Sustainable Forestry & Certification

EUDR Context

FieldValue
eudr_commoditywood
country_focusColombia
deforestation_riskhigh
last_updated2026-05-26

Overview

Sustainable forestry certification represents the most viable pathway for Colombian timber to access EU markets under the EUDR. While certification alone does not satisfy the regulation's requirements (operators must still provide geolocation data and specific deforestation-free proof), certified timber operations have the management systems, documentation practices, and third-party audit infrastructure that closely align with EUDR due diligence obligations. Colombia's sustainable forestry sector is small but growing, and scaling it up is both a commercial opportunity and a conservation imperative.

The Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) is the primary international certification standard operating in Colombia. FSC-certified operations exist in both the planted forest sector (teak, pine, eucalyptus plantations) and—more critically for EUDR purposes—in natural forest management by community concessions. Community forestry initiatives in the Pacific coast and Amazon have achieved FSC certification through multi-year capacity-building programs supported by international cooperation, demonstrating that even in high-risk regions, sustainable, legal, and traceable timber production is achievable.

The EU's FLEGT (Forest Law Enforcement, Governance and Trade) Action Plan, while distinct from the EUDR, has influenced Colombia's forestry governance framework. Although Colombia does not have a FLEGT Voluntary Partnership Agreement (VPA), the principles of FLEGT—legal verification, stakeholder participation, and trade transparency—have informed domestic initiatives like the Pacto Intersectorial por la Madera Legal (PIML).

Colombian Context

Colombia's sustainable forestry landscape includes several distinct pathways:

The Colombian government's ambition to become Latin America's second forestry powerhouse (after Chile or Brazil) depends on expanding planted forest area while simultaneously improving governance in natural forest extraction. The 223 forestry companies and 400,000 sector jobs represent a base that could grow significantly if legal, sustainable, and EUDR-compliant supply chains are scaled.

EUDR Compliance Requirements

Certification and sustainable forestry practices contribute to EUDR compliance through:


Revisión #1
Creado 2026-05-27 04:00:48 UTC por Gideon Blaauw
Actualizado 2026-05-27 04:00:48 UTC por Gideon Blaauw