Takes legal action over the use of the word “Iceland”
The Government of Iceland, on behalf of Iceland's businesses and people, announced before the weekend that it has taken legal action against the UK supermarket chain Iceland Foods.
The goal of the legal action is to ensure the rights of Icelandic companies to use the word “Iceland” in relation to their goods and services.
According to Iceland’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Government along with SA Business Iceland and Promote Iceland is taking this step because Iceland Foods has aggressively pursued and won multiple cases against Icelandic companies which use “Iceland” in their representation or as part of their trademark, even in cases when the products and services do not compete.
A Europe-wide trademark registration for the word mark ‘”Iceland” is held by Iceland Foods, a UK company. The Icelandic Government's legal challenge at the European Union Intellectual Property Office (EU-IPO) seeks to invalidate this exclusive registration on the basis that the term “Iceland” is exceptionally broad and ambiguous in definition, often rendering the country's firms unable to describe their products as Icelandic.
“The Government of Iceland is concerned that our country's businesses are unable to promote themselves across Europe in association with their place of origin – a place of which we are rightly proud and enjoys a very positive national branding”, reads an announcement at the ministry’s website.