BRUSSELS—As the European Parliament prepares for a vote on amendments to the European Deforestation Regulation (EUDR), rubber industry organizations have voiced concern over the impact of certain proposals on the industry.
MEPs are convening Nov. 14 to vote European Commission (EC) amendments—essentially to delay and facilitate implementation of the EUDR—as well as subsequent MEP amendments that would significantly alter the regulation.
Last month, the European Union Council approved the EC's proposals to move the regulation's date-of-entry into application from Dec.30, 2024, to Dec. 30, 2025, with small and micro-enterprises having an extended deadline of June 30, 2026.
However, a new set of MEP amendments in November, propose more potentially significant changes to the EUDR as originally drafted by the EC.
These latest proposals, for instance, aim to remove responsibilities from traders down the supply-chain and introduce a "value-chain that polices itself."
A further MEP proposal concerns the introduction of a new "no or negligible" risk category covering regulated commodities originating from certain regions.