A forest beside a cabbage farm in Thailand. A new European Union law makes it mandatory for commodities sold in the bloc to be grown on land that is not deforested. -AFP PIC
A forest beside a cabbage farm in Thailand. A new European Union law makes it mandatory for commodities sold in the bloc to be grown on land that is not deforested. -AFP PIC

IMPORTERS of coffee to the European Union are starting to scale back purchases from small farmers in Africa and beyond as they prepare for a landmark EU law that will ban the sale of goods linked to the destruction of forests.

Industry sources said the cost and difficulty of complying with the EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR), which comes into force late next year, meant it was already having unintended impacts that could in time reshape global commodities markets.

Four cited a drying-up of orders in recent months for coffee from Ethiopia, where some five million farming families rely on the crop.

They warned that sourcing strategies being adopted by companies in advance of the law risk increasing small scale farmer poverty and raising prices for EU consumers, while also undermining the EUDR's impact on forest conservation.

"I see no way of buying significant quantities of Ethiopian coffee going forward," said Johannes Dengler, an executive at German roaster Dallmayr, which buys about one per cent of the world's exported coffee.

Because beans he orders now could find their way into coffee products sold in the bloc in 2025, they must be EUDR-compliant, he says, even though implementing acts for the law have yet to be finalised.

Under EUDR, importers of commodities like coffee, cocoa, soy, palm, cattle, timber and rubber — and products that use them — must be able to prove their goods did not originate from deforested land, or face hefty fines.

Coffee major JDE Peets said it might exclude some smaller producing countries from its supply chain as early as March if it hasn't "found and implemented a solution with them" by that date.

Deforestation is the second leading cause of climate change after burning of fossil fuels.

The European Commission said it has several initiatives to help producing countries and smallholders comply with the EUDR, including one launched at COP28 where the EU and member states pledged €70 million to that end.

It added that some smallholders see the EUDR as an opportunity, especially if accompanied by EU support measures, as it will help them meet growing global demand for sustainably sourced products.

The EUDR requires companies to digitally map their supply chains down to the plot where the raw materials were grown, which could potentially involve tracing millions of small farms in remote regions. Moreover, because companies often don't deal directly with farmers, they could be relying in part on data provided by multiple local middlemen, some of whom they also might not deal with directly or trust.

In some developing countries, patchy Internet coverage makes mapping difficult, while traders and industry experts say land rights disputes, weak law enforcement and clan conflict can make it dangerous to even seek data on farm ownership.

"Nowadays from Europe no one is interested in our coffee," a representative from Ethiopia's Oromia Coffee Farmers' Cooperatives Union told a recent World Coffee Alliance webinar.

He said, most Ethiopian coffee farmers have never heard of the EUDR and that even educated villagers would struggle to collect the required data in time.

Coffee generates 30 to 35 per cent of Ethiopia's total export earnings, with almost a quarter sold to the EU.

"Roasters are moving to big rich Brazilian farmers. It's really shocking," said a trader at one coffee trade major.

"In risky countries, there's smallholders and middlemen who are illiterate, and we're coming to them with a law that even Europeans don't understand."

But, cutting out small-scale farmers or whole countries will not be feasible if they are major commodity producers.

Ivory Coast and Ghana, for example, produce nearly 70 per cent of the world's cocoa, while 60 per cent of coffee comes from Brazil and Vietnam.

Indonesia and Malaysia grow almost 90 per cent of the world's palm oil, a commodity used in everything from pizza and lipstick to biofuels.

As such, some major companies say they will redirect raw materials they cannot reliably trace in those countries to non-EU markets, while sending compliant goods to the EU.

Golden Agri Resources, one of the world's largest palm oil companies, told Reuters "segregated supply chains will be required" to implement the EUDR. A source at palm oil major Musim Mas concurred.


The writers are from Reuters

The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect those of the New Straits Times