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Eleven countries demand EU weakens deforestation law further, document shows

Eleven countries demand EU weakens deforestation law further, document shows

By Kate Abnett

BRUSSELS (May 26) - According to a document obtained by, 11 governments are urging the European Union to delay or weaken its upcoming deforestation law.

This policy, a world first, aims to stop the 10% global deforestation caused by EU imports of soy, beef and palm oil, among other products. However, it has become a controversial part of Europe's environmental agenda.

After complaints from Brazil and the U.S. and a reduction in reporting rules, the EU has already delayed its launch for a year, until Dec. 2025. The Commission announced last week that it would spare most countries from the strictest checks.

A group of eleven countries led by Austria, Luxembourg and Germany, have demanded that the European Commission further simplify the rules and delay the application date.

"The requirements placed on farmers and forests remain high, or even impossible to implement. The countries' paper, that the EU agriculture ministers in Brussels will be discussing on Monday, said the requirements are "disproportionate" to the regulation’s goal.

The paper was also signed by Bulgaria, Croatia the Czech Republic, Finland Italy Latvia, Portugal, Romania, Slovenia and Slovenia.

The EU policy will require that operators who place soy, beef and palm oil on the EU market as well as cocoa, coffee, and cocoa butter, provide due diligence reports proving these commodities do not contribute to deforestation.

Exports to the EU would be subject to due diligence, causing concern in other countries about their industries.

Non-compliance could result in fines of up to 4 percent of the company's EU turnover.

The government proposed amending the law to exempt countries with very low deforestation risks from customs inspections and track the origin of their goods.

A spokesperson for the Commission did not respond immediately to a comment request. (Reporting and editing by Kate Abnett)

(source: Reuters)