This photo shows aerial view of deforestation of the native Cerrado (savanna) in Sao Desiderio, west Bahia state, Brazil, taken on Sept 25, 2023. (PHOTO / AFP)
BRASILIA — Brazilian officials said on Wednesday new legislation enacted by the European Union to ban the import of goods linked to deforestation was complicating negotiations of a trade deal with South America's Mercosur bloc.
EU lawmakers approved the regulations in April requiring producers of soy, beef, coffee, wood and other commodities to provide proof their supply chain is free of deforestation.
Even though the onus on complying with the new rules will be on the EU importers, Brazilian Foreign Trade Secretary Tatiana Prazeres said the commercial impact for exporters in increased costs and bureaucracy cannot be ignored in the trade talks
"We must not allow this legislation to disrupt a trade agreement between Mercosur and the 27 countries of the European Union," Brazil's Vice-President Geraldo Alckmin said at a conference organized by soy processors' group Abiove.
READ MORE: Deforestation in Brazil's Amazon falls 66% in August
Even though the onus on complying with the new rules will be on the EU importers, Brazilian Foreign Trade Secretary Tatiana Prazeres said the commercial impact for exporters in increased costs and bureaucracy cannot be ignored in the trade talks.
"You cannot offer in one hand what you are taking away with the other," she said at the conference.
Prazeres added, however, that the EU-Mercosur negotiations are an opportunity to influence the implementation of the deforestation rules and to find ways to compensate with trade concessions that maintain a balance in market access.
"They really don't like the deforestation directive but we are trying to reassure them that the implementation will take into account some of their concerns," a European diplomat said.
Abiove says the soy sector complies with a moratorium on farming in deforested areas and Brazil already regulates deforestation under its forest code that allows some areas to be cleared. Farms in the Amazon have to conserve 80 percent of their forests.
Both Prazeres and the Foreign Ministry's Economic and Finance Secretary Mauricio Lyrio said they expect to be able to announce the long-awaited conclusion to the trade negotiations with the EU at a Mercosur summit on Dec 7.
READ MORE: Brazil's Amazon deforestation surges to 15-year high
They reiterated the Brazilian government's position that the EU deforestation law is protectionist, arbitrary and incompatible with World Trade Organization (WTO) rules.
Lyrio said they asked for more time to implement the deforestation regulations at a meeting in Brussels last week. Companies have until Jan 1, 2025 to comply with the new law.
Environment Minister Marina Silva said only 2 percent of farmers produce from illegally deforested land, and President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva's government has cut the deforestation rate in the Amazon by 49.5 percent since taking office this year.