In the high-stakes world of international trade and supply chain management, a single digit in an HS code can mean the difference between a highly profitable product line and a catastrophic financial loss.
This is the gripping, true story of a massive reversal—a scenario where an importer stared down the barrel of a devastating 9.00% + EA(1) duty rate, stood up against an unreasonable customs decision using a forgotten 16-year-old court precedent, and clawed their way back to a definitive 0% duty. It’s a masterclass in why you should never take a government ruling at face value, and how fighting back with hard legal evidence can lead to an explosion in profits.
The Sweet, Red Trap: A Simple Colorant Turned Nightmare
Our story begins in the supply chain trenches with a rather unassuming product: a slightly viscous, red liquid colorant.
Intended for industrial manufacturing, the product’s formulation was remarkably simple and entirely natural. The spec sheet read like a recipe for a healthy smoothie rather than a complex chemical compound:
Radish concentrate
Safflower concentrate
Lemon concentrate
Citric acid
Sucrose syrup (Sugar)
With the intention of importing this into the European Union, the importer did everything by the book. They applied for a Binding Tariff Information (BTI) decision from the Netherlands Customs authorities to secure legal certainty before shipping. The application confidently requested classification under HS Code 3203.00—the designated category for “Coloring matter of vegetable or animal origin.”
However, in 2019, the response from Customs sent shockwaves through the importer’s finance department.
The ruling was brutal: “This is not a colorant. Due to the amount of added sugar, it is a ‘Food Preparation’.”
Operating on a rigid, checklist mentality, the Customs laboratory had fixated entirely on the presence and volume of the “sucrose syrup.” Completely ignoring the product’s fundamental purpose and commercial reality—that it was exclusively used to dye other products, not to be consumed on its own—they shoved it into the catch-all category for food preparations: HS Code 2106.90.
NLBTI2019-0073
With that stroke of a pen, the duty rate skyrocketed to 9.00% + EA(1).
The “Agricultural Duty” Hell
To the uninitiated, treating a colorant as “food” might just sound like bureaucratic semantics. But in the EU, importing “food” that contains sugar or dairy is akin to walking through a financial minefield.
The European Union fiercely protects its domestic agricultural sector. When a product gets dumped into a category like 2106.90, it doesn’t just get hit with a standard ad valorem (percentage-based) tariff of 9%. It triggers the dreaded Agricultural Component (EA).
The EA is a punitive, specific duty calculated relentlessly based on the exact weight and percentage of sugar, starch, or milk fat in your product. Unlike standard tariffs, the EA isn’t capped by the value of the goods. In some cases, the agricultural duty can equal or even exceed the commercial value of the product itself.
For the importer, this wasn’t just a slight margin erosion. The sudden spike in the Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) destroyed the business model. Selling this natural colorant in the EU was now mathematically impossible. The Customs decision was a death sentence for the product line.
The Importer Who Refused to Yield
Faced with a ruling like this, 99% of importers would fold. They would accept the narrative of “you can’t fight city hall,” write off the sunk costs, and abandon the EU market. Or worse, they would quietly pay the ruinous taxes and bleed cash.
But this importer refused to play the victim.
They understood the fundamental truth of the product: “The sugar is merely a carrier, a stabilizer used for preservation and standardization. The core essence, the undisputed ‘star of the show,’ is the color!”
Armed with this conviction, they didn’t just write a polite letter of complaint; they launched a full-scale legal assault. To defeat Customs, they had to beat them at their own game. They dug deep into the archives of Dutch customs jurisprudence and pulled out a heavy weapon: ECLI:NL:GHAMS:2004:AO4626—a landmark judgment from the Court of Appeal in Amsterdam (Gerechtshof Amsterdam), dated February 19, 2004.
The Weapon: The 2004 Amsterdam Court of Appeal Precedent
To understand how the importer won, we have to look at what happened in that courtroom 16 years prior.
In the 2004 case, a different importer was fighting Netherlands Customs over a product called Beta-Carotene 30% Oil Suspension—an orange-red colorant used in butter, margarine, and juices.
