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EU removes leather from anti-deforestation law after industry pressure

By Thomson Reuters May 4, 2026 | 5:05 AM

BRUSSELS, May 4 (Reuters) – The European Commission has decided to exclude imports of leather from its anti-deforestation ​law, it said on ‌Monday, after a campaign by industry groups which argued that production does not incentivise the cattle farming that fuels forest destruction.

The exemption ‌will ​remove leather, hides and ⁠skins from the ⁠world-first law, which from December will require companies selling goods including soy, coffee, beef and palm oil into ​the EU to prove their products did not cause deforestation.

The EU’s ⁠decision confirmed a ⁠Reuters report from last week.

“The ​main driver of deforestation is the ​expansion of agricultural land linked to ‌the production of seven commodities covered by the regulation – cattle, wood, cocoa, soy, palm oil, coffee, rubber, and ⁠some of their derived products,” said the European Commission in a statement.”

“Under the Regulation, ⁠any operator ‌or trader who places ⁠these commodities on the EU ​market, ‌or exports from it, must ​be ⁠able to prove that the products do not originate from recently deforested land or have contributed to forest degradation,” it added.

(Reporting by Kate Abnett;Editing by ​Sudip Kar-Gupta)