Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

EU deforestat­ion laws reach coffee

2nd largest producer Vietnam struggles to adapt to measures

- ANIRUDDHA GHOSAL

BUON MA THUOT, Vietnam — Le Van Tam is no stranger to how the vagaries of global trade can determine the fortunes of small coffee farmers like him.

He first planted coffee in a patch of land outside Buon Ma Thuot city in Vietnam’s Central Highland region in 1995. For years, his focus was on quantity, not quality.

Tam used ample amounts of fertilizer and pesticides to boost his yields, and global prices determined how well he did.

Then, in 2019, he teamed up with Le Dinh Tu of Aeroco Coffee, an organic exporter to Europe and the U.S., and adopted more sustainabl­e methods, turning his coffee plantation (field) into a a sun-dappled forest.

The coffee grows side-byside with tamarind trees that add nitrogen to the soil and provide support for black pepper vines.

Grass helps keep the soil moist and the mix of plants discourage­s pest outbreaks. The pepper also adds to Tam’s income.

“The output hasn’t increased, but the product’s value has,” he said.

In the 1990s, Tam was among thousands of Vietnamese farmers who planted about 2.5 million acres of coffee, mostly robusta, to take advantage of high global prices.

By 2000, Vietnam had become the second-largest producer of coffee, which provides a tenth of its export income.

Vietnam is hoping that farmers like Tam will benefit from a potential reordering of how coffee is traded due to more stringent European laws to stop deforestat­ion.

The European Deforestat­ion Regulation or EUDR will outlaw sales of products like coffee from December 30, 2024, if companies can’t prove they are not linked with deforestat­ion.

The new rules don’t just seek to reduce risks of illegal logging and its scope is wide: It will apply to cocoa, coffee, soy, palm oil, wood, rubber and cattle.

To sell those products in Europe big companies will have to provide evidence showing they come from land where forests haven’t been cut since 2020. Smaller companies have till July 2025 to do so.

Deforestat­ion is the second-biggest source of carbon emissions after fossil fuels.

Europe ranked second behind China in the amount of deforestat­ion caused by its imports in 2017, according to a 2021 World Wildlife Fund report.

If implemente­d well, the EUDR could help reduce this, especially if the more stringent standards for tracing where products come from becomes the “new normal,” Helen Bellfield a policy director at Global Canopy told The Associated Press in an interview.

It’s not fail-safe. Companies can just sell products that don’t meet the new requiremen­ts elsewhere, without reducing deforestat­ion. Thousands of small farmers unable to provide the potentiall­y expensive data could be left out.

Much depends on how countries and companies react to the new laws, Bellfield said.

Countries must help smaller farmers by building national systems to ensure their exports are traceable.

Otherwise, companies may just buy from very large farms that can prove they have complied.

Already, orders for Ethiopian grown coffee have fallen. And Peru lacks the capacity to provide informatio­n needed for coffee and cocoa grown in the Peruvian Amazon.

This is on top of other challenges, which in Vietnam include worsening droughts and receding ground water levels.

“There will be winners and losers,” Bellfield said.

Vietnam can’t afford to lose — Europe is the largest market for its coffee, comprising 40% of its coffee exports.

Six weeks after the EUDR was approved, Vietnam’s agricultur­e ministry started working to prepare coffee growing provinces for the shift.

It has since rolled out a national plan that includes a database of where crops are grown and mechanisms to make this informatio­n traceable.

The Southeast Asian nation has long promoted more sustainabl­e farming methods, viewing laws like the EUDR as “an inevitable change,” according to an August 2023 agricultur­e ministry communique.

The EUDR could help accelerate such a transforma­tion, according to agricultur­e minister Le Minh Hoang.

Tam and Tu, his export partner, were quick to adapt.

Even if the costs are higher, Tu said, they can get better prices for their high quality coffee.

“We must choose the highest quality. Otherwise, we will always be laborers,” Tu said, while sipping a cup of his favorite coffee at his company’s coffee processing factory adjoining Tam’s farm. This is where trucks laden with red coffee cherries, both robusta and arabica, arrive from other farms, where the pulp of the fruit is removed and beans of coffee are laid out on tables to dry in the sun.

Tu already has certificat­es from internatio­nal agencies for sustainabi­lity that will enable him to deal with the EUDR.

Such certificat­es typically address the issue of deforestat­ion, although some tweaks may be needed, said David Hadley, program director for regulatory impacts at the nonprofit group Preferred by Nature in Costa Rica.

Ensuring that Vietnam’s roughly half a million small farmers, who produce about 85% of its coffee, are able to collect and provide data showing their farms did not cause deforestat­ion remains a challenge.

Some may struggle to use smartphone­s to collect geolocatio­n coordinate­s. Small exporters need to set up systems to prevent other uncertifie­d products from being mixed with coffee that meets EUDR requiremen­ts, said Loan Le of Internatio­nal Economics Consulting.

Farmers also will need documents proving they have complied with national laws for land use, environmen­tal protection and labor, Le said. Moreover, coffee’s long value chain — from producing beans to collecting them and processing them — requires digital systems to ensure records are error-free.

Brazil, the world’s largest coffee producer, is better placed, said Bellfield, since its coffee grows on plantation­s that are far away from forests and it has a relatively well organized supply chain. Also, Brazilian-grown coffee is most likely to meet the EUDR requiremen­ts, according to a 2024 Brazilian study, because much of it is exported to the EU, Brazil has fewer small farmers, and about a third of its coffee growing acreage already has some kind of sustainabi­lity certificat­ion.

The EUDR has acknowledg­ed concerns for less well-prepared suppliers by giving them more time and said the European government will work with affected countries to “enable the transition” while “paying particular attention” to the needs of small holders and Indigenous communitie­s. A review in 2028 will also look at effects on smallholde­rs.

“Despite this we still anticipate it being costly and difficult for small holder farming communitie­s,” she said.

 ?? (AP/Hau Dinh) ?? Farmer Le Van Tam tends coffee plants at a coffee farm in Dak Lak province, Vietnam, in early February.
(AP/Hau Dinh) Farmer Le Van Tam tends coffee plants at a coffee farm in Dak Lak province, Vietnam, in early February.

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