
The UK Government has announced plans to strengthen its approach
to tackling deforestation linked to British supply chains.
Under the proposals, businesses in Great Britain using certain
forest-risk commodities and wood products could be required to
carry out supply chain due diligence, collect product-origin
information and report on their compliance.
New mandatory rules will require British businesses to verify
that everyday goods — from chocolate to cooking oil — are not
sourced from illegally cleared forests.
A mandatory timber due diligence framework has operated across
the UK since 2013. The Government now intends to build on this
system to further reduce the UK’s contribution to global
deforestation.
The new regime is expected to be introduced in 2027, although
the detailed requirements will be subject to consultation and
further legislation. This article aims to summarise the recently
published policy paper of the UK’s approach to deforestation
regulations.
The UK government announced on Tuesday, 23 June, during London
Climate Action Week, that it would introduce new regulations
requiring businesses trading in rainforest-linked commodities to
demonstrate their supply chains are free from illegal
deforestation. The announcement marks a significant shift from
voluntary industry commitments toward enforceable legal
obligations across Great Britain.
What the New Rules Cover
Under the proposed framework, UK businesses that import or trade
in commodities such as soy, palm oil, cocoa, coffee, rubber, and
timber will be required to conduct mandatory due diligence. They
must verify that the goods they source have not contributed to
the illegal clearing of forests or other natural land.
These commodities are embedded in thousands of everyday
supermarket products. Chocolate, shampoo, cosmetics, and cooking
oils are among the most common examples. British consumers, the
government argues, currently have no reliable way of knowing
whether their purchases are linked to forest destruction abroad.
The new measures draw on existing powers under the Environment
Act and propose strengthening the UK Timber Regulation to close
gaps in current oversight.
The Scale of the Problem
The numbers behind the policy are stark. They demand urgent
attention.
In 2023 alone, the UK’s consumption of internationally traded
agricultural commodities was linked to approximately 29,000
hectares of deforestation globally — an area roughly equivalent
to one and a half times the size of Manchester. Associated
carbon emissions from that deforestation totalled an estimated
9.4 million tonnes.
Globally, agricultural expansion accounts for around 90 per cent
of all deforestation. Much of that expansion is directly tied to
the production of the same commodities the UK imports in large
volumes each year.
Rainforests are irreplaceable. They store vast quantities of
carbon. They sustain biodiversity found nowhere else on Earth.
Their continued loss poses risks that extend well beyond
environmental concern — the UK government has previously
described tropical forest collapse as a national security issue.
Government and Industry Response
Nature Minister Mary Creagh stated that eliminating products
linked to illegal deforestation would protect precious
ecosystems while strengthening the UK’s long-term economic
resilience. She described the move as leading by example —
scrutinising domestic supply chains rather than simply
commenting on deforestation abroad.
The British Retail Consortium welcomed the announcement. Andrew
Opie, Director of Food and Sustainability at the BRC, confirmed
that retailers had long advocated for UK deforestation
regulation as a necessary step toward forest conservation across
retail supply chains. He also called for alignment with EU
requirements wherever possible, to reduce administrative costs
and complexity for businesses and consumers alike.
Conservation organisation WWF urged the government not to delay
further. Gavin Crowden, Director of Advocacy at WWF, noted that
new rules are already due to take effect in Northern Ireland at
the end of 2026. He argued there was no justification for
leaving consumers elsewhere in the UK without equivalent
protections.
Northern Ireland and the EU Link
Northern Ireland holds a unique position. It retains dual market
access. The EU Regulation on Deforestation-Free Products (EUDR)
will apply there in phases from 30 December 2026, in accordance
with the Windsor Framework.
To protect the integrity of the UK Internal Market, the
forthcoming consultation will propose that the Great Britain
regime covers the same core commodities and information
requirements as the Northern Ireland regulation. Businesses
operating in Northern Ireland are encouraged to begin compliance
preparations immediately.
What Comes Next
The government will launch a formal consultation later in 2026,
engaging businesses, civil society groups, and international
partners on the precise design of the Great Britain
deforestation policy. Further details on the consultation
timeline will be confirmed in due course.
The longer-term ambition extends beyond tackling illegality. The
government has indicated it intends to transition eventually
toward a fully deforestation-free standard — one that goes
further by requiring products to be sourced free from any
deforestation, not merely illegal clearing.
The measures form part of the UK’s commitments under the Glasgow
Leaders’ Declaration on Forests and Land Use, agreed at COP26,
which pledged to halt and reverse global forest loss and land
degradation by 2030.
Source:
clarity.eco