Simplification Must Not Mean Weakening: Why the EUDR and other Environmental Legislation Must Stay Strong
Both ENDS warns that the current debate on “simplification” of EU environmental law must not become an excuse to weaken or postpone urgently needed safeguards. In earlier contributions to the drafting of the EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR), Both ENDS relayed the voices of local and Indigenous forest-dependent peoples, who consistently urged the EU to take responsibility for the massive deforestation linked to European imports. They underlined how this deforestation destroys biodiversity, undermines climate stability, and erodes their rights, livelihoods and cultures.
The EUDR was adopted in response to these calls and represents a crucial step in aligning EU consumption with global sustainability. Yet the ongoing discussion about revising or “streamlining” its requirements risks undoing years of progress. Any postponement or dilution would come at a very high price: continued large-scale forest loss, deeper human rights violations, and mounting carbon emissions. Local communities, who are already on the frontline of deforestation and climate change, cannot afford further delays.
Both ENDS stresses that EU legislation such as the EUDR is not excessive bureaucracy but a means of providing legal certainty, ensuring fair competition, and enabling real accountability across complex global supply chains. Watering down these rules would penalise companies that have already invested in compliance while rewarding those that ignore sustainability concerns.
The priority should not be deregulation but effective implementation, enforcement, and support for those actors, especially Indigenous peoples and community organisations, who defend forests daily at great personal risk. The EU must invest in digital innovation, capacity building, inspections, and meaningful engagement with stakeholders.
Testimonies from Both ENDS’ partners show the stark reality: Indigenous leaders facing intimidation and violence for resisting illegal logging; women losing access to clean water, food and medicinal plants as forests are cleared for soy and palm oil; and entire communities displaced without consent. In Brazil, for example, EU demand for beef and soy has directly driven deforestation in the Cerrado and Amazon, threatening iconic species such as the jaguar and giant anteater, while displacing traditional peoples (RAISG, 2022).
Scientific assessments confirm the urgency. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC, 2022) stresses that halting deforestation is among the most effective mitigation strategies available, while the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES, 2019) identifies land-use change as the leading driver of global biodiversity loss. Weakening or delaying the EUDR would therefore lock in further emissions, biodiversity decline, and human rights abuses.
The urgent message from also forest peoples is clear: ambition must not be sacrificed under the banner of simplification.
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