Once our primary forests are gone, they’re gone forever

 

 

At the 2021 United Nations Climate Conference in Glasgow, 145 nations made a pledge to halt and reverse deforestation and land degradation by 2030. Almost three years later, the call for transformative action is ringing hollow.

Globally, 6.37 million hectares of forest were lost in 2023, and targets to reduce deforestation were missed in almost all tropical regions, according to the 2024 Forest Declaration Assessment. Even more forest — 62.6 million hectares — became degraded (meaning an area fell to a lower ecological integrity class) in 2022. Overall, the world is 45% off its deforestation targets, and, in a frustrating twist, forest-loss levels have risen above a 2018-20 baseline since the pledge.

The core driver of deforestation is commodity production. Over the past two decades, 57% of permanent forest loss has been caused by the production of agricultural commodities such as beef, soy and palm oil, with about 20% to 25% of that production being exported. Demand for these products has only increased. The European Union and China were responsible for 40% of all deforestation embodied in the direct trade of agricultural commodities from 2020-22.

Efforts to eliminate deforestation from supply chains have largely been voluntary corporate commitments. While these pledges have steered the conversation, it’s clear that they aren’t enough to deliver results at a sufficient pace.

That’s why policy experts and forest advocates alike have been pushing for demand-side regulation — essentially a ban on the import of deforestation-linked goods — in consumer countries for years.

Though great strides have been made toward this, nations now seem to be dragging their feet. Considering this latest report, it looks particularly egregious. Take, for example, the E.U.’s Deforestation Regulation (EUDR), which covers seven commodities: cattle, cocoa, coffee, oil palm, rubber, soya, and wood and their derivatives (glycerol, soybeans, leather etc.). Due to come into force from Dec. 30, 2024, for medium and large operators and traders, the new rules will require companies trading in those products to ensure the goods don’t result from recent deforestation (including legal clearing), degradation or breaches of local environmental and social laws.

Yet, in a shock twist at the start of October, the European Commission adopted a proposal to delay the implementation of the EUDR for another 12 months, a week after saying it had no plans to do so. The postponement needs to be approved by the European Parliament to become official. Meanwhile, supermarkets have taken to urging the United Kingdom to press ahead with its own long-promised anti-deforestation law, saying holdups are causing market uncertainty and undermining retailers’ own efforts.

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