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“The Commission’s proposal will need a major boost if the EU is to achieve its goals of stopping illegal logging and its adverse impacts on climate change, biodiversity loss and the rights of indigenous people. As it stands, this law would not give EU consumers any guarantees that the wood products they buy have been legally sourced and do not contribute to deforestation and forest degradation,” said the three environmental organisations.
Amendments tabled by MEPs strengthen the Commission proposal in a number of areas, including by:
Friends of the Earth, Greenpeace and WWF call on MEPs to support these changes.
Illegal logging, deforestation and forest degradation are accelerating climate change, causing the loss of hundreds of species and are costing the world up to $5 trillion a year (2). As one of the world’s largest timber markets, the EU is responsible for a large chunk of this figure.
The plenary vote in the European Parliament is provisionally scheduled for 23 April. The Agriculture Council is expected to adopt a common position before the end of the Czech EU Presidency in June.
(1) Conflict timber refers to timber that has been traded at some point by armed groups, rebel factions, soldiers or by a civilian administration involved in armed conflict to take advantage of conflict situations for personal gain.
(2) Pavan Sukhdev et al. (2008), The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity.