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EU delays logging ban however disposes of modifications

Negotiators for EU organizations agreed a compromise on Tuesday on a ban on the import of products linked to deforestation, which will be postponed by a year but without changes proposed by EU legislators.

The European Commission in October proposed a 12-month hold-up till Dec. 30, 2025 after grievances from 20 EU countries, some companies and nations such as Brazil and Indonesia. EU governments backed the move.

However, EU legislators voted last month not just to postpone the EU Deforestation Regulation, but likewise to water it down by proposing a brand-new 'no danger' classification of countries with vastly reduced checks. These would principally have been EU members.

Mediators for EU federal governments and lawmakers satisfied late on Tuesday and agreed on the 12-month hold-up, but without any modifications to the existing rules.

Big operators and traders will have to respect the responsibilities from Dec. 30, 2025, and little enterprises 6 months later, a delay developed to allow business around the world to adjust.

The Commission devoted to assess whether requirements might be simplified for nations that have sustainable forest management practices.

An emergency break will likewise use if the online system for companies is not completely functional by end-December 2025 or if the country classification is not released at least six months previously.

The European Individuals's Party, the biggest parliamentary group, which promoted further changes, invited these add-ons.

The Greens group described the compromise of a delay without any amendments as a partial but substantial success.

The logging policy aims to root deforestation out of supply chains for beef, soy, wood, cocoa, palm oil, coffee and rubber sold in Europe, so that EU customers are not adding to the damage of forests from the Amazon to Southeast Asia.

It was hailed as a landmark in the battle versus climate change, however emerging market nations from Brazil to Indonesia state it is protectionist and might exclude millions of bad, small farmers from the EU market.

(source: Reuters)