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Quick summary: TraceX helps soy companies in Spain meet EUDR requirements with automated Due Diligence Statement (DDS) generation, farm-level traceability, and deforestation risk verification.
EUDR DDS for Soy Supply Chain in Spain ensures that all soy and soy-derived products imported, processed, or traded by Spanish operators are deforestation-free, legally sourced, and fully traceable. Under the EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR), Spanish soy importers, feed manufacturers, and biofuel producers must implement a Due Diligence System (DDS) to verify farm-level geolocation, legality of production, and deforestation-free status before placing soy on the EU market. By adopting digital traceability and risk assessment tools, Spain’s soy industry can secure compliance, maintain EU trade access, and lead in sustainable, transparent agri-commodity supply chains.
The EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR) fundamentally reshapes how Spain’s soy supply-chain must operate. As a major European consumer and importer of soybeans and soy-derived products, Spain must ensure that all soy entering or processed within its market is legally produced, deforestation-free (no forest cleared after 31 Dec 2020), and fully traceable to its plot of origin.
Soy is a high-risk agricultural commodity for deforestation, especially from producing countries in South America and elsewhere. The EUDR explicitly includes soy and its derivatives in its scope of regulated commodities. For Spain with its strong livestock, animal-feed, oil-processing and food-industry links this means Spanish importers, processors and traders must verify that every tonne of soy meets the three core EUDR criteria: legal production, deforestation-free sourcing, and complete traceability of origin.
Spain is one of the EU’s key gateways for soy imports and soy-based processing (animal feed, oils, food ingredients). Spanish companies placing soy or soy-derived products on the EU market must comply with EUDR. The regulation binds Spanish operators to collect geolocation data for farms or plots, verify legality, assess deforestation-risk, and submit a Due Diligence Statement (DDS
Under EUDR:
The regulation applies to soybeans and soy-derived products (e.g., soy meal, soy oil, animal-feed containing soy) when placed on the EU market. Spain’s feed-industry, oil-processing and food-ingredients sectors are all in scope. The operator responsibility lies with those placing the commodity on the market.
For Spain’s soy sector, EUDR drives digital traceability, tighter supplier-engagement, and stronger integration of sustainability data. It raises the bar for transparency and responsible sourcing positioning Spain’s soy-industry not just for compliance, but for leadership in deforestation-free supply-chains.
By aligning with EUDR, Spanish soy-importers and processors can reduce regulatory risk, strengthen credibility with EU buyers, and align with broader sustainability/ESG trends.
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 soy importers can achieve traceability, transparency, and compliance under EUDR.
Read the full blog on EUDR Soy Compliance
Spanish soy importers, feed‐mill operators and processors must provide farm or plot geolocation data for every batch of soy placed on the EU market. Yet many supplying farms in Brazil, Argentina or Paraguay operate without precise GIS documentation or certified boundaries, making full traceability difficult.
Soy flows through multiple stages—smallholder farms → aggregators → crushers → meal/oil processors. Batches are often blended at storage, losing farm‐level origin. Spanish operators thus struggle to ensure the original plot data remains intact for each product chain.
Beyond origin, operators must verify that the soy did not originate from land deforested after 31 Dec 2020 and that all production complied with country laws. Given variations in land-tenure systems and monitoring in key origin states, Spanish firms face high due-diligence burdens
Many Spanish mid‐sized soy‐processors and feed mills lack advanced digital platforms to gather, integrate and report supplier and plot data. Building or adopting systems that can handle geolocation, batch tracking, risk scoring and annual reporting represents a steep investment.
EUDR deadlines (large/medium by 30 Dec 2025; smaller by 30 Jun 2026) impose tight timelines. Industry bodies such as COCERAL cite high costs for segregated supply chain upgrades and fear SMEs may lack capital to adapt.
As requirements tighten, compliant soy volumes may shrink initially, raising premiums on verified batches. Spanish feed and oil‐crushing sectors may face supply constraints, forcing shifts to alternative origins or facing cost increases.
Many Spanish soy supply chains rely indirectly on smallholders in exporting countries. Ensuring these upstream actors provide valid geolocation, sustainability declaration and legality documentation remains a major challenge in practice.
Ambiguities remain around implementation details, IT-systems, harmonisation across Member States, and risk classification. Spanish operators must prepare amid regulatory uncertainty which may affect compliance planning and investment decisions
In short: Spanish soy companies must scale transparency, digitise supply chains, verify legality rigorously and act swiftly. Those who do will secure EU market access and sustainability leadership; those who delay risk disruption, higher costs and competitive disadvantage.
As Spain plays a pivotal role in Europe’s soy import and feed production network, compliance with the EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR) has become a strategic priority. Spanish soy importers, crushers, and feed manufacturers must ensure that every shipment of soybeans, meal, or oil is deforestation-free, legally sourced, and fully traceable to its farm of origin. TraceX’s digital EUDR Compliance Platform provides an integrated, AI- and blockchain-enabled solution that helps Spanish soy companies automate Due Diligence Statement (DDS) generation, digitise supplier onboarding, and achieve seamless compliance ahead of the 2025 deadline.
TraceX automates the generation and validation of EUDR-compliant DDS reports, consolidating critical data from farm-level geolocation to legality documentation and supplier declarations into a single digital record. Direct integration with the EU’s official reporting portal enables Spanish operators to generate submission-ready DDS files instantly, cutting administrative work and ensuring full audit-readiness for shipments entering or circulating within the EU market.
Each soy batch imported through Spanish ports like Barcelona, Valencia, or Bilbao is assigned a secure blockchain ID, creating a tamper-proof chain of custody from producing farm to end processor. This digital ledger ensures transparent proof of origin, enabling Spanish importers and feed manufacturers to demonstrate compliance and build trust with EU buyers, regulators, and retailers demanding deforestation-free assurance.
