 3, point (b) of Article 10(5) and Article 11, for liqueurs containing milk or milk products, the legal name may be ‘cream’ supplemented by the name of the raw material used conferring on the liqueur its predominant flavour, with or without the term ‘liqueur’.
(e) The following compound terms may be used in the description, presentation and labelling of liqueurs produced in the Union, where ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin or distillate of agricultural origin is used to mirror established production methods:
— prune brandy
;
— orange brandy
;
— apricot brandy
;
— cherry brandy
;
— solbaerrom
or blackcurrant rum.
As regards the description, presentation and labelling of the liqueurs referred to in this point, the compound term shall appear in one line in uniform characters of the same font and colour and the word ‘liqueur’ shall appear in immediate proximity in characters no smaller than that font. If the alcohol does not come from the spirit drink indicated, its origin shall be shown on the label in the same visual field as the compound term and the word ‘liqueur’ either by stating the type of agricultural alcohol or by the words ‘agricultural alcohol’ preceded on each occasion by ‘made from’ or ‘made using’.
(f) Without prejudice to Articles 11 and 12 and Article 13(4), the legal name ‘liqueur’ may be supplemented by the name of a flavouring or foodstuff that confers the predominant flavour of the spirit drink, provided that the flavour is conferred on the spirit drink by flavouring foodstuffs, flavouring preparations and natural flavouring substances, derived from the raw material referred to in the name of the flavouring or of the foodstuff, supplemented by flavouring substances only where necessary to reinforce the flavour of that raw material.

34.   

Crème de (supplemented by the name of a fruit or other raw material used)

(a) Crème de (supplemented by the name of a fruit or other raw material used) is a liqueur which has a minimum content of sweetening products of 250 grams per litre expressed as invert sugar.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of crème de (supplemented by the name of a fruit or other raw material used) shall be 15 %.
(c) The rules on flavouring substances and flavouring preparations for liqueurs laid down under category 33 shall apply to this spirit drink.
(d) The raw materials used shall exclude milk products.
(e) The fruit or any other raw material used in the legal name shall be the fruit or the raw material that confers on that spirit drink its predominant flavour.
(f) The legal name may be supplemented by the term ‘liqueur’.
(g) The legal name ‘
crème de cassis
’ may only be used for liqueurs produced with blackcurrants, which have a content of sweetening products of more than 400 grams per litre expressed as invert sugar.

35.   

Sloe gin

(a) Sloe gin
is a liqueur produced by maceration of sloes in
gin
with the possible addition of sloe juice.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of
sloe gin
shall be 25 %.
(c) Only natural flavouring substances and flavouring preparations may be used in the production of
sloe gin
.
(d) The legal name may be supplemented by the term ‘liqueur’.

36.   

Sambuca

(a) Sambuca
is a colourless aniseed-flavoured liqueur which meets the following requirements:
(i) it contains distillates of anise (
Pimpinella anisum
L.), star anise (
Illicium verum
L.) or other aromatic herbs;
(ii) it has a minimum content of sweetening products of 350 grams per litre expressed as invert sugar;
(iii) it has a natural anethole content of not less than 1 gram and not more than 2 grams per litre.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of
sambuca
shall be 38 %.
(c) The rules on flavouring substances and flavouring preparations for liqueurs laid down under category 33 shall apply to
sambuca
.
(d) Sambuca
shall not be coloured.
(e) The legal name may be supplemented by the term ‘liqueur’.

37.   

Maraschino

,

marrasquino

or

maraskino

(a) Maraschino
,
marrasquino
or
maraskino
is a colourless liqueur the flavour of which is given mainly by a distillate of marasca cherries or of the product produced by macerating cherries or parts of cherries in ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin or in a distillate of marasca cherries, with a minimum content of sweetening products of 250 grams per litre expressed as invert sugar.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of
maraschino
,
marrasquino
or
maraskino
shall be 24 %.
(c) The rules on flavouring substances and flavouring preparations for liqueurs laid down under category 33 shall apply to
maraschino
,
marrasquino
or
maraskino
.
(d) Maraschino
,
marrasquino
or
maraskino
shall not be coloured.
(e) The legal name may be supplemented by the term ‘liqueur’.

38.   

Nocino

or

orehovec

(a) Nocino
or
orehovec
is a liqueur the flavour of which is given mainly by maceration, or by maceration and distillation, of whole green walnuts (
Juglans regia
L.), with a minimum content of sweetening products of 100 grams per litre expressed as invert sugar.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of
nocino
or
orehovec
shall be 30 %.
(c) The rules on flavouring substances and flavouring preparations for liqueurs laid down under category 33 shall apply to
nocino
or
orehovec
.
(d) The legal name may be supplemented by the term ‘liqueur’.

39.   

Egg liqueur or

advocaat

or

avocat

or

advokat

(a) Egg liqueur or
advocaat
or
avocat
or
advokat
is a liqueur, whether flavoured or not, produced from ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin, distillate of agricultural origin or spirit drink, or a combination thereof, and the ingredients of which are quality egg yolk, egg white and sugar or honey or both. The minimum sugar or honey content shall be 150 grams per litre expressed as invert sugar. The minimum content of pure egg yolk shall be 140 grams per litre of the final product. Any use of eggs from hens belonging to a species other than
Gallus gallus
shall be indicated on the label.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of egg liqueur or
advocaat
or
avocat
or
advokat
shall be 14 %.
(c) Only flavouring foodstuffs, flavouring substances and flavouring preparations may be used in the production of egg liqueur or
advocaat
or
avocat
or
advokat
.
(d) Milk products may be used in the production of egg liqueur or
advocaat
or
avocat
or
advokat
.

40.   

Liqueur with egg

(a) Liqueur with egg is a liqueur, whether flavoured or not, produced from ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin, distillate of agricultural origin or spirit drink, or a combination thereof, the characteristic ingredients of which are quality egg yolk, egg white and sugar or honey or both. The minimum sugar or honey content shall be 150 grams per litre expressed as invert sugar. The minimum egg yolk content shall be 70 grams per litre of the final product.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of liqueur with egg shall be 15 %.
(c) Only flavouring foodstuffs, natural flavouring substances and flavouring preparations may be used in the production of liqueur with egg.
(d) Milk products may be used in the production of liqueur with egg.

41.   

Mistrà

(a) Mistrà
is a colourless spirit drink flavoured with aniseed or natural anethole which meets the following requirements:
(i) it has an anethole content of not less than 1 gram and not more than 2 grams per litre;
(ii) it may also contain a distillate of aromatic herbs;
(iii) it has not been sweetened.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of
mistrà
shall be 40 % and the maximum alcoholic strength by volume shall be 47 %.
(c) Mistrà
may only be flavoured with flavouring preparations and natural flavouring substances.
(d) Mistrà
shall not be coloured.

42.   

Väkevä glögi

or

spritglögg

(a) Väkevä glögi
or
spritglögg
is a spirit drink produced by flavouring wine or wine products and ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin with the flavour of cloves or cinnamon or both, using one of the following processes or a combination thereof:
(i) maceration or distillation,
(ii) distillation of the alcohol in the presence of parts of the plants specified above,
(iii) addition of natural flavouring substances of cloves or cinnamon.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of
väkevä glögi
or
spritglögg
shall be 15 %.
(c) Väkevä glögi
or
spritglögg
may only be flavoured with flavouring substances, flavouring preparations or other flavourings but the flavour of the spices specified in point (a) shall be predominant.
(d) The content of wine or wine products shall not exceed 50 % of the final product.

43.   

Berenburg

or

Beerenburg

(a) Berenburg
or
Beerenburg
is a spirit drink which meets the following requirements:
(i) it is produced using ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin;
(ii) it is produced by the maceration of fruit or plants or parts thereof;
(iii) it contains as a specific flavour distillate of gentian root (
Gentiana lutea
L.), of juniper berries (
Juniperus communis
L.) and of laurel leaves (
Laurus nobilis
L.);
(iv) it varies in colour from light to dark brown;
(v) it may be sweetened to a maximum of 20 grams of sweetening products per litre expressed as invert sugar.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of
Berenburg
or
Beerenburg
shall be 30 %.
(c) Berenburg
or
Beerenburg
may only be flavoured with flavouring preparations and natural flavouring substances.

44.   

Honey nectar or mead nectar

(a) Honey nectar or mead nectar is a spirit drink produced by flavouring a mixture of fermented honey mash and honey distillate or ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin or both, which contains at least 30 % vol. of fermented honey mash.
(b) The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of honey nectar or mead nectar shall be 22 %.
(c) Honey nectar or mead nectar may only be flavoured with flavouring preparations and natural flavouring substances, provided that the honey taste is predominant.
(d) Honey nectar or mead nectar may only be sweetened with honey.

