bxl-law : Legal | EU Affairs
A combined law firm and EU public affairs consultancy practice.
About bxl-law
bxl-law is a combined law firm and EU public affairs consultancy practice. It has extensive experience in a wide range of sectors, while it has a particular focus on the EU’s regulatory environment for food and drink. bxl-law combines years of experience in legal advice, consultancy and European public affairs. Its Brussels hub is centrally based within walking distance of the European institutions.
2020: 10 years bxl-law — Same Address, New Offices
Founded in 2010 and established in Avenue de la Renaissance 1, bxl-law since moved to a larger premises under the same address to prepare for growth and accommodate a larger clientele.
Sectors
Food and farm
Food security, food safety, food information and nutrition are the four pillars of EU food law. bxl-law advises food business operators and their associations of food law on matters such as labelling, advertisement and health claims, food improvement agents and novel food, functional food including food supplements, food for specific groups, and enriched food, hygiene, food safety and packaging. bxl-law also provides advice on food retailing, both off-line and online.
bxl-law also advises clients on farm law relevant to food law. For example, where product denominations are determined by the EU’s Common Market Organisation (CMO), quality labelling (PDO, PGI, TSG), and the production and trading of organic food.
Comitology
An opaque layer of EU regulatory action but one critical to businesses.
Many people are familiar with EU Regulations and Directives and the process through which they are developed through negotiations between the European Commission, Parliament and Council. More detailed rules which are used to implement Regulations and Directives are produced through a process called comitology. Rules developed through comitology are legally binding and can have serious implications for economic actors. Following the entry into force of the Lisbon Treaty (Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU)), the two types of rules that can be adopted through comitology are:
– Delegated Acts: Article 290 TFEU
– Implementing Acts: Article 291 of the TFEU
Delegated acts and implementing acts deal with the detail of a law’s application – in other words, the nitty-gritty. These acts are adopted by the European Commission, not the co-legislators (the European Parliament and Council). Their preparation, negotiation and adoption follow an entirely different pattern to the ordinary legislative procedure. The danger for stakeholders of comitology is that while the provisions in a Regulation may be perfectly acceptable to a business, if it does not engage in the correct ways with the comitology process the detailed implementing rules which are subsequently adopted may pose serious difficulties. The comitology process is also very opaque, and if stakeholders do not access the right advice, rules can be adopted and come into force before it finds any opportunity to raise its concerns.
The European Commission’s power is significantly greater when rules are adopted through comitology. Under the standard co-decision process, the European Parliament and Council adopt their own versions of EC proposals and an agreed text is then negotiated. With comitology, the Parliament and Council have less opportunity and time to raise objections and by extension, stakeholders have less time to address these institutions to raise objections. For stakeholders, comitology is the point where the EU machinery turns opaque to follow. While the Commission must be empowered by law to regulate by delegated act and implementing act, it is difficult to spot when these powers are being used, when acts are prepared, when to consult drafts and at what stage to make proposals or raise objections.
bxl-law can help you to identify – at the early and crucial stage of the preparation of delegated acts and implementing acts – the key people in the Commission who would hear your message, and bxl-law can help you put across your views as strongly as possible. We understand the procedures involved and can guide you through the rulemaking process, which can be difficult to understand, and guide you on making your interventions in the process at the right time and in the right place.
Services
Lobbying & advocacy
European law is subject to continuous change and re-interpretation. bxl-law assist companies and associations by advocating and lobbying in their own name or on their behalf, on issues of importance to them, directly to decision-makers and other influential parties. The assistance we provide clients is based on years of experience campaigning on a broad variety of topics.
Regulatory intelligence
Sound monitoring and analysis, and accurate political and regulatory intelligence are the basis of any successful advocacy campaign. This includes not only following media reports, but also intelligence gathering from officials, policy-makers and other relevant players. Whether the issue at stake is large or small, bxl-law can help to provide you with quality intelligence gathering services. It will also act as your early warning system to identify any potential threats which may have an adverse impact on business operations.
