| We handpick and explain the most important stories at the intersection of climate, land, food and nature over the past fortnight. This is an online version of Carbon Briefâs fortnightly Cropped email newsletter. Subscribe for free here. This is the last edition of Cropped for 2025. The newsletter will return on 14 January 2026. Key developments EU trade impacts AG EXCEPTION: France and Italy are âat least temporarilyâ seeking a carve-out for fertilisers from the EUâs carbon border tax in order to âprotect struggling European farmersâ, reported Reuters. The first-of-its-kind levy, which came into effect on 1 January, âimposes CO2 emissions fees on importsâŚto ensure they do not have an unfair advantage over products made in Europeâ, the newswire explained. Following the âfertiliser backlashâ, the European Commission said it will assess a temporary suspension if the tax leads to âsignificant inflationary pressure on food pricesâ, said S&P Global. MERCOSUR IMMINENT: The EU is set to sign the Mercosur trade deal â an agreement âmore than 25 years in the makingâ â in Paraguay on 17 January, reported the Buenos Aires Times. The deal will create a free trade zone between the EU and the five Mercosur countries: Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay. Bloomberg wrote that the deal is âmeant to signal independence from the worldâs two largest economies [the US and China] â and to show that broad multilateral deals remain possible in a global order upended by Donald Trumpâ. Subscribe: CroppedSign up to Carbon Briefâs free \âCropped\â email newsletter. A fortnightly digest of food, land and nature news and views. Sent to your inbox every other Wednesday. FARMERS FUMING: Meanwhile, âdozensâ of farmers in France and Greece have been protesting the trade deal, âhalting traffic and blocking key roads with tractorsâ, according to the Associated Press. Farmers in Greece âhalt[ed] all traffic except emergency vehiclesâ, the newswire said, while French farmers âset up roadblocks across the countryâ. French farmers also drove into Paris yesterday, reported Reuters, warning that the trade deal âthreatens local agriculture by creating unfair competition with cheaper South American importsâ. Greek farmers have been protesting âdelayed EU subsidy payments, rising production costs and other grievancesâ for more than a month, according to Kathimerini. DEFORESTATION LAW âHOLLOWED OUTâ: The EU deforestation regulation has been âhollowed outâ, the architect of the original legislation told the Guardian. Hugo Schally told the newspaper that the removal of reporting obligations from traders âwill make enforcement and eventual prosecution more difficultâ. The Guardian noted that the law had come under âintense pressureâ from rightwing groups, as well as âsome of the biggest exporters to the EUâ. A spokesperson for the commission told the newspaper that the law âhas already led to positive developments and action on the ground to fight deforestation, climate change and biodiversity lossâ. Wildfires worldwide âMAJOR FIRESâ IN OZ: Nearly a dozen âmajor firesâ burned across the Australian state of Victoria over the weekend, according to the Sydney Morning Herald. The newspaper reported that more than 130 structures have been destroyed and more than 400,000 hectares of land have been âblackened in the firesâ. A separate Sydney Morning Herald article noted that the fires had âprompt[ed] grave fears for vulnerable animalsâ, such as dingoes, critically endangered frogs and several endangered bird species. WESTERN CAPE WILDFIRES: Thousands of people were also displaced following wildfires in South Africaâs Western Cape, according to Xinhua News Agency. The Daily Maverick wrote that âhomes and farms were consumed within minutes, while neighbours and volunteers scrambled to protect propertyâ. Several factors may have contributed to the blazes, including exceptionally dry weather, strong winds, unmanaged vegetation and invasive tree species, the newspaper said. CRITICAL SITUATION: In Argentine Patagonia, tourists were evacuated and homes burned as fires âscorched more than 15,000 hectaresâ of forest, reported Agence France-Presse. Rain on Sunday afternoon provided âreliefâ to some residents of the Chubut region, but the provinceâs governor, Ignacio Torres, said that the situation âremains very criticalâ. Torres said that people should ânever againâŚdownplay the implications of climate changeâ, the newswire reported. BRAZIL FIRES FALL: The number of wildfires in the Brazilian Amazon dropped by 69% in 2025, compared to the previous year, reaching the lowest level in 28 years, reported EFE Verde. The newswire said the decline was âattributed by specialists to less severe climatic conditions than in 2024 [and] to shorter and less rigorous periods of droughtâ. News and views SOYA MORATORIUM âENDEDâ: A major Brazilian soya industry association has announced it will âwithdrawâ from the âsoya moratoriumâ â an agreement to refrain from selling soya grown on recently deforested land, reported the Associated Press. The newswire noted that the moratorium âhas been widely credited with helping curb rainforest lossâ. It added: âEnvironmentalists and government officials said the withdrawal essentially ended the agreement, even though no participant has formally declared it over.