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OPINION OF ADVOCATE GENERAL
GEELHOED
delivered on 5 April 2005 (1)
Joined Cases
C-154/04
The Queen
Alliance for Natural Health
Nutri-Link Ltd
v
Secretary of State for Health
and
C-155/04
The Queen
National Association of Health Stores
Health Food Manufacturers Ltd
v
Secretary of State for Health
and
National Assembly for Wales
(Reference for a preliminary ruling from the High Court of
Justice of England and Wales)
(Approximation of laws – Food supplements – Directive
2002/46/EC – Ban on marketing of products which do not
comply with the directive – Validity – Legal basis –
Article 95 EC – Compliance with Articles 28 EC and 30 EC,
and with Regulation No 3285/94 – Principles of
subsidiarity, proportionality and equal treatment – Right
to property – Freedom to carry on an economic activity –
Duty to state reasons)
I – Introduction
1. These
references by the High Court of Justice of England and
Wales for a preliminary ruling concern the validity of
Directive 2002/46/EC of the European Parliament and of the
Council of 10 June 2002 on the approximation of the laws
of the Member States relating to food supplements
(hereinafter ‘the Directive’ or ‘Directive 2002/46’). (2)
More specifically they concern Articles 3, 4(1) and 15(b)
of the Directive.
2. The main features of these provisions are that
only food supplements in conformity with the Directive may
be marketed in the Community, that is to say, inter alia,
that only vitamins and minerals listed in the annexes to
the Directive may be used and that from 1 August 2005
trade in non-compliant products is prohibited.
3. As I will explain later on, these provisions
cannot be dealt with in isolation.
4. Furthermore, it is not the first time the Court
has had to deal with questions of the appropriate legal
basis, the principles of subsidiarity, proportionality,
equal treatment and the fundamental rights protected by
the European Convention of Human Rights, more specifically
the right to property and/or the right to carry on an
economic activity. The Court has dealt with similar
questions in its
BAT
judgment (3)
and in its judgments in
Swedish Match
and
Arnold André. (4)
The line of reasoning to be followed in the present cases
can be deduced from those judgments.
I –
Legal framework
5. Directive
2002/46, adopted on the basis of Article 95 EC, ‘concerns
food supplements marketed as foodstuffs and presented as
such’ (Article 1(1)).
6. For the purposes of the Directive, ‘food
supplements’ means foodstuffs the purpose of which is to
supplement the normal diet and which are concentrated
sources of nutrients or other substances with a
nutritional or physiological effect, alone or in
combination, marketed in dose form, namely forms such as
capsules, pastilles, tablets, pills and other similar
forms, sachets of powder, ampoules of liquids, drop
dispensing bottles, and other similar forms of liquids and
powders designed to be taken in measured small unit
quantities (Article 2(a)); ‘nutrients’ means the following
substances: (i) vitamins, (ii) minerals (Article 2(b)).
7. Under Article 3 of the Directive, Member States
are to ensure that food supplements may be marketed within
the Community only if they comply with the rules laid down
in the Directive.
8. Article 4 of the Directive contains the following
provisions:
‘1. Only vitamins and minerals listed in Annex I, in
the forms listed in Annex II, may be used for the
manufacture of food supplements, subject to paragraph 6.
…
5. Modifications to the lists referred to in
paragraph 1 shall be adopted in accordance with the
procedure referred to in Article 13(2).
6. By way of derogation from paragraph 1 and until
31 December 2009, Member States may allow in their
territory the use of vitamins and minerals not listed in
Annex I, or in forms not listed in Annex II, provided
that:
(a) the substance in question is used in one or more
food supplements marketed in the Community on the date of
entry into force of this Directive,
(b) the European Food Safety Authority has not given
an unfavourable opinion in respect of the use of that
substance, or its use in that form, in the manufacture of
food supplements, on the basis of a dossier supporting use
of the substance in question to be submitted to the
Commission by the Member State not later than 12 July
2005.
7. Notwithstanding paragraph 6, Member States may,
in compliance with the rules of the Treaty, continue to
apply existing national restrictions or bans on trade in
food supplements containing vitamins and minerals not
included in the list in Annex I or in the forms not listed
in Annex II.
…’
9. Article 11 of the Directive states:
‘1. Without prejudice to Article 4(7), Member States
shall not, for reasons related to their composition,
manufacturing specifications, presentation or labelling,
prohibit or restrict trade in products referred to in
Article 1 which comply with this Directive and, where
appropriate, with Community acts adopted in implementation
of this Directive.
