04/30/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 04/30/2026 14:00
April 30, 2026
The National Milk Producers Federation, U.S. Dairy Export Council and Consortium for Common Food Names welcomed today's release of the U.S. Trade Representative's (USTR) 2026 Special 301 Report, which details the significant progress made over the past year in securing commitments from U.S. trade partners to protect the free use of generic food and beverage terms.
The annual report documenting the most pressing intellectual property issues facing U.S. exporters this year spotlights the administration's successful efforts to protect American producers' use of common names such as "parmesan" and "feta" against the European Union's protectionist geographical indication (GI) policies. NMPF, USDEC and CCFN have been proud to coordinate with the administration on combatting policies that restrict the use of widely recognized food and beverage terms to only specific European producers and effectively cut U.S. producers out of certain key markets.
"For too long, the EU has weaponized GI policy to crowd out American producers from markets they have served for decades," Krysta Harden, president and CEO of USDEC, said. "This past year's reciprocal trade agreements are a sea change, and we welcome USTR's leadership and persistence in addressing this issue. We encourage the administration to build on this impressive foundation in every remaining negotiation to ensure U.S. exporters are never again shut out of export markets by the EU's GI misuse."
"EU GI schemes create a two-tiered system that benefits European dairy producers and stamps out competition," Gregg Doud, president and CEO of NMPF, said. "NMPF deeply appreciates USTR's leadership in addressing the GI restrictions detailed in the Special 301 report as a priority trade barrier. We look forward to continuing this great work with USTR."
"The EU's approach to geographical indications is simply a dressed-up trade barrier. It is entirely unacceptable," Jaime Castaneda, executive director of CCFN, said. "Too many trading partners have been coerced into imposing barriers on products using common food names. We greatly appreciate the administration's leadership in reversing this trend, and we urge USTR to build on their great work securing important protections for common names in nine Agreements on Reciprocal Trade signed to date and protect common names in every market."
CCFN submitted comments to the agency in January, which broke down the many markets where U.S. dairy producers' common name rights are being threatened, including "asiago," "provolone" and "gruyere," and participated in the Special 301 public hearing USTR held in February. NMPF and USDEC filed supporting comments, expressing gratitude for the administration's action.
All three organizations will continue to work closely with USTR and U.S. government partners to monitor implementation of the reciprocal trade agreements and to ensure that U.S. trade partners fully meet their commitments to maintaining open and predictable access for U.S. dairy and other common name products.