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				Quick summary: TraceX helps rubber companies in Netherlands meet EUDR requirements with automated Due Diligence Statement (DDS) generation, farm-level traceability, and deforestation risk verification.
	  EUDR DDS for Rubber Supply Chain in the Netherlands requires Dutch importers, manufacturers, and distributors of natural rubber to prove that all rubber and derived products placed on the EU market are deforestation-free and legally sourced. Under the EU Deforestation Regulation (Reg (EU) 2023/1115), companies must submit a Due Diligence Statement (DDS) with verified geolocation, legality, and risk-assessment data. Given the Netherlandsā role as a key European import hub, robust traceability systems and digital due diligence platforms are essential to ensure compliance, transparency, and continued market access under the EUDR framework.Ā
The EUDR is the EUās new law requiring that certain commodities and derived products placed on the EU market must be deforestation-free and legally produced. Its goal is to reduce the EUās global impact on forest conversion, biodiversity loss, and climate change by ensuring that imports (and production) of high-risk commodities do not originate from land deforested after 31 December 2020.Ā Ā
Natural rubber is explicitly listed among the regulated commodities under the EUDR. This inclusion means that all companies that place natural rubber or products derived from it (such as sheets, blocks, components with high natural rubber content) on the EU market must demonstrate origin, traceability, and deforestation-free statusĀ
The Netherlands plays a pivotal role in the EUDR landscape because it is a major entry and logistics hub for the EU market. For example, it imports a considerable share of the EUās volume of commodities within EUDRās scope. As such, Dutch rubber supply-chain actors (importers, processors, distributors) are significantly affected; they must ensure that any relevant rubber-based goods entering via the Netherlands are compliant with EUDR requirements.Ā
Under the EUDR, companies classified as āoperatorsā (those placing for the first time a relevant commodity or derived product on the EU market) must comply. The enforcement is set to fully apply from 30 December 2025 for most operators. Importers and traders in the Netherlands dealing with natural rubber (or rubber-derived products under HS codes covered by the regulation) must complete due diligence and supply the required documentation ahead of market placement.Ā Ā
For rubber supply chains in the Netherlands, this means: Dutch importers must map their natural rubber sources (country of origin, plantation/harvest plot, species), verify legal production and absence of deforestation after the cut-off date, and submit the required due diligence (DDS) documentation as part of their compliance strategy. Because rubber often passes through the Netherlands en route to other EU destinations, Dutch-based firms may serve as the āoperatorā under EUDR and bear the compliance burden even if final manufacturing occurs elsewhere.Ā
Master the step-by-step process of submitting Due Diligence Statements under the new EUDR rules. 
Read the blog on filing DDS for EUDR compliance 
Explore how rubber importers can achieve traceability, transparency, and compliance under EUDR.Ā 
Read the full blog on EUDR Rubber ComplianceĀ 
The EUDR DDS for Rubber Supply Chain in the Netherlands presents several compliance and operational challenges due to the industryās complex, globalized structure. Dutch importers, processors, and distributors must navigate intricate sourcing networks while ensuring full traceability to meet the EUās deforestation-free requirements.
The natural rubber trade involves multiple intermediaries, aggregators, traders, and brokers between smallholder plantations and EU importers. Dutch operators often have limited visibility into the original harvest plots, making it difficult to link end products to their geographic origins. This opacity complicates the mapping and verification steps required for EUDR due diligence.Ā
Under the EUDR, companies must provide geolocation coordinates for every plot where natural rubber is harvested. For rubber, this is particularly challenging because production is dominated by millions of smallholders, each managing small, fragmented plots. In Southeast Asia and West Africa, plantation boundaries are poorly documented, and geospatial data is often incomplete. Collecting, verifying, and maintaining accurate plot-level coordinates across such a dispersed network requires major digital and organizational investments.
Rubber is sourced from multiple countries with varying land-use and legality systems. While some nations, like Thailand or Malaysia, have established traceability and certification programs, others rely on paper-based or informal systems. This inconsistency increases the complexity of verifying legality and compliance with both local regulations and EUDR standards for deforestation-free production. Dutch companies must often reconcile conflicting documentation formats and conduct country-specific risk assessments.
Unlike single-stage agricultural commodities, rubber undergoes multiple transformations: latex ā sheets ā blocks ā compounds ā finished goods (such as tyres, seals, or footwear). During this process, rubber from various origins and species is often blended. This mixing of material disrupts chain-of-custody continuity and complicates the assignment of geolocation data to final products. Maintaining traceability through each transformation stage is a major technical challenge for compliance.
