"Anyway, the general angst of Westerners for other people's forests has inspired them to instate various laws to Protect Our Planet's Trees. One such law is the European Union Timber Regulation (EUTR), which passed in 2010.
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This new law would target wood, yes, but it would also go after other products like beef, cocoa, soy, palm oil, coffee, tyres, chocolate, leather and furniture. Anybody bringing these commodities to market in the EU should have to "prove that the products do not originate from recently deforested land or have contributed to forest degradation." This new draft legislation would really put a stop to deforestation, they thought, and so in May 2023 - largely out sight and with nobody paying attention - the EU Parliament and the member states made the EU Regulation on Deforestation Free Products the 1,115th regulation passed that year.
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That feeling did not last very long. As I write this, basically nobody thinks the Deforestation Regulation is a good idea any longer. Olaf Scholz, the German Chancellor, is against it, as are (according to Welt 20 other EU heads of government (the EU only has 27 member states). The United States thinks it is a bad idea and all of South America thinks it is a terrible idea. Even the Greens think it is stupid now. Still more amazing, a lot of people in Brussels in the very same legislative and executive bodies that passed this law in 2023, have now also decided that their own law is shit."
Trechos retirados de "How the European Union passed a brave new law to protect our planet's forests, only to realise that it is a logistical and bureaucratic nightmare that nobody wants"
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