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Investigation: EU-bound food from occupied territories mislabeled as Israeli

Created at 11 Jun · 2:56 AM2 sources↑ Market-relevant
IN SHORT

An investigation reveals that nearly 20% of food shipments labeled "Made in Israel" entering the EU originate from settlements in the occupied West Bank or Golan Heights, benefiting from preferential trade terms.

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Key Numbers

19.2%share of shipments to EU from settlements
17.2%share of shipments to EU, UK, Norway, Switzerland from settlements (2017-2026)
30,000+export documents reviewed
5,900+shipments of dates, citrus, tahini to EU, UK, Norway, Switzerland
€13.1 millionvalue of goods from occupied territories declared on customs invoices
€63 millionestimated total payouts by Israeli government to refund settlement tariffs
2005year EU technical arrangement on Israeli exports began
2024year International Court of Justice issued advisory opinion on settlements
September 2025month European Commission proposed suspending trade provisions with Israel
end of 2025effective date of Spain's national ban on imports from settlements

Who's Involved

Global Echo Litigation Center
U.S.-based legal advocacy group that conducted the investigation
European Union
Recipient of mislabeled food shipments and subject of proposed trade provision suspension
Israeli government
Accused of facilitating trade with settlements and refunding tariffs
Claudio Francavilla
Associate Director for EU advocacy at Human Rights Watch
Ursula von der Leyen
President of the European Commission, urged to ban trade with settlements
Achva
Israeli brand whose tahini from West Bank settlements is labeled 'Product of Israel'
Investigation: EU-bound food from occupied territories mislabeled as Israeli

↳ Why This Matters

The findings challenge the EU's ability to enforce its policy of distinguishing between Israeli goods and products from settlements, potentially impacting trade agreements and human rights standards.

Key facts

  • Nearly 20% of Israeli-labeled food shipments entering the EU originate from settlements in the occupied West Bank or Golan Heights.
  • Settlement goods benefit from tariff breaks and organic labels reserved for Israeli-grown produce.
  • Methods to disguise origin include mislabeling, fake addresses, and mixing settlement produce with Israeli-grown food.
  • Israeli authorities issue plant health certificates for produce from occupied territories, accepted by EU and UK customs.
  • The Israeli government allegedly refunds exporters for tariffs on settlement goods.
  • Lawsuits are being filed in the UK and France to compel authorities to act.

An investigation has revealed that a significant portion of food products entering the European Union and other European countries from Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank and Golan Heights are being mislabeled as "Made in Israel." The probe by the Global Echo Litigation Center found that between 2017 and 2026, approximately 17.2% of food shipments to the EU, UK, Norway, and Switzerland originated from these settlements, with the figure rising to 19.2% for EU-bound shipments alone.

These settlement products, including dates, citrus fruits, and tahini, benefit from preferential treatment such as tariff breaks, organic labels, and plant health certificates that are legally reserved for goods grown within Israel itself. The report details methods used to disguise the origin, such as mislabeling the country of origin, using fake addresses within Israel, or mixing settlement produce with Israeli-grown food before export. Even when customs authorities identify settlement goods and charge tariffs, the Israeli government reportedly reimburses exporters, effectively nullifying the tariffs.

International law, including an advisory opinion from the International Court of Justice in 2024, considers Israeli settlements in the West Bank and East Jerusalem illegal. The EU's position has been to trade with Israel but not with these settlements. However, the investigation suggests this distinction is failing at borders. Human Rights Watch stated that such trade supports abuses like ethnic cleansing and apartheid. In response to these findings and ongoing concerns, lawsuits are being filed in the UK and France to compel authorities to take action. The European Commission had previously proposed suspending trade provisions with Israel in September 2025 due to human rights clause breaches, but this has not been adopted by EU governments. Spain, however, has implemented its own national ban on imports from settlements.

Frequently asked questions

The investigation found that nearly 20% of food shipments labeled as "Made in Israel" entering the EU actually originate from Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank or Golan Heights.

Methods include mislabeling the country of origin, using fake Israeli addresses, and mixing settlement produce with Israeli-grown food before export.

The EU's position is to trade freely with Israel but not with communities in the occupied territories, which are condemned as undermining a future Palestinian state.

Lawsuits are being filed in the UK and France to compel authorities to act, and there are ongoing calls for the EU to ban all trade with illegal settlements.

What Happens Next

01Lawsuits are being filed in the UK and France to force customs and consumer protection authorities to act.
02EU governments are yet to agree on the European Commission's proposed suspension of trade provisions with Israel.
03Further investigations may be prompted by the report's findings.

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Cadence

How It Developed

An investigation revealed that nearly 20% of food shipments labeled "Made in Israel" entering the EU originate from settlements in the occupied West Bank or Golan Heights.
Goods like dates, tahini, and oranges from settlements benefit from tariff breaks and organic labels reserved for Israeli-grown produce.
Methods to disguise origin include mislabeling, fake addresses, and mixing settlement produce with Israeli-grown food.
Israeli authorities reportedly issue plant health certificates for produce from occupied territories, accepted by EU and UK customs.
The Israeli government allegedly refunds exporters for tariffs on settlement goods, making them financially insignificant.
Lawsuits are being filed in the UK and France to compel authorities to act on the mislabeling.

Sources

T1
Almost one in five Israeli-labeled food shipments entering the EU are actually from settlements in the occupied West Bank or from the Golan Heights, according to a new investigation. https://t.co/UKU42D9b51@POLITICOEurope via PiQSuite
T1
Food from occupied territories enters Europe disguised as Israeli, investigation findsPOLITICO Europe

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