Holmen welcomes the EU Regulation on Deforestation-free Products (EUDR) and can guarantee that our products do not contribute to deforestation or forest degradation.
The EUDR is intended to prevent trade in products that contribute to deforestation and forest degradation worldwide and is an initiative within the EU Forest Strategy for 2030. Holmen fully supports the initiative and has worked actively, both centrally and at business area level, to ensure compliance with the requirements set out in the EUDR.
Initially, the EUDR was intended to enter into force on 30 December 2024, but this date was later postponed to 30 December 2025. The European Parliament and the Member States have now formally approved further amendments to the legislation, which will enter into force before the end of the year. As a result of these changes, the implementation date is postponed by an additional year.
In addition, the amendments also say that:
Holmen will continue to work actively to ensure compliance with the requirements of the EUDR, with a target date of 30 December 2026. We are also closely monitoring developments and will provide continuous updates.
Holmen has long practiced sustainable forestry methods and maintains well-established traceability processes, providing a solid foundation for EUDR compliance.
We have both worked and will continue to work actively on the implementation of the EUDR to ensure compliance with the regulatory framework. Among other things, IT solutions are being developed to manage traceability and the exchange of information with the EU’s information system.
We want to refine these processes to ensure robust traceability and to achieve compliance with relevant parts of the EUDR in the most seamless way possible – both for Holmen and Holmen's business relationships.
The aim is for all products that contain wood (and a number of other raw materials) to be traceable back to the place of production, which for forest is the area where the wood was harvested.
The Swedish Forest Industries Federation supports the overarching objective of the EUDR, which is to prevent deforestation and forest degradation linked to specific raw materials and products.
The Swedish Forest Agency is the competent Swedish authority that will check compliance with the provisions of the EUDR. The EUDR replaces the EUTR (the Timber Regulation).