Dr. Ollie
Bartlett, Maynooth University
This month the
Irish Public
Health (Alcohol) Bill completed its passage through the houses of the Oireachtas,
after two years and nine months of debate. The Bill introduces five main
interventions: minimum pricing of alcoholic beverages; stricter labelling of
alcoholic beverages; restrictions on alcohol advertising; the structural
separation of alcoholic beverages from other products in retail outlets; and
restrictions on the sale and supply of alcoholic beverages. Its purpose is to
combat alcohol related harm in Ireland, which has reached
worryingly high levels.
Health Minister
Simon Harris has been obliged to defend various aspects of the Bill in the
Irish press, and has described the eventual passage of the legislation as ‘groundbreaking’.
This short contribution will focus on assertions that certain
parts of the legislation are not compatible with European Union law. Such
assertions (usually made by those with vested interests in the alcohol trade)
attempt to deploy a vision of the EU internal market as a guarantor of
commercial freedoms, in order to intimidate national governments into watering
down public health protections. This contribution will address the inaccuracy
of these assertions in relation to the Irish Public Health (Alcohol) Bill. In
doing so it will identify how governments might also misinterpret European
public health law and policy, and how this can lead to regulatory failure.
Opponents could
argue, and have argued, that any substantive aspect of the Bill will be liable
to unduly restrict trade in alcoholic beverages, and should therefore be seen
as an unjustified breach of Article
34 TFEU, which prohibits measures having equivalent effect to a
quantitative restriction upon trade in goods. However, Article
36 TFEU (which provides for exceptions to Article 34), together with
consistent CJEU case law (for example, Aragonesa,
Bacardi
France, Ahokainen
and Leppik, Rosengren
and Scotch
Whisky Association) indicate that, provided an alcohol control measure is
proportionate, it can be adopted despite the fact that it places a restriction
on trade.
All five
interventions in the Bill can be justified as proportionate. Minimum pricing rules
can be compatible with EU law as the Scotch
Whisky judgement suggested in the context of Scottish minimum unit
pricing (MUP). Context is key for MUP, and Irish MUP will not automatically be
legal as a result of this decision, but under the terms of the decision, and
given the extensive and clear impact
assessment conducted by the Irish government, as well as the already very
high tax rates on alcohol in Ireland, it should not be difficult to demonstrate
that MUP is an appropriate and necessary measure in this jurisdiction too.
There was a last
minute and intense debate
on the inclusion of cancer warnings on alcoholic beverage labels. This proposal
has perhaps been the most harshly criticised, as trade
restrictive, stigmatising for Irish products and detrimental to the operation
of the internal market. Mandatory health warnings on alcoholic beverages
have not been directly addressed by the CJEU. Having said this, labelling and
information provision have regularly been viewed by the CJEU as a proportionate
form of public health intervention (for example, Van
der Veldt, Commission
v Germany, Neptune
Distribution), and indeed the CJEU has stated that ‘labelling
is one of the means that least restricts the free movement of products within
the [EU]’. Furthermore, it can be argued that given the remarks
made by the CJEU on the carcinogenic nature of tobacco in the Philip Morris case, and the strong
evidence on the carcinogenic nature of alcohol (the third leading risk
factor for disease and death in Europe behind smoking and high blood pressure),
it is not unreasonable that the decision to warn of the risk of alcohol related
cancer on warning labels, using a method of intervention that does
not impair the substance of intellectual property or business rights, would
be seen as proportionate. Cancer warning labels might stretch the limits of
what is necessary to achieve the objectives of public health protection, but
they arguably do not - given the existence of evidence on positive
effects and Member
States’ commitment at WHO level to consider stronger alcohol labelling
requirements - go beyond these limits.
Arguments that
such labelling requirements would put Ireland at an economic disadvantage are
less forceful when one considers that nine other
countries around the world have introduced stricter alcohol labelling proposals.
Arguments that Irish products will be stigmatised are misguided given that the
rule applies to the sale of products in Ireland, not Irish exports. Lastly, arguments
that stricter labelling requirements will have severe operational consequences
for industries are something of a hyperbolic smokescreen, considering that there
are currently no
common rules on alcohol labelling due to the exemption of alcohol from food
labelling regulations, the industry themselves have specifically
rejected the opportunity to create a harmonised alcohol labelling scheme within
the EU, and there is already
diversity in EU countries’ labelling requirements, including
Targeted advertising
restrictions have also been upheld
as proportionate by the CJEU. The restrictions proposed by the Bill do not
amount to a total prohibition on the advertising of alcohol, and indeed that is
not their intention. Consistent CJEU case law has demonstrated that if
advertising interventions are limited and targeted in scope, then they will be
proportionate. Retail restrictions that serve public health purposes will likely
fall within the exception to Article 34 TFEU that was created by the Keck decision – any non-discriminatory
‘selling arrangement’ will fall outside the scope of Article 34 TFEU altogether.
Indeed, recent tobacco case law indicates that the CJEU will classify
public health interventions concerning the retail of unhealthy products as
selling arrangements, and do not appear especially motivated to interfere
in the Member States’ legislative choices in this regard. The same argument
applies to the restrictions on sale and supply of alcohol, which primarily concern
price promotions, for example buy one get one free offers. Such restrictions
would likely fall within the scope of a selling arrangement, and would
therefore also fall outside the scope of Article 34.