Issue management
Companies and associations may find themselves in situations where policies are formulated that have a potentially strong impact on their operations. This could be a new law, a technical standard for their product, a trade barrier, or an advertising restriction. bxl-law can help you to deal with the matter and develop an appropriate response.
Association management
Trade associations and alliances are an effective way of representing trade interests. A collective voice will not only carry greater weight and have a stronger impact over the lobbying of individual players, but is also more appealing to policy-makers. bxl-law can help in the setting-up and management of associations and coalitions in Brussels (namely ASBL and AISBL), and is also able to provide the services required to operate a successful association – from administration to advocacy.
Stakeholder mapping
Identifying and engaging with the right groups of people and individual personalities is crucial in public affairs. However, with the multitude of associations, interest groups and political staff operating at EU level, identifying the stakeholders who are influential on a particular issue is no simple task. bxl-law uses its network of contacts and experience to help clients navigate this complex landscape and map out and profile relevant stakeholders.
News updates
In the area of food policy, bxl-law can help you keep track of the news from Brussels, Strasbourg (European Parliament) and Luxembourg (the EU courts). We provide weekly or monthly updates tailored to the needs of your company or association which help you stay up to date on EU affairs while you focus on your core activities.
People
Jens Karsten
Rechtsanwalt (attorney at law) at bxl-law
admitted to the bar in Cologne and Brussels
Law degree from the University of Frankfurt am Main (Germany); Master of Laws in European law from the University of Nottingham (United Kingdom). Qualified for the German bar in 1999. Research and teaching at the Université Catholique de Louvain (Belgium), Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul in Porto Alegre (Brazil) and College of Europe in Bruges (Belgium). Legal Adviser to the Directorate General Health and Consumer Protection – DG SANCO (now: Health and Food Safety – DG SANTE) of the European Commission 2001-2004. Legal counsel to a European retail trade association 2004-2010. Author of numerous publications on European law. Attorney since 2010. Active in food and agriculture/ consumer and retailing/ travel, transport and tourism (see list of publications).
Jens Karsten is a member of the European Law Institute (ELI) and the Food Lawyers’ Network (www.food-lawyers.net).
Languages: German, English, French, (Portuguese)
Networks: LinkedIn / Xing
Food and Law News
“Fit for Future” platform to look into Evaluation of unfair trading practices (UTP) in B2B relationships in the agricultural and food supply chain, QR codes on products and Organic production and labelling of organic products
Press notice 29/11/2023 [unofficial translation]: Administrative simplification, the common thread running through the 2023 recommendations and 2024 work programme of the “Fit for Future” platform. The “Fit for Future” platform, a group of high-level...
JRC “Risks and vulnerabilities in the EU food supply chain”
European Commission’s Joint Research Centre publishes study on food security: JRC "Risks and vulnerabilities in the EU food supply chain”
Smoke flavourings in peril
Risk evaluators lower the thumb in the re-evaluation of smoke flavourings because of alleged genotoxicity. Risk management decision needs to overrule Parma or smoke flavourings market in Europe is upside down with authorisations expiring 31/12/2023. Flavourings...
Food Security – EU Policies Emerging Between Denial and Urgency
Dramatic changes the world is facing force the EU to rethink its policies on food security. The days of affluence are over. New realities need to be acknowledged and addressed. Karsten, Jens, Food Security: EU Policies Emerging Between Denial and Urgency (August 16,...
Consultation: Transition pathway for a more resilient, sustainable and digital agri-food ecosystem
24/7/2023: "Commission gathers views on how to make the agri-food industrial ecosystem greener, more digital and resilient. The Commission published an analysis of the existing EU policies supporting the agri-food sector to become greener, more digital...
Food Law
Information Service
European food law is constantly shifting. Publications on policy papers, amendments to laws, court judgments and statements by parliamentarians are many and in their entirety, difficult and time-consuming to track. Brussels Food Law Information Service is a weekly news service delivering updates from the European institutions related to food.
Contact
Avenue de la Renaissance 1
B-1000 Brussels
How to find bxl-law? bxl-law is located within 200m walking distance from Rond-Point Schuman, at the corner of Avenue de Cortenbergh and Parc Cinquantenaire.
Tel: +32-2-739.62.68