2. Without prejudice to the Treaty, in particular
Articles 28 and 30 thereof, paragraph 1 shall not affect
national provisions which are applicable in the absence of
Community acts adopted under this Directive.’
10. Article 15 of the Directive provides:
‘Member States shall bring into force the laws,
regulations and administrative provisions necessary to
comply with this Directive by 31 July 2003. They shall
forthwith inform the Commission thereof.
Those laws, regulations and administrative provisions
shall be applied in such a way as to:
(a) permit trade in products complying with this
Directive, from 1 August 2003 at the latest;
(b) prohibit trade in products which do not comply
with the Directive, from 1 August 2005 at the latest.
…’
11. Under Article 16, the Directive entered into force
on 12 July 2002, the day of its publication in the
Official Journal of the European Communities.
12. Annexes I and II to the Directive establish lists
of, respectively, ‘[v]itamins and minerals which may be
used in the manufacture of food supplements’ and ‘vitamin
and mineral substances which may be used in the
manufacture of food supplements’ (hereinafter ‘the
positive lists’).
13. The Directive was transposed into law by the Food
Supplements (England) Regulations 2003 (S.I. No 1387 of 9
May 2003) and the Food Supplements (England) Regulations
2003 (S.I. No 1719 (W.186) of 9 July 2003). Those two sets
of regulations (hereinafter ‘the Food Supplements
Regulations’) entered into force in July 2003.
II –
Facts, procedure and preliminary questions
The
parties and the national proceedings
14. The
Alliance for Natural Health and Nutri-Link Limited, the
claimants in the main proceedings in Case C-154/04, are,
respectively, a European-wide association of
manufacturers, wholesalers, distributors, retailers and
consumers of food supplements, and a small specialist
distributor and retailer of food supplements in the United
Kingdom.
15. The National Association of Health Stores and
Health Food Manufacturers Limited, the claimants in the
main proceedings in Case C‑155/04,
are two trade associations representing around 580 small
firms engaged in the supply of health foods in the United
Kingdom.
16. On 10 October 2003, the National Association of
Health Stores and Health Food Manufacturers Limited
applied to the referring court for leave to commence
proceedings for judicial review of the Food Supplements
Regulations. Separate proceedings were commenced by the
Alliance for Natural Health and Nutri-Link Limited on 13
October 2003. In essence, all these parties claim that the
combined provisions of Article 3 and 4(1), and
subparagraph (b) of the second paragraph of Article 15 of
the Directive (hereinafter the ‘contested Community
provisions’), which the Food Supplements Regulations
transposed, and which, with effect from 1 August 2005,
prohibit the marketing of food supplements which do not
comply with the directive because of the use, in their
manufacture, of substances not permitted by it, are
incompatible with Community law and should therefore be
annulled.
17. The Queen’s Bench Division (Administrative Court)
of the High Court of Justice of England & Wales granted
the claimants in the main proceedings leave to apply for
judicial review of the Food Supplements Regulations and,
in those circumstances, decided, by two respective orders
of 3 March 2004, to stay the proceedings and to refer a
question – identical in both cases – to the Court for a
preliminary ruling.
Preliminary question
18. That
question is:
‘Are Articles 3, 4(1) and 15(b) of Directive 2002/46/EC
invalid by reason of:
(a) the inadequacy of Article 95 as a legal basis;
(b) infringement of (i) Articles 28 and 30 of the EC
Treaty and/or (ii) Articles 1(2) and 24(2)(a) of
Regulation (EC) No 3285/94;
(c) infringement of the principle of subsidiarity;
(d) infringement of the principle of
proportionality;
(e) infringement of the principle of equal
treatment;
(f) infringement of Article 6(2) of the Treaty on
European Union, read in the light of Article 8 of, and
Article 1 of the First Protocol to, the European
Convention on Human Rights, and of the fundamental right
to property and/or the right to carry on an economic
activity;
(g) infringement of Article 253 EC and/or the duty
to give reasons?
Procedure
before the Court
19. The
orders of the High Court of Justice were received at the
Court on 26 March 2004. By order of the President of the
Court of 7 May 2004 the cases were joined for the purpose
of the procedure and judgment. Written observations were
submitted by the claimants in both cases, by the United
Kingdom, Greek and Portuguese Governments and by the
Parliament, the Council and the Commission. On 25 January
2005 a hearing was held.
III –
Assessment
20. As
a preliminary remark I note that the referring court has
limited the scope of its questions to Articles 3, 4(1) and
15(b) of the Directive. These provisions, read together,
restrict the marketing of non‑positive
list (NPL) goods as from 1 August 2005 at the latest.
