Overview
In the last quarter of 2021, the United States, the European Union, and the United Kingdom introduced or adopted measures aimed at eliminating illegal deforestation throughout the world. All three measures recognize the harmful effects of deforestation with regard to climate change and seek to address such effects by prohibiting certain commodities produced on (illegally) deforested land from being placed on their respective markets. However, there are significant differences among the measures that warrant closer examination as they could have market access implications for companies.
In an article titled "Comparing recent deforestation measures of the United States, European Union, and United Kingdom," published in Environmental Law and Management, Steptoe's Jeffrey Weiss, Katy Shin, Eva Monard, Simon Tilling and Byron Maniatis set out the key similarities and differences across the US, EU, and UK anti-deforestation measures, building on Steptoe's previous posts on the proposed Fostering Overseas Rule of Law and Environmentally Sound Trade Act of 2021 ('the FOREST Act') in the United States, the European Union's 'Proposal for a Regulation on Deforestation-free Products', and the United Kingdom’s Environment Act 2021.