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US paper industry asks Trump to seek lighter EU deforestation rules

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on February 18, 2025

3 min read

· Last updated: January 26, 2026

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US paper industry lobbying for lighter EU deforestation rules - Global Banking & Finance Review
This image represents the U.S. paper and pulp industry's efforts to persuade the Trump administration to negotiate lighter EU deforestation rules, aiming for a deforestation-free status that eases export compliance. The article discusses the impact of EU regulations on U.S. companies.
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By Richa Naidu and Kate Abnett LONDON/BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The U.S. paper and pulp industry is lobbying President Donald Trump's administration to ask the EU to declare the United States deforestation

US Paper Industry Urges Trump to Advocate for EU Deforestation Policy Changes

By Richa Naidu and Kate Abnett

LONDON/BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The U.S. paper and pulp industry is lobbying President Donald Trump's administration to ask the EU to declare the United States deforestation-free, a step that could make it easier for exporters to meet the bloc's new environmental rules.

From December, the European Union's anti-deforestation policy will ban imports of commodities linked to forest destruction. Brussels already delayed the policy's launch by a year following complaints from trade partners including Brazil, Indonesia and the Biden administration in the United States.

"A delay does not solve our concerns with the regulation's complex requirements and significant technical barriers," Heidi Brock, CEO of the American Forest and Paper Association (AF&PA), told Reuters, saying the EU law would impose "costly and unnecessary obligations" on U.S. companies.

"We are urging President Trump and his trade advisors to include this on the list of items to negotiate with the European Union to ensure the U.S. is recognised as a country that wisely manages its forest resources and must be recognised as not contributing to deforestation," Brock said in emailed comments.

That goes beyond a call by Trump's nominee to run the Commerce Department, Howard Lutnick, for the U.S. to be classed as "low-risk" - the EU policy's least-stringent level. That would still require U.S. companies to conduct due diligence and face inspections.

The Office of the U.S. Trade Representative, U.S. Commerce Department and European Commission did not respond to requests for comment. A spokesperson for the Trump transition team who has been handling media inquiries for Lutnick did not respond to a request for comment.

The EU policy will categorise countries as high, standard or low risk - with imports from "low-risk" countries facing lighter compliance requirements.

However, the law does not contain a category of countries deemed to be deforestation-free - despite EU lawmakers attempting unsuccessfully to add a new "no risk" category of countries which would face even lighter rules.

Any changes to the EU law would require a legal proposal from the Commission, and approval from EU lawmakers and member states.

SUPPLY CHAIN REQUIREMENTS

Europe's world-first deforestation law will require companies and traders placing cattle, cocoa, coffee, palm oil, rubber, soy and wood products onto the EU market to provide proof their supply chain does not contribute to deforestation, or face fines and potentially have their products turned away.

The aim is to ensure that European consumers are not fuelling deforestation, from the Amazon to Southeast Asia. At least 120 million metric tons of CO2 emissions were caused by deforestation associated with EU commodity imports in 2021-2022, according to campaign group Global Witness.

U.S. forest product exports to the EU are valued at more than $3.5 billion, and the U.S. is Europe's biggest supplier of speciality pulp used to make diapers and menstrual products, according to AF&PA.

The AF&PA said U.S. pulp and paper mills cannot comply with the EU policy's traceability requirements.

"The leftover materials from sawmills and forest residues our industry uses are regularly blended multiple times throughout the production process," Brock said. "This makes tracing each individual wood chip from the original forest plot of land to a final product effectively impossible."

(Reporting by Richa Naidu and Kate Abnett; Additional reporting by Alexandra Alper; Editing by Simon Jessop and Helen Popper)

Key Takeaways

  • US paper industry lobbies Trump for EU policy changes.
  • EU's new rules ban imports linked to deforestation.
  • US seeks deforestation-free status for easier compliance.
  • EU policy categorizes countries by deforestation risk.
  • US exports to EU valued at over $3.5 billion.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the main request from the US paper industry?
The US paper industry is lobbying for President Trump to ask the EU to declare the United States deforestation-free, which would ease compliance with the upcoming EU anti-deforestation policy.
What does the EU's anti-deforestation policy entail?
Starting in December, the EU's policy will ban imports of commodities linked to forest destruction, requiring proof of a deforestation-free supply chain for various products.
What are the categories established by the EU policy?
The EU policy categorizes countries as high, standard, or low risk, with imports from low-risk countries facing lighter compliance requirements.
Why does the US paper industry struggle with the EU policy?
The American Forest and Paper Association stated that US pulp and paper mills cannot comply with the EU policy's traceability requirements due to the blending of materials throughout the production process.
What is the economic significance of US forest product exports to the EU?
US forest product exports to the EU are valued at over $3.5 billion, making the US the largest supplier of specialty pulp used in products like diapers and menstrual products.

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