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EU Parliament Delays Deforestation Law, With Far-right Backing. Nov 26, 2025

  • Writer: Ana Cunha-Busch
    Ana Cunha-Busch
  • Nov 25
  • 2 min read
A plot of land where conifers were felled by loggers in the Morvan regional reserve, in Brassy, central France, on September 3, 2021. HASSAN AYADI / AFP
A plot of land where conifers were felled by loggers in the Morvan regional reserve, in Brassy, central France, on September 3, 2021. HASSAN AYADI / AFP

By AFP - Agence France Presse


EU Parliament Delays Deforestation Law, With Far-right Backing


The European Parliament on Wednesday backed a new one-year delay to landmark anti-deforestation rules, in a vote pushed through by an alliance of centre-right and far-right lawmakers.


Already delayed by a year, the rollout of the landmark law banning imports of products driving deforestation will now be postponed to the end of 2026, under plans already backed by EU member states and endorsed by a majority of 402 to 250 lawmakers.


Parliament also backed a review of the legislation early next year -- before it even comes into force -- under a proposal endorsed by the conservative EPP and the far-right bloc, as well as part of the centrist group.


Adopted in 2023, the deforestation law, known as EUDR, was hailed by green groups as a breakthrough in the fight to protect nature and combat climate change.


The law bans goods produced using land deforested after December 2020, with at-risk items including anything from coffee to cocoa, soy, timber, palm oil, cattle, printing paper, and rubber.


But it has faced stiff opposition from trading partners, including Brazil and the United States, as well as some EU capitals, who argue businesses will suffer from more red tape and increased costs.


The vote marked the second time this month the EPP has drawn on far-right support to back weakening the bloc's environmental and human rights rules -- as part of a business-friendly drive to slash red tape.


Two weeks ago, parliament backed amending the EU's legislation on corporate sustainability, a law approved only last year that was hailed by green and civil society groups but loathed by firms.


Environmental campaign group Fern said Wednesday's vote was evidence that the EU's will to tackle "the stain of deforestation" in its supply chains has "crumbled".


"The endless carousel of attempts to revise and even destroy a law that was passed with a large democratic mandate two years ago is a farce," the group charged.


Parliament and member states need to hold a final round of negotiations before the adoption of the deforestation delay -- but the result is now a foregone conclusion.


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