Tuesday, April 29, 2025

See parts of the letter that Brazil sent to Europe regarding the anti-deforestation regulation. And a study associating deforestation with international trade and consumption patterns.

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Wednesday, 18 September 2024.

European Union’s anti-deforestation regulation handed again in 2022 and was adopted in June 2023, permitting firms 18 months to adapt. The regulation applies to a variety of merchandise, together with soy, cattle, espresso, cocoa, rubber, palm oil, timber and its derivatives, comparable to beef, printed paper, furnishings, chocolate and tyres. Click here and go to Annex 1 for the complete list of derived products.

Listed here are some components of the letter despatched by Brazil to the European Fee on 11 September 2024.

Dear Commissioners and High Representative,

The implementation of the European Union’s anti-deforestation regulation (EUDR), scheduled to begin at the end of 2024, is a matter of serious concern for various Brazilian export sectors and for the Brazilian government. Brazil is one of the EU’s main suppliers of most of the products targeted by the legislation… To avoid any impact on our trade relations, we request that the EU refrain from implementing the EUDR at the end of 2024 and urgently reassess its approach to the matter…

The EUDR was designed without a proper understanding of the production and export processes of different products and of the realities on the ground in each country. Representatives of the Brazilian sectors affected by the EUDR have visited Brussels and explained…

We acknowledge that environmental challenges transcend national borders… Internationally, sustainable development is an unequivocal priority for Brazil…

However, we consider that unilateral, coercive, and punitive measures erode trust in nationally determined contributions when used as a pretext for imposing trade barriers. Positive incentives are more effective in promoting environmental protection by adequately rewarding and remunerating those who provide environmental services. Financial assistance to developing countries frees up resources for poverty reduction investments and supports the implementation of environmental commitments related to financing, capacity building, and technology transfer, including the allocation of USD 100 billion per year for environmental preservation in developing countries, in line with the Paris Agreement on Climate Change. …

We hope to count on the European Union and its member states as partners in addressing these common challenges, on the basis of dialogue, cooperation, and mutual respect, avoiding the imposition of barriers to our bilateral trade.

Letter was collectively signed by the Brazilian Minister of Overseas Affairs and Minister of Agriculture and Livestock.

Picture under was taken from the 2021 examine “Mapping the deforestation footprint of nations reveals growing threat to tropical forests” by Keiichiro Kanemoto and Nguyen Tien Hoang from the Analysis Institute for Humanity and Nature, Kyoto, Japan.

Utilizing 15 years of distant sensing information, they related deforestation with worldwide commerce and consumption patterns and concluded “We find that, while many developed countries, China and India have obtained net forest gains domestically, they have also increased the deforestation embodied in their imports, of which tropical forests are the most threatened biome.”

Tomorrow the ultimate a part of this text.

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