â US TREATY RETREAT: US president Donald Trump announced that the country will withdraw from 66 international bodies, including the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, saying these bodies âno longer serve US interestsâ, reported Politico. Among the other organisations are two major scientific bodies â the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES), reported Carbon Brief. Several legal experts told the Guardian that the move to withdraw from the treaties âmay be illegalâ. ALTERNATIVES FOR ENGLAND: Seven out of Englandâs 10 wildlife targets under the Environment Act 2021 are unlikely to be met by 2030, reported the Guardian. The outlet added that some of the targets could be hindered by the proposed planning and infrastructure bill. Elsewhere, English livestock farmers could profit more from improving the environment than producing meat, according to analysis by thinktank Green Alliance covered by the Grocer. DIETARY CHANGE: The Trump administration released new dietary guidelines that âtake a dramatic turn toward encouraging the consumption of animal protein, including red meatâ, said Inside Climate News. It added that the âmeat industry celebrated the new guidelinesâ, while health and environmental groups âcalled them a dangerous reversal of science-based health advice that could worsen the climate and ecological impacts of livestockâ. Previous iterations of the dietary guidelines have not directly considered environmental sustainability, but have encouraged plant-based proteins from a health perspective. LARGE SEIZURE: Indonesia is planning to reclaim millions of hectares of land it believes are being used illegally, reported Bloomberg. The country has so far seized 4m hectares of palm oil plantations, mining concessions and processing facilities, and officials say this could soon double. The outlet added that much of the land has been given to a state-owned company responsible for managing palm oil plantations, as part of Indonesian president Prabowo Subiantoâs efforts to combat âmalfeasance in the commodities sectorâ. Palm oil traders fear land seizures could hurt Indonesiaâs palm oil supply, reduce investment and impact smallholder plantations, the article said. FOOD SECURITY RISK: The head of Iranâs meteorological organisation warned that climate change is becoming a serious threat to the countryâs food security, according to NatureNews Africa. The official said that sea level rise in the Persian Gulf could cause flooding and saltwater seep into coastal provinces of south-western Iran, damaging soil and food production. The official also pointed out that high temperatures are already reducing crop yields, damaging soil and harming marine life, the outlet reported, and called for âurgentâ policy changes and climate adaptation strategies. Spotlight 2026 FLAN moments to watch out for This week, Carbon Brief compiles a non-exhaustive list of international policies and negotiations in 2026 that concern food systems, biodiversity and climate change, as well as major reports expected this year. The coming year is another âtriple COPâ year, as countries will meet to negotiate outcomes under three major environmental treaties â the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), the UN Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) and the UN Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD). The world is coming out of an âintense period on the climate policy sideâ, Oliver Camp, an environment and food systems advocacy advisor at the Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition (GAIN), told Carbon Brief. Following 2025, which saw many â but not all â countries update their climate pledges (ânationally determined contributionsâ, or NDCs), Camp said he expects new focus on accelerating implementation in the coming year. This means âmoving from what and why to howâ, he continued. On the policy front, countries need to begin implementing high-level plans, such as their NDCs, national adaptation plans (NAPs), food system pathways and national nutrition plans, he added. Policies Regarding global agricultural policies, Camp said he expects the focus to shift towards food-based dietary guidelines, national agroecology transition plans, livestock strategies and food loss and waste reduction roadmaps. On nature, a key moment will be the delivery of countriesâ biodiversity plans (NBSAPs) and national reports, the latter of which must be submitted to the CBD by 28 February. At the EU level, countries are required to submit their national restoration plans to the European Commission by mid-2026, which detail how they will meet their targets for restoring ecosystems. This is part of the Nature Restoration Law, which the bloc approved in 2024. This aims to restore at