Through its mobile-enabled interface, TraceX enables easy onboarding of global suppliers and cooperatives. Producers and aggregators in key sourcing regions (Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay) can register plantations, capture precise GPS coordinates, and upload compliance documents. This simplifies supplier inclusion for Spanish firms sourcing from smallholder-based or high-risk areas, ensuring end-to-end traceability down to individual farm plots.
TraceX’s AI-driven dashboards offer real-time insights into sourcing risk, deforestation alerts, and supplier performance metrics. Spanish soy operators can identify non-compliant or high-risk sources early, track mitigation progress, and ensure that only verified, low-risk soy enters the EU supply chain. The platform’s predictive analytics also help businesses prepare for audits and manage evolving EUDR risk categories efficiently.
A Spanish feed manufacturer sourcing soy meal from Brazil and Argentina can use TraceX to onboard suppliers, verify legality and land-use documentation, and automatically generate DDS for each shipment. Within weeks, the company can achieve full supply-chain visibility, cut manual compliance work by 70%, and guarantee deforestation-free certification for all EU-facing trade.
By combining AI-based intelligence, blockchain traceability, and automated DDS workflows, TraceX converts EUDR compliance into a competitive edge for Spanish soy traders and processors. The platform helps companies maintain uninterrupted EU market access, reduce regulatory risks, and strengthen brand credibility in sustainable agri-trade.

The EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR) represents one of the most transformative shifts for Spain’s soy, food, and animal feed sectors in decades. As one of Europe’s largest importers of soybeans and soy meal primarily for livestock feed, food ingredients, and bio-based industries Spain’s compliance with EUDR is not merely a regulatory requirement but a strategic imperative tied to competitiveness, sustainability, and market access.
Spain’s feed and food processors are deeply integrated with the EU single market. Under EUDR, operators must submit verified Due Diligence Statements (DDS) confirming that all soy products including beans, meal, and derivatives are deforestation-free and legally sourced. Non-compliance could lead to import restrictions, product seizures, or fines, disrupting supply chains and jeopardising access to high-value EU buyers who demand EUDR-aligned sourcing.
Soy underpins Spain’s agri-food economy, particularly as the primary source of protein for livestock feed. The regulation affects feed manufacturers, crushing plants, and soy oil refineries in hubs like Catalonia, Andalusia, and Valencia. Adhering to EUDR ensures business continuity for thousands of processors and exporters whose operations depend on compliant, verified soy imports safeguarding jobs, exports, and food security.
EUDR compliance positions Spanish companies as sustainability leaders within the EU. Demonstrating deforestation-free and legally sourced soy aligns with global ESG expectations, the European Green Deal, and Sustainable Food Systems policies. This compliance can enhance brand reputation, improve relationships with institutional investors, and unlock access to sustainability-linked financing and certifications such as FSC, PEFC, or ISCC PLUS.
Spanish retailers and food brands are under increasing pressure from consumers and NGOs to eliminate deforestation-linked commodities from their supply chains. Verified EUDR compliance provides a transparent proof of ethical sourcing, allowing brands to strengthen consumer trust and meet the expectations of sustainability-conscious markets across Europe.
EUDR drives a digital transformation across the Spanish soy ecosystem from importers to crushers, feed mills, and distributors. The adoption of traceability platforms like TraceX promotes seamless data sharing, improves supplier accountability, and facilitates cross-sector collaboration. In the long term, this transparency reduces reputational risks, builds resilience, and enables more efficient sustainability reporting under upcoming EU frameworks like the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD).
The regulation incentivises Spanish companies to source more responsibly favouring certified, low-risk origins and encouraging investment in deforestation-free soy production in supplier countries. This transition not only stabilises long-term supply security but also aligns with Spain’s national strategies for climate neutrality and biodiversity protection.
EUDR compliance is more than a legal requirement it’s a defining opportunity for Spain’s soy, food, and feed industries to modernise supply chains, reinforce sustainability leadership, and secure their future in an increasingly regulated, transparent, and climate-conscious marketplace.
The EUDR DDS for Soy Supply Chain in Spain marks a pivotal shift toward transparency, accountability, and sustainability in one of the nation’s most critical import-dependent sectors. As Spain continues to serve as a major gateway for soy entering the EU, companies across the feed, food, and bio-material industries must now adopt advanced digital traceability and compliance systems to meet deforestation-free and legality standards. Platforms like TraceX empower Spanish operators to automate Due Diligence Statements, verify origin data, and ensure full traceability from farm to factory. By embracing this digital transformation, Spain’s soy sector can safeguard EU market access, enhance sustainability credentials, and position itself as a frontrunner in responsible agricultural trade under the new EUDR regime.
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 EUDR and how technology can turn compliance into a competitive edge.
Read blog on Challenges for EU Importers
The EUDR is a regulation by the European Union aimed at preventing deforestation-linked commodities like soy from entering the EU market. It requires full supply chain traceability and submission of Due Diligence Statements (DDS) proving compliance.
A DDS is a formal declaration confirming that soy imported or sold in Spain is deforestation-free and legally sourced. It must include farm-level geolocation data and risk assessment documentation.
All Spanish importers, traders, processors and retailers handling soy are required to comply. Both large corporations and small operators must provide DDS documentation for their supply chains.
Common difficulties include gathering farm-level data, verifying deforestation-free claims, managing multiple smallholders, and preparing DDS documents manually.
TraceX digitizes the entire process mapping soy farms, verifying deforestation risks via satellite data, and auto-generating compliant DDS reports ready for submission.
Yes. TraceX is built for scalability and ease of use. It supports both large enterprises and smallholder networks, enabling simple data collection via mobile apps