Latest News

EU Parliament offers final approval to deforestation law

The European Parliament gave its last approval on Tuesday to a oneyear hold-up of Europe's landmark logging law, which from Dec. 2025 will prohibit the import of beef, soy and other items connected to the destruction of forests.

The lawmakers' approval paves the way for European Union countries to also approve the hold-up, which they are anticipated to do this week - as a rule, with no modifications. After that, the postponement will pass into law.

WHY IT is necessary

The delay to the world-first policy to resolve logging is a blow to the EU's green agenda, which is facing pushback amongst markets from car manufacturers, to airline companies, who say EU measures to eliminate climate modification are too burdensome.

However the hold-up provides relief to the companies and countries that had opposed the policy. Brazil and Indonesia had actually branded the law protectionist and said it could omit countless bad, small farmers from the EU market.

The EU law, which was initially due to work from Dec. 30, 2024, will need companies and traders putting soy, beef, coffee, palm oil and other items onto the EU market to offer proof their supply chain does not contribute to deforestation.

EU farmers would also be prohibited from exporting items cultivated on deforested or broken down woodlands.

CONTEXT

EU legislators had tried to likewise damage parts of the policy, however those propositions were shelved in negotiations with EU nations. The 2 sides struck a deal previously this month to merely postpone the law by 12 months.

BY THE NUMBERS

At least 120 million metric tons of CO2 emissions were triggered by deforestation connected with EU commodity imports in 2021-2022, according to campaign group International Witness.

(source: Reuters)