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Coffee traders wary of EU law banning beans grown on deforested land


FILE — Coffee producer Neide Peixoto selects coffee beans at the Santo Antonio farm in Santo Antonio do Amparo, Minas Gerais, Brazil on May 15, 2024.
FILE — Coffee producer Neide Peixoto selects coffee beans at the Santo Antonio farm in Santo Antonio do Amparo, Minas Gerais, Brazil on May 15, 2024.

SANTOS, Brazil— Coffee importers have increased the pace of shipments recently, seeking to avoid problems after December when the European Union's Regulation on Deforestation Free Products (EUDR) enters into force, said the International Coffee Organization (ICO) this week.

ICO Executive Director Vanusia Nogueira said coffee stocks at producing countries are falling as importers rush to send the beans to countries in Europe, ahead of the new legislation that will deny entrance of agricultural products produced on
deforested land.

"Importers are speeding up shipments because there are questions about the law that the Europeans didn't answer yet," said Nogueira on the sidelines of the International Coffee Seminar 2024 in Santos, Brazil.

"And who knows if we are going to have surprises?" she said. The European Union is the largest market for coffee in the world, while the beans are produced in tropical countries. Nogueira said there is an expectation that the European Union would give an exemption on compliance during a certain period until producing countries and traders are ready to work with the new legislation, but that is not certain.

She said countries such as Brazil, Colombia and Costa Rica are more prepared to work with the EUDR, which requires certification that the coffee was not produced in deforested land, while small farmers in African countries would face more
difficulties.

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