Not an easy ride: Economic research priorities for pro-environmental trade regulation
Other text in scientific journal, 2026

Demand-side trade regulation is promoted as a policy tool to reduce negative environmental and socioeconomic footprints associated with global commodity supply chains. We present a theory of change (ToC) that explains how the economics of pro-environmental trade regulation can be expected to work, using the recent EU Regulation on Deforestation-free products (EUDR) as a topical illustration. Along this complex ToC, we review and characterize multiple factors that might either constrain overall policy effectiveness or enhance it. Evidence suggests that, in addition to land-use leakage (the displacement of environmental pressures to unregulated domains), predictably strong market-segregating responses might rearrange sourcing and trading patterns, especially where EU commodity import shares are low. Lacking observable and attributable land-use changes, segregation spillovers are harder to document. We outline an economically informed interdisciplinary research agenda around the potential impact pathways of demand-side trade regulations. However, our ex-ante conceptual policy assessment also cautions of potential functional shortcomings in reaching the desired global forest-protective goals.

Environmental governance

Ex-ante evaluation

Deforestation

EUDR

Global value chain

Theory of change

Author

Dario Schulz

European Forest Institute

Johanna Coenen

Stockholm University

Mairon G. Bastos Lima

Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI)

Laila Berning

University of Freiburg

Jan Börner

University of Bonn

Mathias Cramm

European Forest Institute

Cecilia Fraccaroli

European Forest Institute

Gustavo Magalhães de Oliveira

University of Bonn

Martin Persson

Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment, Physical Resource Theory

Metodi Sotirov

University of Freiburg

Sven Wunder

European Forest Institute

Center for International Forestry Research

Forest Policy and Economics

1389-9341 (ISSN)

Vol. 182 103682

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Economics

DOI

10.1016/j.forpol.2025.103682

More information

Latest update

12/15/2025