least 20% of EU land and sea by 2030, and all ecosystems in need of restoration by 2050. Several global and regional agreements and policies focus on the ocean. The High Seas Treaty, also known as the agreement on âbiodiversity beyond national jurisdictionâ, will enter into force on 17 January. The treaty â already ratified by 81 of 145 signing countries â aims to govern the conservation and sustainable use of the worldâs oceans outside of national waters and was agreed upon in March 2023. The first conference of parties to the treaty is supposed to take place within one year after the treaty enters into force and will address the rules of procedure, permanent bodies and rules of funding and budget, as well as priorities for implementing the treaty. The European Ocean Act is planned for adoption by the end of this year and will seek to improve the implementation of marine governance at EU level by structuring all the marine conservation and sustainable use targets adopted by the bloc. The act also aims to streamline EU ocean policies and reporting. Reports The Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) will release its âbusiness and biodiversity assessmentâ in February. This report will examine the impacts and dependence of companies on nature and the methods they use to measure and report their impacts. The report is expected to be adopted at the IPBES 12th plenary session, held from 3 to 8 February 2026 in Manchester, UK. Marie Cosquer, food systems and climate advocacy analyst for Action against Hunger, told Carbon Brief that she is looking forward to an upcoming report on Indigenous peoplesâ food and knowledge systems. That report will be produced by the High Level Panel of Experts on Food Security and Nutrition of the UN Committee on World Food Security and released in October. International negotiations The first of the UN conventions to meet will be the UNCCD, which will convene COP17 from 17 to 28 August in Ulaanbaatar, the capital of Mongolia. It is expected to deliver solutions for land restoration, sustainable land use, resilience and mitigation of climate impacts. This occurs during the International Year of Rangelands and Pastoralists, which will gather efforts for the conservation, restoration and sustainable use of rangelands. COP17 of the CBD will be held from 19 to 30 October in Armeniaâs capital Yerevan. It will deliver the first global review of nationsâ progress in the implementation of the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework. Finally, COP31 of the UNFCCC will be held in Antalya, Turkey from 9 to 20 November, with rival bidder Australia acting as âpresident of negotiationsâ. In its coverage of COP30 in BelĂŠm last November, Carbon Brief compiled a list of the key meetings and milestones leading up to the summit in Turkey. Watch, read, listen LAST BAOBAB STANDING: The Guardian asked whether the city of Kinshasa â the capital of the Democratic Republic of the Congo â can save its sole remaining baobab tree. BEAVER HEROES: A National Geographic video explored how beaver dams can be beneficial to ecosystems and other species. âMICRO-FORESTâ MOVEMENT: NPRâs Short Wave podcast discussed the rise of âmicro-forestsâ â small forests that can help restore degraded lands, take up CO2 and preserve biodiversity. THE LIVING RIVER: The story of how Indigenous knowledge of New Zealandâs MÄori community helped grant recognition of legal rights to the Whanganui River was told by Inside Climate News. New science Dog food accounts for around 1% of total greenhouse gas emissions in the UK, with a â65-fold variationâ between different foods due to their meat content and composition | Journal of Cleaner Production Deforestation leads to more intense drought in âmore than halfâ of the Earthâs climate zones â particularly in the boreal forests of the far northern hemisphere | Science Advances Around one-third of terrestrial vertebrates in protected areas are projected to be subjected to increased human land-use pressures by 2050 | Nature Ecology & Evolution In the diary 17 January: High Seas Treaty enters into force 26-27 January: UN Water Conference preparatory meeting | Dakar, Senegal 3-8 February: Plenary session of the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services | Manchester, UK Cropped is researched and written by Dr Giuliana Viglione, Aruna Chandrasekhar, Daisy Dunne, Orla Dwyer and Yanine Quiroz. Ayesha Tandon also contributed to this issue. Please send tips and feedback to [email protected] Cropped 17 December 2025: âDeadlyâ Asia floods; Boosting Londonâs water birds; UN headwinds Cropped | 17.12.25 Cropped 3 December 2025: Extreme weather in Africa; COP30 roundup; Saudi minister interview Cropped | 03.12.25 Cropped 19 November 2025: COP30 edition Cropped | 19.11.25 Cropped 5 November 2025: Nature finance at COP30; Storms devastate crops; Brazilian deforestation decline Cropped | 05.11.25 The post Cropped 14 January 2026: Wildfires scorch three continents; EU trade; Food and nature in 2026 appeared first on Carbon Brief. |