Is the EU’s forest protection law becoming Brussels’ next nightmare? | Radio Schuman

Two years ago, the EU adopted a ground-breaking deforestation law, set to take effect in January, aiming to ban imports of products linked to forest loss, such as coffee, soy, timber, and cocoa.

The regulation requires suppliers to certify that their goods are not sourced from areas that were recently stripped of woods to make way for farms and plantations.

While supported by environmental groups and left-leaning politicians, it has faced opposition from governments, trading partners, and conservative MEPs, who argue it could disrupt supply chains, increase prices, and add administrative burdens.

Despite this, the European Commission has stood by its original deadline.

How serious is the backlash against deforestation? Is the recoil another sign that the EU’s Green Deal is under threat? Will conservative governments continue to oppose laws linked to the Green Deal’s implementation?

Today Radio Schuman answers these questions with Virginijus Sinkevičius, outgoing European Commissioner for Environment, Oceans and Fisheries.

There is also the agenda for this weekend, with the Austrian parliamentary elections a major event to keep an eye on.

And finally, we’ll reveal Europe’s top tax havens — spoiler alert: it’s not the same place for everyone.

Access the original publication here

#Eurozone: #ECB officials question whether #Euro has strengthened too much, by @OlafStorbeck and Ian Smith | Financial Times

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ECB officials question whether euro has strengthened too much

Policymakers at central bank fret that a surging currency increases the risk of inflation undershooting

www.ft.com

[Featured] #Trade: #EU splits weaken its hand in crunch trade talks with #Trump, by @_Zimmerfrau and @_AriHawkins | Politico

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EU splits weaken its hand in crunch trade talks with Trump

European capitals are pulling in different directions ahead of a decisive round of trade talks in Washington. 

www.politico.eu

#EUDefence: The Italian job - How #Rome plans to work around #NATO spending hike, by @giuseppe_fonte, @AmanteAngelo and Gavin Jones | Reuters 

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The Italian job: how Rome plans to work around NATO spending hike

Italy, along with other NATO countries, has agreed to sharply increase defence spending over the next decade, but ...

www.reuters.com

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