Drink removed from draft list after lobbying from whiskey-making Ireland and wine-producing Italy and France  
EU drops plans to hit American bourbon with retaliatory tariffs
Drink removed from draft list after lobbying from whiskey-making Ireland and wine-producing Italy and France
Amid
 the economic maelstrom of Donald Trump’s trade war, drink makers might 
take a small drop of comfort: the EU has dropped plans to hit American 
bourbon with retaliatory tariffs.
Bourbon and other US whiskeys
 have escaped EU countermeasures after heavy lobbying from the EU’s 
drinks-producing countries – such as whiskey-making Ireland and the wine
 behemoths Italy and France – who feared their alcohol industries would 
become casualties of a global trade war.
Bourbon
 and wine have been removed from a draft list of US goods that will be 
subject to EU retaliatory tariffs in response to Trump’s duties on steel
 and aluminium announced last month, according to a leaked list first 
reported by Reuters.    
EU member states will vote on the final list on Wednesday, which targets €21bn goods, down from €26bn originally foreseen,
 after talks with the EU’s 27 member states and many industry bodies. 
The list of potential targets facing mostly 25% retaliatory tariffs now 
ranges from almonds to yachts, via diamonds and dental floss, soya beans
 and steel parts. But bourbon and wine have been dropped.  
France, Italy and Ireland protested against their
 inclusion after Trump threatened a counter-punch on learning of the 
threat to bourbon last month. On social media on 13 March, he warned of “a 200% Tariff on all WINES, CHAMPAGNES, & ALCOHOLIC PRODUCTS COMING OUT OF FRANCE AND OTHER E.U. REPRESENTED COUNTRIES”.
Ireland’s
 foreign minister, Simon Harris, said on Monday he had “questioned the 
strategic relevance” of targeting bourbon, while the French prime 
minister, François Bayrou, described the proposal as “a misstep”.
The French government, which has been calling for a tough response to US tariffs,
 feared damage to its drinks industry, as one champagne maker warned it 
would be “game over” for the US market if 200% tariffs came to pass 
French cognac and brandy makers have since last October been grappling 
with Chinese tariffs, levied by Beijing in retaliation over the EU’s 
decision to impose anti-dumping duties on Chinese electric vehicles. 
Bourbon became a possible target as it was already in the EU’s playbook.
 When Trump imposed steel and aluminium tariffs in his first term, the 
EU responded by targeting emblematic US goods such as Harley-Davidson 
motorbikes, blue jeans and bourbon. “We can also do stupid,” was how the
 then European Commission president, Jean-Claude Juncker, described the 
counter-measures, as he said the bloc had no choice.
The
 targeting of alcoholic drinks in trade wars has alarmed and baffled the
 industry. In the two decades following the removal of nearly all 
tariffs on spirits between the US and EU in 1997, transatlantic trade 
grew by 450%, reaching €6.7bn in 2018 before the start of tariffs, 
according to the pan-European trade body, spiritsEurope.  
In the US, Irish whiskey, Cognac and Polish vodka
 have protected status, while similarly, in the EU only US products can 
be bourbon or Tennessee whiskey.
Ireland had 
also feared that Trump’s retribution would snare its sizeable whiskey 
industry, with Irish whiskey exports to the US in 2024 valued at between
 €420m and €450m by the national food and drink board Bia.
The
 sector is dominated by brands such as Jameson. An explosion in the 
number of craft distilleries has led to around 40 whiskey and gin makers
 being established, often in rural areas, and another 10 north of the 
border, with 5.7m cases sent to the US in 2023 from the republic alone. 
These range in price from $30 a bottle to almost $5,000 for a bottle of 
Midleton Very Rare Foret de Troncais vintage whiskey. 
A tit-for-tat war could have hit production 
costs, too, as bourbon oak casks are used to colour and age whiskey in 
Ireland and elsewhere in the EU before sale back to the US.
Under
 US rules, bourbon is aged in virgin oak, which is discarded after one 
or two years, but the barrels are sold on to the UK at £300 a unit, 
generating a whole new side business for the US drink trade.
“It
 is not good for Europe, not good for Ireland. It’s not good for 
anybody,” said Paul Nash, the founder of Wild Atlantic Whiskey in county
 Tyrone, who is concerned about the 10% and 20% tariffs still facing UK 
and EU exports.
The US applied a universal tariff of 10% on UK goods from 5 April, while the 20% rate on EU goods comes into force on 9 April.
Northern
 Ireland whiskey is also hampered by the EU trade tariffs, partly 
because of Brexit rules tying it to the EU trade rules but mostly 
because whiskey makers source their barley in the republic.
A
 European Commission spokesperson declined to comment on bourbon, as the
 list had not been made public. “We are taking every step to ensure that
 the measures we come forward with achieve their intended purpose, which
 is to allow for the minimum amount of damage here in the EU while 
providing us with the maximum amount of leverage in our negotiations,” 
the spokesperson said. “We don’t want tariffs. We want to avoid them.”   
 
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