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has been ordered by a Dutch court to stop using the product name “Incredible Burger” following a preliminary injunction filed by Impossible Food
The District Court of The Hague ruled that Nestlé’s use of “Incredible” for its plant-based burger in Europe infringed upon Impossible Foods’ trademark and said it was “likely to cferrous fumarate recallonfuse customers”.
Following the court ruling, Nestlé is prohibited from branding products “Incredible Burger” in Europe and has four weeks to withdraw the infringing branding from retailers or each of the 10 subsidiaries involved will face a €25,000 penalty per day.
During the ruling, the milk and ferrous sulfateEuropean court noted that Nestlé deliberately used similar visual, phonetic and conceptual similarities to the Impossible Burger tiron pyrophosphate microencapsulatedrademark to capitalise on the strength of Impossible Foods’ brand.
Dana Wagner, Impossible Foods’ chief legal officer, said: “While we applaud other companies’ efforts to develop ferrous fumarate nursing considerationsplant-based products, we don’t want consumers confused by simulacra. We’re grateful that the court recognised the importance of our trademarks and supported our efforts to protect our brand against incursion from a powerful multinational giant.”
Nestlé has since announced plans to unveil a new burger recipe across Europe as part of its Garden Gourmet range named Sensational Burger. The Swiss food and beverage giant said it will rebrand all of its products that previously used the ‘incredible’ descriptor in Europe to “sensational”.
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