This beta-carotene was produced through a highly complex, industrial biotechnological process. It involved placing a specific fungus (Blakeslea trispora) into massive industrial fermentation tanks filled with a nutrient medium consisting of sugar syrup, corn steep liquor, and soy oil.
Back then, Customs tried a similar trick. They argued that because the product was manufactured in an industrial bioreactor using a highly controlled medium (like sugar syrup) rather than being simply squeezed from a plant in nature, it was no longer a natural “vegetable colorant” (HS 3203 at 0% duty). Instead, Customs classified it as a “synthetic organic colorant” (HS 3204 at a 6.5% duty).
The Court of Appeal completely dismantled the Customs argument. The judges ruled that even though the manufacturing took place in an extensive industrial process, and even though complex mediums (like sugar syrup) were used to cultivate and extract it, the product fundamentally retained its vegetable origin and essential character as a natural colorant. The court explicitly stated that industrial processing and the presence of carrying mediums do not strip a product of its rightful place in HS 3203.
The Checkmate: Applying the Precedent
The 2019 importer took this 2004 judgment and used it as a legal battering ram against the 2106.90 (Food Preparation) classification.
Their argument to Customs was a masterpiece of legal logic:
“You are classifying our radish and safflower colorant as a ‘food product’ simply because it contains a high volume of sucrose syrup. But look at the 2004 Court of Appeal ruling! The highest judges already established that using sugar syrup as a medium or carrier in the manufacturing and stabilization process does NOT destroy a product’s essential character as a vegetable colorant (HS 3203). >
Our product is a colorant. The sugar is there for viscosity, preservation, and standardization—not to be eaten as a snack. Just as industrial fermentation didn’t turn beta-carotene into a synthetic chemical in 2004, the presence of stabilizing sugar syrup does not turn our colorant into a food preparation today. By law, it remains a vegetable colorant under HS 3203!”
The Smoking Gun: Tracing the DNA of the Fight
If you know where to look, the European customs databases hold the “smoking gun” that proves just how fiercely this battle was fought.
When we examine the original, devastating BTI issued in 2019 and compare it to the triumphant, revised BTI issued in 2020, we find two identical, irrefutable pieces of data embedded in the Dutch text:
aangevraagd onder kenmerk 2087432-01 (Applied under reference number: 2087432-01)
bekend onder laboratoriumnummer 2100 F 19 (Known under laboratory number: 2100 F 19)
These numbers are the administrative fingerprints of the case. The fact that the application number and the physical laboratory test number match perfectly across both documents proves a vital point: The importer did not cheat. They did not reformulate the product to have less sugar and submit a new sample. They forced Customs to look at the exact same product, from the exact same initial application, and legally compelled them to admit they were entirely wrong the first time.
The Great Reversal: 0% Duty and an Explosion in Profits
Checkmate. After a grueling standoff, the dam broke. In 2020, the Netherlands Customs officially invalidated their own 2019 decision, citing the 2004 jurisprudence as their new legal justification.
They issued a new BTI, formally reclassifying the red liquid not as a heavily taxed food preparation, but as what it always was: a pure “Coloring matter of vegetable origin” (HS 3203.00).
NLBTI2020-0103
The new duty rate? A definite, rock-solid 0%. The terrifying Agricultural Component (EA) vanished into thin air. In a single bureaucratic maneuver backed by ironclad legal precedent, a product that was on the verge of plunging the company into the red was resurrected into a high-margin powerhouse. Free from the shackles of agricultural taxes, the importer’s profit margins on this product line exploded overnight.
Conclusion: “The Authorities” Aren’t Always Right
This story serves as a stark, realistic warning for every supply chain manager, trade compliance officer, and executive operating in global trade: Never blindly accept a Customs decision just because it comes printed on official letterhead.
Customs authorities are prone to rigid, mechanical judgments. When they see the word “sugar” on an ingredient list, their algorithms and protocols will reflexively try to trap you in high-tax categories, ignoring the commercial reality of your goods.
It is your job to understand the true essence of your product, challenge the surface-level assumptions of the authorities, and fight back using hard evidence and historical legal precedent. In international business, your profit margins aren’t just protected by good sales strategies; they are defended by regulatory vigilance. Stand your ground, know the law, and don’t let the system classify your profits away.
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