ANNEX II

SPECIFIC RULES CONCERNING CERTAIN SPIRIT DRINKS

1.   
Rum-Verschnitt
is produced in Germany and obtained by mixing rum and ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin, in such a manner that a minimum proportion of 5 % of the alcohol contained in the final product shall come from rum. The minimum alcoholic strength by volume of
Rum-Verschnitt
shall be 37,5 %. The word ‘
Verschnitt
’ shall appear in the description, presentation and labelling in characters of the same font, size and colour as, and on the same line as, the word ‘
Rum
’ and, in the case of bottles, on the front label. The legal name of this product shall be ‘spirit drink’. Where
Rum-Verschnitt
is placed on the market outside Germany, its alcoholic composition shall appear on the label.
2.   
Slivovice
is produced in Czechia and obtained by the addition to the plum distillate, before the final distillation, of ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin, in such a manner that a minimum proportion of 70 % of the alcohol contained in the final product shall come from plum distillate. The legal name of this product shall be ‘spirit drink’. The name ‘
slivovice
’ may be added if it appears in the same visual field on the front label. If
slivovice
is placed on the market outside Czechia, its alcoholic composition shall appear on the label. This provision shall be without prejudice to the use of the legal names for fruit spirits in category 9 of Annex I.
3.   
Guignolet Kirsch
is produced in France and obtained by mixing
guignolet
and
kirsch
, in such a manner that a minimum proportion of 3 % of the total pure alcohol contained in the final product shall come from
kirsch
. The word ‘
guignolet
’ shall appear in the description, presentation and labelling in characters of the same font, size and colour as, and on the same line as, the word ‘
kirsch
’ and, in case of bottles, on the front label. The legal name of this product shall be ‘liqueur’. Its alcoholic composition shall indicate the percentage by volume of pure alcohol that
guignolet
and
kirsch
represent in the total pure alcohol content by volume of
guignolet kirsch
.

ANNEX III

DYNAMIC OR ‘

CRIADERAS Y SOLERA

’ OR ‘

SOLERA E CRIADERAS

’ AGEING SYSTEM

The dynamic or ‘
criaderas y solera
’ or ‘
solera e criaderas
’ ageing system consists in the execution of periodical extractions of a portion of the
brandy
contained in each of the oak casks and containers that form an ageing scale and the corresponding replenishments with
brandy
extracted from the preceding ageing scale.
Definitions
 
‘Ageing scale’ means each group of oak casks and containers with the same level of maturation, through which the
brandy
progresses in the course of its ageing process. Each scale is known as ‘
criadera
’, except the last one, previous to the expedition of the
brandy
, known as the ‘
solera
’.
 
‘Extraction’ means the partial volume of
brandy
drawn from each oak cask and container in an ageing scale, for its incorporation into the oak casks and containers in the next ageing scale or, in the case of the
solera
, for its shipping.
 
‘Replenishment’ means the volume of
brandy
from the oak casks and containers of a given ageing scale that is incorporated into and blended with the content of the oak casks and containers of the following scale in terms of age.
 
‘Average age’ means the period of time corresponding to the rotation of the total stock of
brandy
that is undergoing the ageing process, calculated by dividing the total volume of
brandy
contained in all the ageing scales by the volume of the extractions made from the last scale – the
solera
– in one year.
The average age of the
brandy
drawn from the
solera
shall be calculated using the following formula: t = Vt/Ve, in which:
— t is the average age, expressed in years;
— Vt is the total volume of stocks in the ageing system, expressed in litres of pure alcohol;
— Ve is the total volume of product extracted for shipping during a year, expressed in litres of pure alcohol.
In the case of oak casks and containers of less than 1 000 litres, the number of annual extractions and replenishments shall be equal to or lower than twice the number of scales in the system, in order to guarantee that the youngest component has an age equal to or higher than six months.
In the case of oak casks and containers of 1 000 litres or more, the number of annual extractions and replenishments shall be equal to or lower than the number of scales in the system, in order to guarantee that the youngest component has an age equal to or higher than one year.

ANNEX IV

Correlation table

This Regulation

Regulation (EC) No 110/2008

Article 1(1) and (2)

Article 1(1) and (2)

Article 2, points (a) to (d)

Article 2(1) and (3)

Article 2, point (e)

Article 2(2)

Article 2, point (f)

Annex I, point 6

Article 3(1)

Article 8

Article 3(2) and (3)

Article 10

Article 3(4)

Article 15(1)

Article 3(5)

Article 3(6)

Article 3(7)

Article 15(3), third subparagraph

Article 3(8)

Article 3(9) and (10)

Article 11(2) and Annex I, point 4

Article 3(11) and (12)

Annex I, point (7)

Article 4(1)

Article 7 and Annex I, point (14)

Article 4(2)

Article 7 and Annex I, point (15)

Article 4(3)

Article 7 and Annex I, point (16)

Article 4(4)

Article 4(5)

Annex I, point (17)

Article 4(6)

Article 4(7)

Annex I, point (2)

Article 4(8)

Annex I, point (3)

Article 4(9)

Annex I, point (3)

Article 4(10)

Annex I, point (5)

Article 4(11)

Annex I, point (8)

Article 4(12)

Annex I, point (9)

Article 4(13)

Article 4(14)

Article 4(15)

Article 4(16)

Article 4(17)

Article 4(18)

Article 4(19) and (20)

Annex I, point (10)

Article 4(21)

Article 4(22)