Failure to comply with EUDR requirements can lead to customs detentions, fines, or EU market exclusion. Non-compliance also damages corporate reputation, particularly among sustainability-focused customers and investors. For Dutch companies, many of which serve as trusted EU distribution partners, maintaining transparent and compliant supply chains is vital to preserving business relationships and market access.Ā
Most rubber suppliers in producing regions lack digital traceability infrastructure. Essential data such as GPS coordinates, harvest dates, and parcel ownership are either unavailable or scattered across analog records. Dutch importers must build or integrate digital systems capable of aggregating supplier data, validating sources, and generating EUDR-compliant Due Diligence Statements (DDS). This requires new workflows, training, and partnerships with technology providers.Ā
The Netherlandsā position as a European entry and re-export hub means many companies act as āoperatorsā under the EUDR, bearing legal responsibility for compliance even if their suppliers are overseas. While Dutch firms often operate closer to final manufacturing or distribution, their compliance depends on upstream data quality from Asia, Africa, or Latin America. Early engagement with suppliers, transparent data sharing, and proactive risk management are therefore essential to maintaining regulatory compliance and supply chain resilience.Ā
Digital solutions such as the TraceX EUDR Compliance Suite are reshaping how Dutch rubber importers, processors, and distributors comply with the EU Deforestation Regulation (EU 2023/1115). Instead of managing fragmented spreadsheets and manual audits, Dutch operators now benefit from a streamlined, transparent, and fully auditable compliance workflow designed for natural rubber.Ā
Use Case: A Netherlands-based tyre-component importer sources natural rubber sheets from Southeast Asia. They can use TraceX to onboard plantations, capture GPS coordinates, verify no deforestation after 31 Dec 2020, link each batch to the invoice, and auto-generate the DDS. As a result, they can reduce audit preparation time significantly and strengthen buyer confidence.Ā
By adopting TraceX, Dutch rubber supply-chain actors transition from reactive compliance to proactive sustainability leadership, ensuring their imports and production remain deforestation-free, traceable, and future-proof.
The implementation of the EUDR DDS for the Rubber Supply Chain in the Netherlands goes far beyond regulatory compliance. It represents a strategic transformation of the countryās role in global trade from being a logistics hub to becoming a leader in sustainable, deforestation-free sourcing. For Dutch companies active in rubber import, processing, or distribution, aligning with the EUDR not only ensures legal continuity but also delivers measurable economic, reputational, and environmental benefits.Ā

European Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs), automotive producers, and industrial clients are increasingly demanding verified, deforestation-free inputs. Compliance with the EUDR enhances supplier credibility and strengthens business relationships across the EU.Ā
For Dutch companies that serve as intermediaries or distributors, offering transparent, traceable rubber products differentiates them from competitors still adapting to the new regulatory landscape. It signals commitment to responsible sourcing a key purchasing criterion for sustainability-driven buyers.Ā
EUDR compliance dovetails seamlessly with corporate Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) strategies. By adopting due diligence systems and traceability frameworks, Dutch rubber firms can demonstrate alignment with broader sustainability commitments, including responsible sourcing, circular economy principles, and carbon footprint reduction.Ā
Compliance data generated under EUDR can feed directly into ESG reporting frameworks such as GRI, CSRD, or TCFD, helping companies meet investor expectations and reinforce their sustainability narratives.Ā
Companies that implement EUDR-compliant systems early will enjoy a tangible competitive advantage. By establishing digital traceability networks and transparent supplier data chains, early adopters can avoid border bottlenecks, minimize documentation delays, and ensure uninterrupted EU market access once enforcement begins.Ā
In addition, early movers are better positioned to capture contracts from OEMs seeking verified EUDR-compliant suppliers, strengthening their position in high-value manufacturing segments like tyres, automotive components, and industrial goods.Ā
EUDR non-compliance carries serious consequences ā from import restrictions and fines to loss of market access and reputational harm. By embedding due diligence and digital traceability into procurement systems, Dutch companies can proactively mitigate:
The EUDR represents one of the EUās strongest climate and biodiversity protection measures to date. By ensuring that natural rubber entering Europe is deforestation-free, Dutch operators directly support global efforts to curb forest loss, protect ecosystems, and reduce carbon emissions.Ā
Every tonne of verified, traceable rubber imported through the Netherlands contributes to responsible land use, empowering smallholder farmers to adopt sustainable practices while aligning the Dutch trade sector with the EU Green Deal and global climate goals.Ā
The EUDR DDS for Rubber Supply Chain in the Netherlands marks a pivotal shift in how Dutch companies manage compliance, transparency, and sustainability in global trade. As a major European gateway for natural rubber, the Netherlands is uniquely positioned to lead by example, demonstrating how technology-driven traceability and proactive due diligence can transform complex, multi-tier supply chains into verifiable, deforestation-free networks.Ā
By integrating digital solutions, engaging upstream suppliers, and embedding compliance into everyday operations, Dutch rubber importers and manufacturers can not only meet EUDR requirements but also strengthen trust, reduce risk, and advance the EUās broader vision of sustainable, responsible commerce.Ā
Understand the key components of EUDR compliance and how to streamline your DDS process efficiently. 
Read the blog on EUDR Due Diligence 
Learn how AI-driven automation and intelligent workflows simplify data collection, verification, and reporting. 
Explore the blog on Agentic AI for EUDR 
Unpack the biggest hurdles faced by importers under EUDRĀ  and how technology can turn compliance into a competitive edge.Ā 
Read the blog on Challenges for EU ImportersĀ 
The EUDR is a regulation by the European Union aimed at preventing deforestation-linked commodities like rubber from entering the EU market. It requires full supply chain traceability and submission of Due Diligence Statements (DDS) proving compliance.Ā
A DDS is a formal declaration confirming that rubber imported or sold in the Netherlands is deforestation-free and legally sourced. It must include farm-level geolocation data and risk assessment documentation.Ā
All Dutch importers, traders, processors, and retailers involved in the rubber industry are required to comply. Both large corporations and small operators must provide DDS documentation for their supply chains.Ā
Common difficulties include gathering farm-level data, verifying deforestation-free claims, managing multiple small-scale farmers, and manually preparing DDS documents.
TraceX digitizes the entire process of mapping rubber farms, verifying deforestation risks via satellite data, and auto-generating compliant DDS reports ready for submission.Ā
Yes. TraceX is built for scalability and ease of use. It supports both large enterprises and smallholder networks, enabling simple data collection via mobile appsĀ