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The EU FLEGT Action Plan is a European Union initiative to address illegal logging and the social, economic and environmental harm it causes. FLEGT stands for ‘forest law enforcement, governance and trade’. The EU adopted the Action Plan in 2003. The plan includes activities in the EU and in tropical countries that export timber and timber products to the EU. These measures include a regulation that prohibits EU businesses from importing or trading illegal timber, and bilateral trade agreements with timber-exporting countries. Much of the FLEGT Action Plan focuses on promoting trade in legal timber products and creating disincentives for trade in illegal products. However, the Action Plan's measures go further by addressing aspects of poor governance that enable illegal logging to persist.

Measures
The EU FLEGT Action Plan evisages action in seven areas:
 * Legislation
 * Promoting legal trade
 * Support to timber-exporting countries
 * Action to limit financial support for illegal logging
 * Support to private-sector initiatives
 * Public procurement policies
 * Action to address conflict timber

EU Timber Regulation
As envisaged in the EU FLEGT Action Plan, in 2003, the EU adopted new legislation called the EU Timber Regulation. The regulation requires timber importers and traders in the EU to trade only in legal timber and adopt due diligence procedures to ensure their supply chains are legal. It requires EU member states to have legislation, procedures and penalties in place to enforce the regulation. By July 2015, 24 of the 28 EU member states had implemented the EU Timber Regulation. The EC has issued pre-infringement notices against the remaining four countries (Greece, Hungary, Romania and Spain).

Voluntary Partnership Agreements (VPAs)
Under the FLEGT Action Plan, in 2005, the EU adopted the FLEGT Regulation, The FLEGT Regulation empowers the European Commission to negotiate bilateral trade deals called Voluntary Partnership Agreements with timber-exporting countries. Under a VPA, the partner country agrees to export only legal timber products to the EU, while the EU agrees to give verified legal ('FLEGT-licensed) timber products automatic access to the EU market. VPAs are also intended to strengthen forest governance in timber-exporting countries by improving transparency, accountability and stakeholder participation. The core of each VPA is the description of a timber legality assurance system the partner country will implement in order to verify the legality of timber products and issue verified legal products with a FLEGT licence.

As of June 2015, six countries were implementing Voluntary Partnership Agreements they have ratified with the EU (Cameroon, Central African Republic, Ghana, Liberia Indonesia , Republic of the Congo ) and nine more countries were negotiating Voluntary Partnership Agreements with the EU (Côte d'Ivoire, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Gabon, Guyana, Honduras, Laos, Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam). Together these 15 countries supply 80 percent of the EU's tropical timber. While no country has yet delivered FLEGT-licensed timber, two countries - Ghana and Indonesia - are close to achieving this goal. , Furthermore, the process of negotiating and implementing VPAs has produced significant improvements to stakeholder participation, transparency and accountability.

Perspectives
Critics of the FLEGT Action Plan point out that no FLEGT-licensed timber has yet arrived in the EU and that some EU member states have not yet fully implemented the EU Timber Regulation. Supporters of the FLEGT Action Plan say the time taken to deliver FLEGT licences indicates the rigour and credibility of the process. For instance, Saskia Ozinga of the campaigning organisation Fern described the FLEGT Action Plan as "the EU’s best-ever policy on tropical forests, since it’s the first scheme of its kind to address the root causes of illegal logging", and gave evidence of improved governance in Ghana, Liberia and Vietnam.

Anand Punja of the UK Timber Trade Federation said the Action Plan "has strongly help create a fairer and more partnership approach to sourcing than before. UK Importers are now much more likely to invest in their supply chains and work in partnership to help their suppliers, some of whom are smaller businesses, to put into place the right procedures and practices to ensure a better approach to forest and timber supply chain management."

Timber trade analyst Rupert Oliver said: "From what I've seen of FLEGT processes in Ghana, Liberia and Indonesia, they have succeeded in bringing groups together who for decades have been at loggerheads and including those who were excluded in the past. There is a strong sense of progress and direction which has often been lacking in other policy initiatives. More importantly they are succeeding in building consensus on key issues in the forest sector beyond what has actually been achieved in many industrialised nations."

European Court of Auditors report
On 22 October 2015, the European Court of Auditors issued a report that was critical of the European Commission's management of the FLEGT Action Plan. The report included a detailed response and rebuttal from the European Commission.

Independent evaluation of the EU FLEGT Action Plan
In July 2014, the European Commission initiated an independent evaluation of the implementation of the EU FLEGT Action Plan. The evaluation team is formed by independent experts from the TEREA - Terre Environnement Aménagement consultancy.

Related initiatives
Since the EU adopted the FLEGT Action Plan, other markets have taken steps to prevent trade in illegal timber products. These include:
 * In the United States, the 2008 amendment to the Lacey Act
 * In Australia, the Illegal Logging Prohibition Act of 2014