Thus, is relatively
clear that four of the five interventions included in the Bill are compatible
with EU internal market law. Furthermore, a coherent argument can be made that
the Bill’s labelling provisions will also be compatible with internal market
law. EU law supports the Irish government’s prerogative to adopt such measures,
and indeed in the comments issued by the Commission on the Bill, concerns
were raised regarding the labelling provisions, but they were not criticised as
opponents of the Bill have asserted. Rather, the Commission used the comments
to reassert Ireland’s right to adopt proportionate public health measures.
Assertions
regarding the incompatibility of the Bill with EU law fail to take account of
the fact that the internal market is founded and has been developed upon the
understanding that the responsibility of governments to protect their
populations from various threats will often conflict with the commitment to
protect free trade. The European Union Treaties explicitly provide that Member
States can limit economic freedoms in a proportionate manner where a pressing
social concern warrants intervention, and the CJEU has reinforced this
time and again in the alcohol context. Moreover, both the right to
health and the right to conduct a business are equally protected as a matter of
EU fundamental rights law, and the CJEU
has held that the right to health will outweigh the commercial rights of
certain industries that contribute to public health epidemics.
Those that
criticise the Public Health (Alcohol) Bill wrongly assume that the internal
market requires Member States to prioritise the rights and interests of
business, and to deal with social issues in a way that best suits the business
community. This is not the case – the internal market guarantees free movement,
but does not guarantee businesses a trump card to play when they feel their
interests are being infringed. Far from preventing the Member States from
protecting their populations, EU law protects the Member States’ right and
responsibility to do so in a proportionate manner - even if this would lead to
a certain amount of disruption to the status quo of transnational trade.
Even Member
States sometimes misinterpret the cues given by EU public health law and policy,
and this can lead to instances of regulatory failure – where mutual inaction by
two regulatory actors results in an issue not being addressed. For example, one
of the most salient debates on the Public Health (Alcohol) Bill concerns the
minimum unit pricing provisions, and their implementation. Simon Harris has
until very recently repeatedly insisted that the MUP provisions enacted in the
Bill would not be implemented until similar provisions were brought into effect
in Northern Ireland, based upon the belief
that Irish public health policy should not produce negative effects for the
transnational trade in alcoholic beverages in border counties. The special
nature of the Irish border and the desire of the Irish government to make
public health policy on an all-island basis may make political sense, but as a
matter of law the CJEU has repeatedly held that ‘the
fact that one Member State imposes less strict rules than another Member State
does not mean that the latter’s rules are disproportionate’.
EU law does not
require Ireland to ensure that its policy choices are consistent with the
policy choices in other Member States, and does not require that, once a
barrier to trade has been justified, it is not implemented on account of
possible trade distorting effects. The Irish government should bear in mind
that internal market law permits each Member State to protect its own population
in whatever way it sees fit, irrespective of choices made by other Member
States, as long the barriers to trade it erects are proportionate. Simon
Harris’ recent softening of his previous stance, through statements that
Ireland cannot wait ‘forever’ to implement MUP, is therefore to be welcomed.
However, some
elements of the Bill have not escaped the trap of regulatory failure. While the
provisions on alcohol advertising are already commendably strong, they could
have been even stronger. Amendments
were proposed in the final rounds of Dáil debate that would have increased the
protection the legislation offered to children against online alcohol
advertising. This would have given effect to a considerable body of evidence that suggests
that children are vulnerable to digital and other non-traditional forms of
alcohol advertising, which are hardly regulated at all by any Member State.
However, Simon Harris rejected these amendments. Despite fully agreeing with
their sentiments, the health minister rejected them on the basis that tackling
online advertising is a task best suited for EU level action, and that Ireland
should therefore not act until the EU has acted. Unfortunately this logic does
not take account of the fact that the EU have already recently refused to
increase the stringency of online alcohol advertising regulation. The Audiovisual
Media Services Directive reforms leave EU provisions governing cross-border
alcohol advertising unchanged, and even relax some of the rules on the
provision of advertising services, to the detriment of children’s health
protection. The Commission has repeatedly
insisted that it will not propose harmonising legislation to regulate cross-border
alcohol trade.
In order for
this to ever happen, Member States must commit to regulating the alcohol
industry in their own territories. The conferral of competence upon the EU to
regulate the internal market depends on the existence of barriers to trade,
which can only exist if Member States have enacted sufficiently diverse
regulations. Currently, regulation of online alcohol advertising is consistent
across Member States in its virtual non-existence. The existence of at least
some variation in national regulation would certainly put greater pressure on
the Commission to adopt common rules, and would add some weight to the Member
States’ political
call for a European Union alcohol strategy. Thus, the Irish government’s
position that Member States should wait for the EU to act has unfortunately led
to a regulatory failure on an important public health issue.
In summary, the
Public Health (Alcohol) Bill is a bold piece of legislation that seeks to act
on the substantial evidence base on alcohol related harm in Ireland. It is
within the discretion of the Irish government to adopt, and contains
interventions which make justified restrictions to free movement. Assertions
that parts of it are not compliant with EU law fail to take account of the fact
that EU internal market law preserves the right of the Member States to protect
their populations as much as it protects the freedoms of traders. Misinterpretations
of this prerogative, or of the reality of EU level public health policy, can
potentially lead to inaction and regulatory failure. The Irish government has taken
an important step towards reducing the burden of alcohol related harm in
Europe, and other Member State governments should be encouraged to follow.
Barnard
& Peers: chapter 12, chapter 21
Photo credit: SpunOut.ie
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDelete