EUDR delay calls mount as world turns on Commission’s plans

Malaysia is the latest territory to weigh into the debate today with Malaysian Palm Oil Council CEO Belvinder Kaur Sron urging the European Commission to “do the right thing”.

Her calls follow fresh warnings of disaster, should the EUDR be implemented as planned​ on 30 December.

“The EC should now do the right thing, and listen to the ever-growing calls for a delay to the EUDR,” said Kaur.

“A delay is now the only way to ensure small farmers are supported, to provide stability for businesses, EU Member States and governments around the world, and to avoid a chaotic implementation of EUDR.”

What’s the impact of EUDR?

The regulation is a non-tariff barrier that would add considerable cost and burden to the supply chain, while excluding smallholders from the EU market altogether, Kaur said.

Clear compliance guidelines had not been supplied, despite just four months until deadline, she continued.

Kaur also called for the EC to provide a genuine and wide-ranging exemption for smallholders to prevent supply chain exclusion.

There was a need for “specific” and “credible” criteria to ensure proven, sustainable commodities like Malaysian palm oil were identified as ‘low risk’ within the regulation.

Finally, it was requested the MSPO standard was recognised as a compliance tool for EUDR to ease market access for proven zero-deforestation palm oil.

Along with German chancellor Olaf Sholz this week calling for an EUDR delay​, ambassadors from 17 countries including Brazil, Ghana and Thailand, recently signed a letter to the EC in which they described the EUDR as “inherently discriminatory and punitive”.