Between the Trees and the Treaties: What EU Policy Means for Forests Today (Policy Update)
Europe’s forests are under growing political attention. From climate targets to biodiversity restoration, EU policymakers are setting ambitious agendas that directly influence how forests are managed on the ground. For the forestry sector, this brings both opportunities and challenges, and a need to navigate an increasingly complex and shifting regulatory landscape.
This overview provides a snapshot of where things stand today and highlights the key debates shaping the months ahead:
Restoration Law: Ambition Meets Resistance
The Nature Restoration Law, formally adopted earlier this year, is the EU’s flagship response to biodiversity decline. For forests, it introduces legally binding targets to improve indicators like deadwood, forest connectivity, and share of mixed-species stands. This represents a genuinely relevant indicators in forest management objectives, but also raises legitimate questions: how feasible is it to meet these targets at scale, within existing silvicultural systems and economic realities? The political pushback from countries such as Sweden, Finland, and Austria, argues that the law infringes on national competence and risks overburdening forest managers.
This tension has intensified with the EU Commission’s “omnibus” package, intended as a simplification tool but increasingly seen as a vehicle to revisit or even weaken some Green Deal commitments. Reports from early 2025 indicate attempts to dilute restoration obligations, with some Member States pressing for rollbacks.
For us on the forest side, the concern isn’t much on restoration as a principle—it’s about whether these targets reflect ecological realities, respect local differences, and avoid unintended consequences for long-term forest planning.
Deforestation Regulation: Implementation or Imbalance?
The EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR) is supposed to prevent products linked to deforestation from entering the EU market. While it focuses on tropical forests, the law also applies to wood and wood products from within the EU.
Since its adoption in 2023, the regulation has faced mounting pressure. Some Member States want to delay implementation again. Others are pushing to reopen the regulation entirely through the omnibus. At the same time, a surprising mix of NGOs, retailers, and sustainability-minded companies are urging the Commission to stay the course.
Many European forest professionals worry this could be another case of over-regulation targeting a continent whose forests are not facing deforestation. If implementation is rushed or unclear, national authorities may struggle to adapt, and foresters may find themselves squeezed between market access rules and management realities.
Forest Monitoring: Data or Distraction?
Brussels is also working on an EU Forest Monitoring Framework. The idea: improve consistency in how forest data is collected and shared across Europe.
That might sound harmless, even helpful. But the proposal has met early pushback. Many countries already operate robust national monitoring systems, often adapted to their forest types and management traditions. The concern is that EU-level frameworks may duplicate existing work, stretch resources, and reduce flexibility.
And then there’s the question of what the data will be used for. If it becomes a tool for second-guessing local decisions from afar, it could damage trust between managers and policymakers, just when we need better cooperation.
Nature and Carbon Credits: The New Buzzwords
There’s also a growing push to link forests to nature credits and carbon credits, part of a broader trend to attract private finance into conservation and restoration. On paper, these schemes promise to reward good stewardship.
But here again, skepticism is high. Are forest owners genuinely interested in these mechanisms? Are the markets mature enough to deliver stable, transparent incentives? And will these credits actually help forests, or just create accounting exercises that benefit intermediaries more than managers?
Until these questions are clearer, most foresters are right to be cautious.
Looking ahead
This autumn will be key. The omnibus proposal may redefine how binding some Green Deal commitments really are. The EUDR could face a pause—or accelerate toward uncertain enforcement. And the LULUCF regulation is heading for review, likely reopening difficult conversations about carbon sinks and forest flexibility. Meanwhile, throughout the beginning of August the European Commission has published four initiatives for consultation, feedback and call for evidence on relevant topics such as simplification of environmental reporting, climate targets, Nature Credits or resilience. The EUSTAFOR Office has been preparing inputs during the holiday period. EUSTAFOR Members have already been consulted and inputs to the above-mentioned consultations have been submitted.
In the next overview, we will report on how these debates unfold, and what it means for forest work in real terms. Whether the EU’s green policies are a lever for better management or a layer of bureaucracy depends on what comes next, and on whether forest professionals have a seat at the table.
Enhancing the resilience of Europe’s forests is already a complex task, and today’s political turbulence adds another layer of difficulty.
Published 10/09/2025, Brussels
Ms. Amila Meškin
Senior Policy Advisor (Deforestation, Biodiversity, Soils, Environment, Climate)
- amila.meskin @ eustafor.eu
- +32 (0) 472 044 759