21. However, the Directive does not concern only the
use of positive lists or the prohibition on the use of
non-listed vitamins and minerals or substances thereof.
The Directive provides not only that only food supplements
in conformity with the Directive may be marketed in the
Community (Article 3), but also that Member States cannot
prohibit or restrict trade in those products (Article
11(1)). These provisions have a general character. They
apply to all the requirements laid down in the Directive,
including the requirement here at issue. It is true that
the use of a positive list is the most characteristic
feature of the Directive, the others, such as provisions
on labelling, do not have the same impact on the
activities of economic operators. None the less, the
question is whether the contested provisions can be viewed
in isolation from the remainder of the Directive.
22. In essence, the system is as follows:
– From 1 August 2003, Member States must permit
trade in food supplements containing vitamins and minerals
positive listed (Articles 3, 4 and 15(a) of the
Directive).
– From 1 August 2005, Member States must prohibit
the trade in products that do not comply with the
requirements of the Directive (Articles 4(1) and 15(b) of
the Directive).
– Article 4(6) contains a temporary derogation on
the prohibition on trade in food supplements containing
non-listed vitamins and minerals.
Member States
may allow on
their territory
the use of these non-listed substances in food supplements
until 31 December 2009, provided certain requirements are
met: they were already marketed in the Community on 12
July 2002, a dossier supporting the use of substances has
been submitted to the Commission by 12 July 2005, and the
European Food Safety Authority has not given an
unfavourable opinion of the use of that substance. Other
Member States do not have to allow imports of these
products (see Article 4(7) of the Directive).
– Modifications to the positive lists may be made
according to the procedure mentioned in Article 4(5) and
13(2) of the Directive.
23. The questions referred do not, for example, cover
the transitional derogation provided for in Article 4(6)
of the Directive, nor the amendment-clause contained in
Article 4(5) of the Directive. These provisions might be
relevant in the examination in order to decide whether the
system chosen by the Community legislature is
proportionate. The effect of the invalidity of the
contested Community provisions would be that the positive
lists would lose their validity. That would deprive many
other Articles of their substance. For example, the
abovementioned amendment-clause concerning the positive
lists would become meaningless. The same applies to the
temporary derogation clauses in Article 4(6) and 4(7) of
the Directive. Meanwhile, the Member States are still
obliged, under the free movement clause contained in
Article 11(1) of the Directive, to allow food supplements
which are in conformity with the Directive, (5)
without having recourse to Article 11(2) of the
Directive. (6)
In the event of partial invalidity certain amendments of
the Directive (and political choices to replace the
positive list system) would certainly be needed. Be that
as it may, in my opinion, the contested Community
provisions should be examined in the context of the
Directive as a whole.
The
legal basis (Article 95 EC)
24. The
claimants in the main proceedings in Case C‑154/04
claim that Article 95 EC cannot serve as the basis for the
prohibition arising from the contested Community
provisions, since that prohibition does not in the least
further the objective of improving the conditions for the
establishment and functioning of the internal market. They
add that, on the assumption that that prohibition is
intended to protect public health and consumers, reliance
on Article 95 EC is not only inappropriate, but also
constitutes a misuse of powers since, under Article
152(4)(c) EC, the Community has no power to harmonise
legislation on public health. The claimants in the main
proceedings in Case C‑155/04
also claim that Article 95 EC is not the correct legal
basis. They argue that the contested Community provisions
are incompatible with the principles of the free movements
of goods within the Community, with which the Community
legislature is required to comply in exercising its powers
under Article 95 EC. Furthermore, they allege that those
provisions contain direct and immediate restrictions on
trade with non-member countries and they should therefore
have been adopted on the basis of Article 133 EC.
25. The United Kingdom, Greek and Portuguese
Governments, as well as the Parliament, the Council and
the Commission, maintain that Article 95 is in this case
an appropriate and sufficient legal basis. The main
arguments put forward in this context are:
– the Directive’s purpose is to improve the
conditions for the functioning of the internal market by
eliminating differences in national legislation in the
field of food supplements and attendant present or future
obstacles to trade.
– the fact that the Directive also pursues a public
health and consumer protection objective does not mean
that it can be concluded that reliance on Article 95 EC is
inappropriate.
– since the aim and content of the Directive relate
mainly to the internal market, the Directive’s effects on
international trade cannot lead to the conclusion that it
should have been based on Article 133 EC.