Article 4(23)

Annex I, point (11)

Article 4(24)

Annex I, point (12)

Article 5

Annex I, point (1)

Article 6(1)

Article 3(1)

Article 6(2)

Article 3(3)

Article 6(3)

Article 3(4)

Article 7(1)

Article 4

Article 7(2)

Article 5(1)

Article 7(3)

Article 5(2)

Article 7(4)

Article 5(3)

Article 8(1)

Article 26

Article 8(2)

Article 1(3)

Article 8(3)

Article 8(4)

Article 9

Article 10(1)

Article 10(2)

Article 9(1)

Article 10(3)

Article 9(2)

Article 10(4)

Article 9(3)

Article 10(5)

Article 9(5) and (6)

Article 10(6), points (a) to (c), (e) and (f)

Article 10(6)(d)

Article 12(2)

Article 10(7), first subparagraph

Article 9(4) and (7)

Article 10(7), second subparagraph

Article 11(1)

Article 10(1) and (2)

Article 11(2) and (3)

Article 12(1)

Article 10(1)

Article 12(2),(3) and (4)

Article 13(1)

Article 12(1)

Article 13(2)

Article 9(9)

Article 13(3), first and second subparagraph

Article 11(4)

Article 13(3), third subparagraph

Article 11(5)

Article 13(3), fourth subparagraph

Article 13(4), first subparagraph

Article 11(3)

Article 13(4), second subparagraph

Article 11(4)

Article 13(4), third subparagraph

Article 11(5)

Article 13(5)

Article 13(6)

Article 12(3)

Article 13(7)

Article 14(1)

Annex I, point (13)

Article 14(2)

Article 15(1)

Article 14(2)

Article 15(2)

Article 16

Article 17

Article 13

Article 18

Article 19(1)

Article 12(3)

Article 19(2)

Article 20, point (a)

Article 20, point (b)

Article 28(2)

Article 20, point (c)

Article 20, point (d)

Article 21(1)

Article 21(2)

Article 16

Article 21(3)

Article 15(3), first subparagraph

Article 21(4)

Article 22(1), first subparagraph

Article 17(4)

Article 22(1), second subparagraph

Article 22(2)

Article 23(1), introductory wording and points (a), (b) and (c)

Article 23(1), second subparagraph

Article 17(3)

Article 23(2)

Article 17(1), second sentence

Article 24(1) to (4)

Article 24(5), (6) and (7)

Article 17(2)

Article 24(8)

Article 17(3)

Article 24(9)

Article 17(1), first sentence

Article 25

Article 26(1), first subparagraph

Article 17(5)

Article 26(1), second subparagraph

Article 26(2)

Article 17(6)

Article 27(1)

Article 17(7), first sentence

Article 27(2), (3) and (4)

Article 27(5)

Article 17(7), second sentence

Article 28

Article 29

Article 30(1), (2) and (3)

Article 17(8), first sentence

Article 30(4), first subparagraph

Article 17(8), second sentence

Article 30(4), second subparagraph

Article 31

Article 21

Article 32

Article 18

Article 33(1)

Article 15(2)

Article 33(2) and (3)

Article 34(1), (2) and (3)

Article 19

Article 34(4)

Article 35(1), first subparagraph

Article 15(3), second subparagraph

Article 35(1), second subparagraph

Article 35(2)

Article 23(3)

Article 35(3)

Article 36(1)

Article 23(1)

Article 36(2)

Article 23(2)

Article 37

Article 38(1)

Article 38(2)

Article 22(1)

Article 38(3)

Article 22(2)

Article 38(4)

Article 38(5)

Article 22(3)

Article 38(6)

Article 22(4)

Article 39(1)

Article 39(2) and (3)

Article 40

Article 41

Article 42

Article 43(1)

Article 24(1)

Article 43(2)

Article 24(3)

Article 44(1)

Article 24(2)

Article 44(2)

Article 45

Article 6

Article 46

Article 47

Article 25

Article 48

Article 49

Article 29

Article 50

Article 28

Article 51

Article 30

Annex I, categories 1 to 31

Annex II, categories 1 to 31

Annex I, category 32

Annex II, category 37a

Annex I, category 33

Annex II, category 32

Annex I, category 34

Annex II, category 33

Annex I, category 35

Annex II, category 37

Annex I, category 36

Annex II, category 38

Annex I, category 37

Annex II, category 39

Annex I, category 38

Annex II, category 40

Annex I, category 39

Annex II, category 41

Annex I, category 40

Annex II, category 42

Annex I, category 41

Annex II, category 43

Annex I, category 42

Annex II, category 44

Annex I, category 43

Annex II, category 45

Annex I, category 44

Annex II, category 46

Annex II

Annex II, part under the Title ‘Other spirit drinks’

Annex III

Annex IV

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