### 1. Essence of the Act
Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) 2026/1189 establishes a consolidated and updated legal framework governing the entry into the European Union of animals and animal products from third countries, specifically regarding compliance with EU restrictions on veterinary antimicrobial use. The act ensures that imported food products of animal origin do not originate from animals treated with antimicrobials used for growth promotion or yield increase, or with antimicrobials reserved exclusively for human medicine. By amending Implementing Regulation (EU) 2021/405 and repealing Implementing Regulation (EU) 2024/2598, it integrates these specific public health import requirements into a single, streamlined legislative text. This consolidation facilitates transparent enforcement of food safety standards at the Union’s external borders.
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### 2. Structure of the Act, Main Provisions, and Changes
The regulation is structured into three main articles and an extensive Annex:
* **Article 1 (Amendments):** This is the core structural change. It amends the primary import regulation, Implementing Regulation (EU) 2021/405, by inserting a new **Article 2b** and adding **Annex XVIa**.
* **Article 2 (Repeal):** It repeals the previous standalone list contained in Implementing Regulation (EU) 2024/2598 to consolidate all import-related third-country lists into one single act.
* **Article 3 (Entry into Force and Application):** It establishes that the regulation enters into force 20 days after publication, with the amendments in Article 1 becoming fully applicable on **3 September 2026**.
* **Annex (Annex XVIa):** Contains the master table listing third countries and territories by ISO code, detailing which specific animal-derived commodities they are authorized to export to the EU based on their antimicrobial guarantees.
#### Key Changes Compared to Previous Versions:
* **New Country Additions:** 21 third countries/regions (including Armenia, India, Kenya, Nigeria, Serbia, Tunisia, and Uzbekistan) have been added to the authorized list after providing the necessary guarantees regarding antimicrobial restrictions.
* **Category Upgrades and Adjustments:**
* *Thailand* is upgraded from a “Δ” to an “X” for eggs, meaning it now uses domestic eggs complying with EU standards rather than relying solely on imported raw materials.
* *Uruguay* is newly listed for aquaculture (finfish and molluscs).
* *North Macedonia* is now authorized for casings.
* *Albania* and *Colombia* are added with a “Δ” marker for crustaceans and eggs, respectively.
* *Singapore* has had its aquaculture restrictions eased to include crustaceans.
* **Removals and Deletions:**
* *Brazil* has had its “X” markings deleted for bovine, equine, poultry, aquaculture, honey, and casings because it failed to provide the required guarantees by the specified deadline.
* *Australia* (eggs) and the *Falkland Islands* (aquaculture) requested the removal of their listings as they are no longer interested in exporting these specific commodities to the EU.
* ****: For *Ukraine*, the “X” marking for rabbit exports has been deleted from the Annex, as Ukrainian authorities informed the European Commission that they are no longer interested in exporting rabbit products to the Union.
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### 3. Main Provisions Most Important for Practical Use
For journalists, trade operators, and border control authorities, the most critical elements for the practical application of this regulation are:
* **The “X” Marker (Article 2b(1)):** This symbol in the Annex XVIa table indicates that the third country has provided full, direct evidence and guarantees that its production standards comply with the EU ban on growth-promoting antimicrobials and human-reserved antimicrobials for that specific animal class.
* **The “Δ” (Delta) Marker (Article 2b(2)):** This symbol indicates a conditional authorization. The listed country does not produce the raw materials under its own fully certified system but guarantees that the exported products are manufactured using raw materials sourced exclusively from EU Member States or other fully approved third countries.
* **Scope of Commodities:** The regulation applies to 12 distinct columns of animal products intended for human consumption: Bovine, Ovine/Caprine, Porcine, Equine, Poultry, Aquaculture, Milk, Eggs, Rabbit, Farmed Game, Honey, and Casings. It explicitly excludes wild animals, products derived from them, and composite products.
* **The Enforcement Date (September 3, 2026):** This is the crucial operational deadline. From this date, any consignment of the listed animal products arriving at an EU border post must strictly align with the authorizations detailed in Annex XVIa, or entry into the Union will be denied.