Some goods could not enter the United States if they came from land cleared illegally after the bill becomes law. Importers would have to show where covered goods came from and how they checked for illegal forest loss.
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FOREST Act of 2023 is a House bill in Congress.
Who this affects: This bill mainly affects U.S. importers, foreign producers, and companies that sell goods made with palm oil, soybeans, cocoa, cattle, rubber, or later-added products. They may need better records that show where goods came from and whether the land was cleared legally. U.S. Customs and other federal agencies would take on new review, audit, reporting, and enforcement work. Countries with weak controls on illegal forest clearing could face more scrutiny, but they could also receive support to improve enforcement and tracking.
Why this matters: Illegal forest clearing can feed global supply chains, and this bill would use the U.S. border to push back. It could change how goods like beef, leather, cocoa, palm oil, and rubber reach U.S. buyers. Companies may need stronger tracking systems to prove their goods are not tied to illegal clearing. The bill could also affect prices, sourcing choices, and trade relations, but those effects would depend on how the rule is carried out.
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