Rubber EUDR Overview — Colombia

EUDR Context

FieldValue
eudr_commodityrubber
country_focusColombia
deforestation_risklow
last_updated2026-05-26

Overview

Natural rubber is the seventh commodity regulated under the EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR). The regulation covers natural rubber (Hevea brasiliensis latex) and derived products but excludes synthetic rubber, which is petroleum-based. Colombia is a minor natural rubber producer globally, with approximately 55,660 hectares under cultivation distributed across 17 departments, making it a small player compared to Southeast Asian producers (Thailand, Indonesia, Vietnam) that supply over 70% of global natural rubber. Nevertheless, Colombian rubber falls within EUDR scope when exported to EU markets or when used as an input in products destined for Europe.

Colombia's rubber sector has a distinctive social origin: it emerged primarily as an alternative development crop to replace coca cultivation in conflict-affected departments, particularly in Caquetá, Meta, Santander, Guaviare, Putumayo, and southern Bolívar. The National Alternative Development Plan promoted rubber in 42 municipalities as a medium-term economic alternative for rural communities transitioning away from illicit economies. This origin means the sector is overwhelmingly smallholder-based, with many producers holding plots of 5-20 hectares.

From an EUDR compliance perspective, Colombian rubber presents a mixed picture. The smallholder, alternative-development character of the sector means that most plantations were established on previously cleared or degraded land (former coca fields, degraded pasture), which supports a deforestation-free claim. However, the informality of many operations, limited documentation infrastructure, and the remote locations of many plantations create practical challenges for meeting the regulation's due diligence requirements.

Colombian Context

Colombia's rubber cultivation is concentrated in five principal departments: Meta leads nationally with 19,849 hectares (35.7% of the total planted area), followed by Santander (15.7%), Vichada (15.3%), Caquetá (10.4%), and Antioquia (7.6%). In terms of producer distribution, Santander has the highest share of rubber producers (20.5%), followed by Caquetá (19.8%), Antioquia (14.8%), and Córdoba (12.6%).

The sector faces structural challenges: low yields compared to Asian competitors, limited processing infrastructure (only one centrifuged latex plant in the country), and price competition from synthetic rubber. The domestic market absorbs most production, with tire manufacturers and industrial goods companies as primary buyers. Direct exports to the EU are currently limited, though this could change as EUDR compliance creates demand for verified deforestation-free rubber from origins with lower corruption and governance risks than some Southeast Asian suppliers.

The Colombian rubber sector has been proactive on EUDR preparation. Preferred by Nature has worked with the sector since 2018 under the "Uniendo Eslabones" (Joining Links) strategy, which focuses on integrating value chain members and building traceability from plantation to finished product. A milestone achievement was FSC certification for 85 small producers, one centrifuged latex plant, and Colombia's leading balloon manufacturer—demonstrating that smallholder certification is feasible. The sector is also developing a "100% Colombian Natural Rubber" brand as a market differentiation tool.

EUDR Compliance Requirements

For Colombian rubber operators, EUDR compliance requires:


Revisión #1
Creado 2026-05-27 04:01:27 UTC por Gideon Blaauw
Actualizado 2026-05-27 04:01:27 UTC por Gideon Blaauw