26. I have already mentioned in point 4 that this is
not the first time that the Court has had to deal with the
issue of the appropriate legal basis. Nor is it the first
time that the protection of public health is at stake. In
the
BAT
judgment the Court recalled its earlier case-law on
Article 95(1) EC. (7)
27. At paragraph 60 of that judgment the Court held that
the measures referred to in Article 95 EC are intended to
improve the conditions for the establishment and
functioning of the internal market and must genuinely have
that object, actually contributing to the elimination of
obstacles to the free movement of goods or to the freedom
to provide services, or to the removal of distortions of
competition.
28. The Court went on, in paragraph 61, to hold that
recourse to Article 95 EC as a legal basis is possible if
the aim is to prevent the emergence of future obstacles to
trade from multifarious development of national laws; it
further held that the emergence of such obstacles must be
likely and the measures in question must be designed to
prevent them.
29. Finally, in paragraph 62, the Court held that,
provided that the conditions for recourse to Article 95 EC
as a legal basis are fulfilled, the Community legislature
cannot be prevented from relying on that basis on the
ground that public health protection is a decisive factor
in the choices to be made.
30. So it is clear that the following requirements
apply: real or potential (future) obstacles to free
movement must exist and the Community measure must
contribute to the elimination of those obstacles.
Furthermore, if these two requirements are met, the
Community legislature cannot be barred from relying on
Article 95 EC if health issues are at stake.
31. In light of the aforementioned principles, I will
now turn to the question whether the conditions for
recourse to Article 95 EC as a legal basis are satisfied.
32. In my view it is beyond doubt that the conditions
are met.
33. First, it is a well-known fact that the market for
food supplements is a fast-growing market (see also
recital one). Secondly, as noted in recital 2, those
products are regulated in Member States by diverse
national rules that may impede their free movement, and
create unequal conditions of competition, thus making it
necessary to adopt Community rules on those products
marketed as foodstuffs.
34. As the Court has indicated, (8)
it is clear that national rules laying down the
requirements to be met by products … are in themselves
liable, in the absence of harmonisation at Community
level, to constitute obstacles to the free movements of
goods.
35. That obstacles with regard to food supplements
materialise is clear. The Parliament, the Council and the
Commission have all indicated that the number of
complaints is growing; (9)
the fact that Member States have disparate approaches,
therefore creating justified or unjustified obstacles to
free trade, is also known from past and more recent
case-law of the Court, such as
Commission
v
Denmark, (10)
Commission
v
France (11)
and
Greenham and Abel. (12)
With respect to cases still pending I refer to
HLM Warenbetrieb and Orthica (13)
in which I recently delivered my Opinion. In those Joined
Cases the importation of food supplements containing
certain vitamins and/or minerals, and allowed as such in
the of origin, was barred by the of importation. That
treated the products concerned as medicines because of
health risks.
36. In my view, it is obvious that the Directive has a
clear internal market dimension.
37. In this context I would also point to Article 11(1)
of the Directive, the so-called free movement clause,
which guarantees the free movement of products which
comply with the Directive and, where appropriate, with
Community acts adopted in implementation of the Directive.
If the products concerned comply with the requirements of
the Directive, Member States are prevented from
prohibiting or restricting trade in those products, or, as
the Court said in its
BAT
judgement, (14)
‘by forbidding the Member States to prevent, on grounds
relating to matters harmonised by the Directive, the
import, sale or consumption of [food supplements] products
which do comply, that provision gives the Directive its
full effect in relation to its object of improving the
conditions for the functioning of the internal market’.
38. This brings me to the third aspect, which is that
the Directive is highly influenced by public health
concerns and the protection of the consumer.
39. According to the claimants in Case C-154/04 the
Community has no power to harmonise public health
measures.
40. It is correct that public health aspects have a
heavy emphasis in the Directive. Indeed, it is the
rationale behind the Directive. Divergent views by the
Member States of health risks with regard to the
consumption of food supplements are, after all, a threat
to the free movement of those products. Therefore, as is
stated in the second recital, harmonising measures were
deemed to be necessary. The public health aspects and
consumer protection aspects are reflected in different
recitals, in particular in the fifth recital, which states
that, in order to ensure a high level of protection of
consumers and facilitate their choice, the products put on
the market must be safe and bear adequate and appropriate
labelling.
