EU lawmakers approve one-year delay to deforestation law
Businesses get more time to comply as debate over policy intensifies
The European Parliament on Wednesday voted in favour of delaying the implementation of the European Union's deforestation law by one year, reported Reuters.
Companies will have an additional year to comply with new EU rules to prevent deforestation, the European Parliament said in a statement.
Large operators and traders must respect the obligations of this regulation as of December 30, 2026, and micro and small enterprises from June 30, 2027.
The ban on imports of cocoa, palm oil and other commodities linked to forest destruction is a key pillar in the EU's green agenda.
The world-first policy aims to end the 10% of global deforestation fuelled by EU consumption of imported soy, beef, palm oil and other products, but has become a politically contested part of Europe's green agenda.
But it faces pushback from some industries and countries that say the measures are costly and logistically challenging.
Critics have previously warned of environmental setbacks.
Food majors such as Nestle, Ferrero and Olam Agri back the law. They warned last month that delaying it endangers forests worldwide and is contrary to the EU's aim of simplifying business rules.
Advocacy group Business For Nature called the delay "a profound failure of political courage".