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Browse all articles tagged with "EU deforestation regulation"
NewsBrussels – Qahwa World The European Commission has announced adjustments to the EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR) aimed at ensuring its timely implementation by 30 December 2025. The changes include lighter reporting requirements, deadline extensions for small businesses, and simplified due diligence obligations to reduce administrative complexity and IT system strain. The EUDR, which targets commodities</p>
NewsDubai – Qahwa World The global coffee market navigated a turbulent September as trade tensions, monetary policy shifts, and regulatory uncertainty reshaped investor sentiment and price dynamics. According to the International Coffee Organization’s (ICO) latest Coffee Market Report for September 2025, the sector was influenced by a combination of U.S. tariff policy, an interest rate</p>
NewsDubai – Qahwa World Brazil is on track to surpass Vietnam as the world’s leading producer of robusta coffee, according to a new report by Dutch bank Rabobank. The report highlights Brazil’s growing advantage due to robusta’s resilience to heat, drought, and disease — key traits as climate change increasingly threatens arabica production. Rabobank estimates</p>
NewsBrussels – Qahwa World The European Commission has confirmed a further one-year delay to the European Union Deforestation Regulation (EUDR), citing IT system capacity issues and risks of disruption to supply chains. The regulation, which entered into force in June 2023, sets strict due diligence requirements for commodities including palm oil, cattle, soy, coffee, cocoa,</p>
NewsSaddama, Ethiopia – Qahwa World Al Jazeera has broadcast a filmed report highlighting the impact of the European Union’s anti-deforestation regulations, which are set to come into force on December 30, 2025, after several delays in implementation. According to the report, the new EU rules are leaving a bitter taste among Ethiopian coffee farmers, who</p>
NewsDubai, August 19, 2025 – (Qahwa World) – A landmark study has revealed that carbon markets are overlooking the most effective climate solution in coffee farming: protecting mature shade-grown coffee systems. The research, led by the Smithsonian’s National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute (NZCBI) and Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (STRI), and published in Communications Earth</p>