41. As we learned from the
BAT
case and the reference made therein to the Tobacco
advertising judgment, (15)
if a Directive’s objective is to improve the conditions
for the functioning of the internal market, and therefore
Article 95 EC can serve as a legal basis, it is no bar
that the protection of public health is a decisive factor
in the choices involved in the harmonising measures which
it defines. Moreover, the first subparagraph of Article
152(1) EC provides that a high level of human health
protection is to be ensured in the definition and
implementation of all Community policies and activities,
and Article 95(3) EC expressly requires that, in achieving
harmonisation, a high level of human protection should be
guaranteed.
42. Does the Directive also need Article 133 EC as a
legal basis? The answer to that question can be short.
43. It is well established (16)
that, in the context of arguments as to the powers of the
Community, the choice of a legal basis for a measure must
rest on objective factors which are amenable to judicial
review. Those factors include in particular the aim and
the content of the measure.
44. If examination of a Community act shows that it has
a twofold purpose or a twofold component and if one of
these is identifiable as the main or predominant
component, whereas the other is merely incidental, the act
must be founded on a sole legal basis, that is, the one
required by the main predominant purpose or component.
45. As stated before, it is clear that the Directive
has an internal market dimension. Its purpose is to
facilitate free trade in food supplements by harmonising
aspects of health protection. Only food supplements which
fulfil the requirements set by the Directive may be
brought on to the market and can have the benefit of free
circulation in the internal market. I do not deny that
these requirements can affect products imported from
outside the Community. However, this is a side effect. It
clearly cannot warrant the choice of Article 133 EC as a
legal basis, since the purpose of the Directive is clearly
related to the internal market, and not to the regulation
of international trade. The argument that the mere fact
that international trade might be affected by a piece of
Community legislation would suffice for recourse to
Article 133 EC has also been rejected by the Court. (17)
Besides, if those products from outside the Community meet
the requirements they can also freely be traded in the
Community.
Articles
28 EC and 30 EC and the Import Regulation
46. The
claimants also argue that the contested provisions are
incompatible with the EC Treaty (Articles 28 EC and 30 EC)
and with the common commercial policy (Article 133 EC) as
implemented by the Import Regulation (Article 1(2) and
24(2)(a)).
47. I will deal first with the question whether there
is an incompatibility with Article 28 EC and the margin of
discretion of the Community legislature.
48. Articles 28 EC and 30 EC apply primarily to
unilateral measures adopted by the Member States. However,
it is well established that the prohibition of
quantitative restrictions on imports and all measures
having equivalent effect applies not only to national
measures but also to measures adopted by the Community
institutions. (18)
49. Thus, the Community institutions themselves must
also have due regard to freedom of trade within the
Community.
50. Article 30 EC can be invoked by the Member States
to justify their unilateral measures. It is obvious that
such unilateral measures by the Member States, in
themselves justified, may nevertheless disturb intra‑Community
trade, thus triggering action by the Community
legislature. The legal basis in the present case, as
discussed earlier, is to be found in Article 95 EC.
51. In the exercise of this power the Community
legislature has a wide margin of discretion as long as
basic principles of Community law are taken into account.
52. In light of the fact that the Community legislature
is also bound to observe the principle of freedom of
trade, the question is whether the Directive as such can
be regarded as introducing restrictions on the free
movement of goods by introducing a positive list system.
53. To my mind the answer should be in the negative. It
is clear that the Directive seeks to improve the
conditions for the functioning of the internal market for
food supplements, thereby limiting the possibilities for
Member States to invoke Article 30 EC. Second and at the
same time, the Directive seeks to strengthen in the
general interest of the Community the protection of public
health and consumers. These general interests are
expressly mentioned in Article 95(3) EC and in Article
152(1) EC.
54. Whether the Community legislature has complied with
the principle of proportionality, and other fundamental
principles of Community law, such as equal treatment and
fundamental rights, will be dealt with in the next
sections.
55. The claimants also claim that the contested
Community provisions are in breach of Regulation (EC) No
3285/94 (19)
(hereinafter the ‘Import Regulation’), in particular
Articles 1(2) and 24(2)(a) of the Import Regulation. Their
arguments are basically the same as those used in the
context of the alleged infringement of Articles 28 EC and
30 EC.
56. As the Commission pointed out, the claimants appear
to equate these provisions with Articles 28 EC and 30 EC,
but as applying to imports from third countries. The
claimants also refer to the fact that many of the NPL
goods are manufactured outside the Community and imported
into individual Member States for sale on their individual
territories.
