Countries, businesses and trade officials urge EU to rethink
deforestation regulation
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[October 02, 2024] By
VICTORIA MILKO
JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) — A growing number of governments, international
trade organizations and businesses are urging the European Union to
reconsider a deforestation regulation set to take effect in December.
Critics of the regulation say it will discriminate against countries
with forest resources and hurt their exports. Supporters of the EU
Deforestation Regulation, or EUDR for short, say it will help combat
forest degradation on a global scale.
Several commodity associations have said they support the objectives of
the regulation but that gaps in its implementation could harm their
businesses.
Environmental organizations have voiced support, saying the EUDR will
help slow global deforestation, which is the second-biggest source of
carbon emissions after fossil fuels.
Here's a look at the EU Deforestation Regulation:
What is the EUDR and what products is it expected to impact?
Starting on Dec. 30, the EU Deforestation Regulation will outlaw the
sale of forest-derived products within the 27-nation bloc if companies
can’t prove their goods are not linked to deforestation. Its scope is
wide, including cocoa, coffee, soy, cattle, palm oil, rubber, wood and
products derived from these commodities.
To sell those products in Europe big companies will have to prove they
come from land where forests haven’t been cut since Jan. 1, 2021,
regardless of whether the deforestation was legal in the countries of
origin. Small businesses further down the supply chain are subject to
the same obligations and retain legal responsibility if regulations are
violated. But they are not liable for due diligence for parts of their
products that were already subject to review.
Failure to comply can result in financial penalties and restricted
access to the EU market.
The regulation also introduces a benchmarking system that ranks
countries or regions based on the risk of non-compliance with the EUDR
in three categories: low, standard, or high.
“We have been working very closely with a whole range of stakeholders in
order to help them prepare for the entry into effect of the regulation,”
European Commission spokesperson Adalbert Jahnz said at a recent press
briefing in Brussels.
“We keep the situation under constant review. We are working hard to
ensure that all the conditions are met for a smooth implementation of
the law,” he said.
Why are there calls for delays in implementing the EUDR?
Officials from leading exporters of affected commodities — including
Brazil, Indonesia and the Ivory Coast — object to the regulation, saying
it could act as a trade barrier, negatively affect small farmers and
disrupt supply chains.
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People move along a road near the Indonesia Weda Bay Industrial Park
in Kulo Jaya, Central Halmahera, North Maluku, Indonesia, June 7,
2024. (AP Photo/Achmad Ibrahim, File)
“This regulation disregards local
circumstances and capabilities, national legislations, certification
mechanisms, their efforts to fight deforestation, and multilateral
commitments of producer countries, including the principle of common
but differentiated responsibilities,” the Indonesian embassy in
Brussels, where the EU is headquartered, said in a statement.
Indonesia is the world's largest exporter of palm oil and exports
many other forest-derived commodities.
Politicians within the EU have also raised concerns
or asked for postponements. German Chancellor Olaf Scholz asked that
the regulation be suspended. Austria and some agricultural
ministries in EU member states have also sought to weaken the
regulation.
The head of the World Trade Organization reportedly has asked
Brussels to reconsider the ban on imports from deforested areas,
saying the EU has not yet issued clear compliance guidelines.
The World Trade Organization declined a request for comment from The
Associated Press.
Lobbying groups representing businesses that will be impacted — such
as animal feed and tire producers — have also voiced concerns about
the regulation's strict traceability requirements and a flawed
information entry and database system where companies need to submit
their due diligence statements.
How do conservationists hope the EUDR will help protect forests?
Europe ranked second in the amount of deforestation caused by its
imports in 2017, according to a 2021 World Wildlife Fund report.
Environmental organizations have said the EUDR will help reduce
that.
In Brazil — where wildfires have rage d during a record drought — 25
environmental groups voiced their support for the regulations in a
letter sent to the president of the European Commission, Ursula von
der Leyen, saying companies and government offices were preparing to
implement the new requirements.
"This groundbreaking regulation is the most ambitious legislative
attempt to tackle these issues worldwide," the Brazilian
organizations wrote in their letter. “Every second counts to protect
human lives today, as well as humankind’s future, avoid climate
change, and stop biodiversity losses.”
The regulation could also help set a precedent for other countries
considering legislation that would have a similar effect, said
Julian Oram, a policy leader for international environmental
organization Mighty Earth.
“It’s a catalyst for governments around the world to say enough is
enough: That we can't continue to import or produce goods linked to
deforestation, that there has to be a cutoff point— and that is
now.”
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Associated Press journalist Aniruddha Ghosal in Hanoi contributed to
this report.
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