The EUTR is not “effective, proportionate and dissuasive”, according to ClientEarth
The potential value of FLEGT licensing is partly dependent on the extent to which EUTR is being implemented consistently across the EU. This is a question considered in a new report issued by ClientEarth, a UK based NGO specialising in analysis of environmental law. In the report, ClientEarth provide their assessment of whether the enforcement regimes, which under EUTR are required to be implemented by the individual EU member countries, are “effective, proportionate and dissuasive” according to the law. The report highlights that although the EUTR was first introduced in March 2013, some EU member countries ...
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