Ireland paves the EU way on plain packaging

Managing IP is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Gardens, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2025

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Ireland paves the EU way on plain packaging

Ireland has become the first country in the EU to introduce a bill that would force tobacco companies to sell their products in plain packaging

plain-packaging.jpg

The country’sMinister for Health, James Reilly, said yesterday that the government has given the go ahead for the Public Health (Standardised Packaging of Tobacco) Bill 2014 to be published and presented in the country’s parliament, the Seanad.

“Ireland will be the first country in the European Union to introduce such legislation and the third country worldwide,” he said. “I understand that other EU countries are also considering such legislation.”

The bill, if made law, would remove all forms of branding including trade marks, logo, colours and graphics from packs, except for the brand and variant name which will be presented in a uniform typeface. Ireland’s standardised packaging will have graphic warnings and text selected from library of graphic images and warnings developed by the European Commission.

“The introduction of standardised packaging will remove the final way for tobacco companies to promote their deadly product in Ireland. Cigarette packets will no longer be a mobile advertisement for the tobacco industry,” Reilly added.

His ministry said that the tobacco industry has invested heavily in pack design to communicate specific messages to specific groups and that the draft legislation will take away one of the industry’s means of promoting tobacco as a desirable product.

The WTO last month appointed three panellists to hear complaints from member states about Australia’s plain packaging rules. The panellists will decide whether they think Australia's tobacco laws breach the trade organisation’s rules before the end of the year.

At a session at the INTA Annual Meeting in Hong Kong last month, panellists raised concerns about the threat posed by plain packaging to trade marks, both within the tobacco industry and beyond it. You can read a report here, and a Managing IP blog post here.

more from across site and SHARED ros bottom lb

More from across our site

Tilleke & Gibbins topped the leaderboard with four awards across the region, while Anand & Anand and Kim & Chang emerged as outstanding domestic firms
News of a new addition to Via LA’s Qi wireless charging patent pool, and potential fee increases at the UKIPO were also among the top talking points
The keenly awaited ruling should act as a ‘call to arms’ for a much-needed evolution of UK copyright law, says Rebecca Newman at Addleshaw Goddard
Lawyers at Lavoix provide an overview of the UPC’s approach to inventive step and whether the forum is promoting its own approach rather than following the EPO
Andrew Blattman, who helped IPH gain significant ground in Asia and Canada, will leave in the second half of 2026
The court ordering a complainant to rank its arguments in order of potential success and a win for Edwards Lifesciences were among the top developments in recent weeks
Frederick Lee has rejoined Boies Schiller Flexner, bolstering the firm’s capabilities across AI, media, and entertainment
Nirav Desai and Sasha S Rao at Sterne, Kessler, Goldstein & Fox explore how companies’ efforts to manage tariffs by altering corporate structures can undermine their ability to assert their patents and recover damages
Monika Żuraw, founder of Żuraw & Partners, discusses why IP should be part of the foundation of a business, and taking on projects that others walk away from
Lawyers say attention will turn to the UK government’s AI consultation after judgment fails to match pre-trial hype
Gift this article