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EU Members Call for Revision of Anti-Deforestation Law

reviewed a document on Monday that said a group of EU nations led by Austria are calling for urgent changes to the bloc's new anti-deforestation legislation set to come into effect by the end of this year. They claim it will hurt European farmers.

The EU law is designed to eliminate deforestation from supply chains of beef, soybeans and other agricultural products that are sold in Europe so that European consumers do not contribute to the destruction global forests, from the Amazon to Southeast Asia.

These rules apply equally to European farmers who will be prohibited from exporting goods cultivated on deforested and degraded woodlands.

The document was signed by Finland. Italy, Poland. Slovakia, Slovenia, and Sweden.

In recent weeks, EU leaders have diluted numerous environmental policies to try and quell angry protests from farmers who have been criticising the EU's green policies for being excessive.

The document will be discussed by the agriculture ministers of EU countries at a meeting on Tuesday in Brussels.

The EU countries stated that producers from low-risk nations, which includes many EU members, should be exempted from the requirements. They also said the burden of certifying deforestation free products should be "dramatically reduced" in the EU.

According to the EU, if farmers switch from conventional to organic farming methods, they may have to increase their land area, but this would not be encouraged in countries with a lot of forests.

According to the letter, the EU's information system to track compliance will not be ready to implement when the law should take effect on December 30.

Virginijus Sinkevicius, EU environment commissioner who toured South American nations this month to calm their concerns about the policy, questioned the timing over complaints regarding a law which EU countries and legislators themselves approved last year.

Sinkevicius said at a press conference on Monday that it was "very strange" to find problems in legislation we have been discussing for two and a half years. He was referring to the EU Parliament elections in June. Reporting by Kate Abnett and Jake Spring from Brussels; editing by Costas Pitas

(source: Reuters)