UK governments new Environment Law puts into doubt their commitments made at COP 26
UK new Environment Act could fail to tackle much of the country’s deforestation footprint abroad, despite the UK government’s claims of a ‘world-leading’ law and their role in securing the Glasgow Declaration on Forests to halt and reverse global deforestation by 2030.
The Department For Environment and Rural Affairs is consulting on new rules that will turn the high-level commitments on deforestation in the Environment Act into concrete requirements for companies. However, the consultation questions themselves give a worrying insight into government’s current thinking.
Rather than suggesting the UK act quickly to rein in its contribution to deforestation through its highest-risk commodities – such as cattle, soy, palm oil, cocoa and rubber – the document suggests that accountability for companies could be put off for years. This would be done by either only regulating one or two commodities, or delaying regulation for a broader set of commodities by up to five years.
“Under the government’s proposed rules, companies producing many everyday commodities like beef, leather and rubber will effectively still be given the green light to keep razing rainforests and selling their deforestation-tainted products to the UK public for several years to come. It will also delay important protections for indigenous peoples and local communities who are facing threats in trying to defend their land and forests.
Veronica Oakeshott, Head of Forests Policy and Advocacy at Global Witness
Our analysis shows that even under the most optimistic of the ‘phase-in’ scenarios mooted by the government, the rules would not even manage to halve the UK’s deforestation footprint between now and 2030, with the most generous estimate suggesting a reduction of only 44%. Even the most ambitious application of options proposed would leave UK consumers at risk of unwittingly contributing to a whopping 90,000 hectares rainforest destruction – an area bigger than the entire city of Berlin. A less ambitious application of the options could contribute tens of thousands of hectares beyond this.
None of the options proposed by the government measure up to the urgent challenge of addressing deforestation and the human rights abuses against indigenous peoples, local communities and land and environmental defenders that often underpin it. Assuming a start date of 2023 to leave time for the regulations to pass through parliament, every option currently on the table would leave many products linked to deforestation on UK supermarket shelves in five years’ time.
The EU legislative proposal would see regulations apply across a full range of items that pose a risk to forests – such as beef, leather, soya, palm oil, cocoa and coffee– all within a year. The EU legislation would also apply to all deforestation, unlike the UK law which only covers deforestation deemed illegal under local laws.
Download Global Witness Analysis : UK Forest Footprint Options Paper