The World Trade Organization sided with Canada and Mexico in their complaint that the US' labeling laws were hurting their export industries.
US retailers are currently required to indicate where an animal was born, raised, and slaughtered, and the complaint alleged that this was doing serious damage to meat exports.
"Our governments will be seeking authorization from the WTO to take retaliatory measures against US exports," read a joint statement from the Mexican and Canadian ministers for trade and agriculture.
Though proponents of the US country-of-origin labelling (COOL) laws say they are an essential tool for shoppers who want transparency about the foods they consume, Republican opponents are pushing to repeal them under threat of retaliatory sanctions.
— House Ag Committee (@HouseAgNews) May 12, 2015
— Global Trade Watch (@PCGTW) May 18, 2015
— Canada Trade (@CanadaTrade) May 18, 2015