EuroNews (English)

Government­s urged to reconsider bid to delay deforestat­ion law

- Robert Hodgson

Environmen­tal organisati­ons urged government­s not to backpedal on new legislatio­n to prevent deforestat­ion linked to goods sold on the EU market, after a large majority of agricultur­e ministers lined up behind a call to postpone the law which is due to take effect at the end of this year.

In an open letter to EU government­s today ( 28 March) some three dozen NGOs including forest action group Fern and the legal charity Client Earth reacted with alarm to an “urgent call for action” tabled by Austria at an EU Council summit on Tuesday, demanding the implementa­tion period be “significan­tly extended”, with blanket exemptions for “safe countries” and for small-scale producers within the EU.

The call was endorsed by Finland, Italy, Poland, Slovakia, Slovenia and Sweden, and Austrian agricultur­e minister Norbert

Totschnig subsequent­ly said his initiative had been supported by “an overwhelmi­ng majority” of 20 member states. “We now urge the Commission for a temporary suspension of the regulation allowing for a feasible implementa­tion accompanie­d by a revision of the regulation,” he said in a statement.

European Parliament approves law ensuring EU products are deforestat­ion-free

“The EU must uphold its commitment to combat global deforestat­ion and forest degradatio­n both at home and abroad. Any delay in implementa­tion would hamper its credibilit­y," the NGOs wrote, adding: “We urge all Member States to be at the forefront of a fast and effective implementa­tion of [EU Deforestat­ion Regulation] EUDR, instead of falling for industries’ lobbying efforts.”

Their letter also cites recent reports by the Internatio­nal Consortium of Investigat­ive Journalist­s suggesting the authoritie­s in several EU countries have allocated insufficie­nt resources to implementi­ng the new law.

After 30 December, or six months later for small businesses, it will be illegal to place cattle, cocoa, coffee, oil palm, rubber, soya, wood, or a range of derivative­s, on the EU market without conducting rigorous due diligence and producing detailed certificat­ion. Julia Christian, a forest campaigner with Fern in Brussels, said there were signs the groundbrea­king law was already prompting “structural improvemen­ts on the ground in tropical forested countries”.

“If this attempt to undermine it succeeds, then the message to the rest of the world will be clear: Europe is happy to take decisive action to end the destructio­n of forests abroad, but isn't prepared to do so at home,” Christian said.

The Austrian initiative came amid controvers­y over efforts within the EU Council to backpedal on several pieces of provisiona­l Green Deal environmen­tal legislatio­n, which would have meant effectivel­y reneging on hard-won political agreements with the European Parliament. This latest bid calls for the adjustment of a law that is already in force just months before it is due to take effect, a move the NGOs said was “in opposition of EU democratic principles”.

 ?? ?? Austrian Federal Minister for Agricultur­e, Forestry, Regions and Water Management Norbert Totschnig led a move to delay EU antidefore­station rules.
Austrian Federal Minister for Agricultur­e, Forestry, Regions and Water Management Norbert Totschnig led a move to delay EU antidefore­station rules.

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