57. I agree that the Import Regulation applies to the
question of importation. However – and I refer to my
Opinion in
Silvano Carbone (20)
and the judgment of the Court in that case – a distinction
should be made between the time when goods are imported
from third countries and the time when they are
subsequently placed on the market. The Import Regulation
applies to the former situation, the question of the
import of goods into the Community, while the latter
situation, the placing on the market of products within
the Community, is governed by the relevant Treaty
provision. It also means that, just as a product lawfully
manufactured within the Community may not be placed on the
market on that ground alone, the lawful importation of a
product does not imply that it will automatically be
allowed onto the market. Furthermore, the reservation
contained in Article 24(2)(a) of the Import Regulation
relates to the importation and not to the placing on the
market of the products referred to.
58. It therefore follows that the Import Regulation is
of no relevance in the present case and cannot be relied
upon to question the legality of the Directive. The
Regulation does not exclude Community rules that apply
generally to the placing on the market of food
supplements. As a passing comment, I would add that, once
the import formalities have been complied with, these
products are regarded as being in free circulation, which
means that foodstuffs imported from third countries which
comply with the Directive can also benefit from free
movement within the Community.
Principle
of proportionality
59. The
claimants in the main proceedings claim that the contested
Community provisions are disproportionate. They argue
that:
– the prohibition arising from the contested
Community provisions is not at all necessary, given the
discretion of the Member States under Articles 4(7) and
11(2) of the Directive to restrict trade in goods which do
not comply with the directive.
– the positive lists were compiled on the basis of
lists established in a completely different context, and
not in the light of the criteria of safety and
availability to be used by the body mentioned in the
recital 11 in the preamble to the Directive. The
prohibition affects substances and minerals which no one
has ever doubted are essential for the diet and/or which
have not been shown to represent a danger to health. The
positive lists betray a preference for the inorganic forms
of vitamins and minerals, which results in the
unjustifiable and disproportionate exclusion, of their
natural forms, which are nevertheless common in the normal
diet and generally better tolerated by the body.
– the Directive’s objectives could have been
achieved by less restrictive solutions than the approach
taken in this case (‘negative list’ or ‘approved list
system’: positive list system accompanied by harmonised
requirements and/or a centralised approval procedure for
products which do not comply with the directive: positive
lists containing all the nutrients which have been proved
to be safe and beneficial to health).
– the procedures laid down in Article 4(5) and (6)
of the Directive impose excessive financial and
administrative constraints and lack transparency. They are
not based on the criteria laid down by the case-law, (21)
but on the criteria defined, essentially, by the European
Food Safety Authority (EFSA) of its own initiative. A
history of safe use of the substance in question is not
sufficient for its acceptance by that agency.
60. All the other intervening parties submit that the
Directive does not infringe the principle of
proportionality.
61. I recall that the referring court refers only to
Articles 3, 4(1) and 15(1) of the Directive. I have
already observed that an examination of these provisions
cannot take place without taking into account the
remainder of the Directive.
62. I also wish to state at this juncture that the
choice of a system of positive lists is as such
appropriate. (22)
It has the advantage of being clear for all interested
parties as well as for the competent national authorities.
The substances included in the list are examined and
considered safe. This is, in my view, an important aspect,
because Member States, as stated, have to allow all food
supplements containing substances which are positive
listed. Member States can no longer invoke Article 30 to
bar these products from their markets. With a view to
attaining a genuine internal market for these products it
is therefore substantively appropriate.
63. In its judgments in
BAT
and
Swedish Match,
to which I have frequently referred above, the Court
considered that the Community legislature must be allowed
a broad discretion in making political, economic and
social choices in the field of the protection of public
health, and that such choices are based on complex
assessments. Consequently, the legality of a measure
adopted in that sphere can be affected only if the measure
is manifestly inappropriate having regard to the objective
which the competent institution is seeking to pursue. (23)
64. It should be added that, on the one hand, courts
must be reticent in assessing the political decisions made
by the institutions in the course of the legislative
process and, on the other, that Article 95(3) EC requires
a high level of protection where health is concerned. The
mere fact that the legislature might, in theory, have been
able to attain a comparable level protection of public
heath by less restrictive measures than those at issue,
does not therefore suffice to support the conclusion that
it has infringed the principle of proportionality as a
system of positive lists undoubtedly provides a high level
of protection eliminating ex ante as many potential health
risks as possible.
65. The selection of a legislative instrument using
positive lists of allowed substances that, on the one
hand, aims at securing a high level of protection of
public health, and, on the other, imposes far-reaching
restrictions on the freedom of market operators in certain
Member States to produce and market foodstuffs enriched
with minerals and/or vitamins, cannot as such be regarded
as being contrary to the principle of proportionality.