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Quick summary: EUDR compliance in palm oil depends on smallholders and FFB agents. Learn how to onboard them, ensure traceability, and secure EU market access.
The EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR) for Palm Oil Smallholders requires proof that palm oil production is deforestation-free and fully traceable to farm plots. Smallholders, who produce about 40% of global palm oil, must provide polygon-level geolocation data and documentation of legality. Without digital onboarding and integration into Due Diligence Systems (DDS), they risk exclusion from EU supply chains. Fresh Fruit Bunch (FFB) agents add complexity by aggregating from multiple farms, often breaking traceability. Ensuring compliance demands farmer-first digital tools that link smallholder production to exportersā DDS filings.Ā
Palm oil is one of the seven key commodities regulated under the EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR). The EU is one of the largest importers of palm oil, using it across food, cosmetics, and biofuels, which makes compliance business-critical for exporters and producers. The regulationās requirements: geolocation of farm plots, proof of no deforestation after December 31, 2020, and mandatory Due Diligence Statements (DDS) in TRACES apply across the supply chain.
The challenge is that ~40% of global palm oil is produced by smallholders. These farmers typically operate on a few hectares with limited digital tools or record-keeping. Without support, they risk being excluded from EU supply chains simply because they cannot meet compliance requirements.
The future of smallholder participation in the EU palm oil trade depends on building accessible, farmer-first compliance solutions that make geolocation mapping, traceability, and DDS integration possible.Ā
Key Takeaways
Oil palm smallholders are critical stakeholders in the global palm oil value chain. They represent around 41% of planted areas in Indonesia and 27% in Malaysia, together contributing 35ā40% of global palm oil production.
These small-scale farmers typically rely on oil palm as their main source of income, with family labor sustaining cultivation.
Beyond production, the palm oil sector is a lifeline for rural communities, creating jobs, generating income, and driving social development. By improving livelihoods and reducing poverty, the industry holds significant potential to support the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and its 17 SDGs.Ā
Under the EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR), oil palm smallholders face the same compliance requirements as large estates, even though their resources and digital readiness are vastly different. The regulation demands:
The biggest risk is not that smallholders canāt produce sustainably; many already do. The risk is that they will be excluded from EU supply chains if their data is incomplete or non-compliant.Ā
EUDR creates a compliance burden that is disproportionately heavy for smallholders, who often lack smartphones, connectivity, or formal land titles. Unless exporters, governments, and tech providers step in with farmer-first digital solutions, millions of smallholders may lose access to the EU market.
The EUDR is not just a regulation ā itās a fork in the road: either we digitize and include smallholders, or we risk shrinking their livelihoods while pushing supply chains into non-compliance.
Dive into our EUDR Palm Oil Compliance Guide and explore proven solutions.
[Read the blog on EUDR Palm Oil Compliance]
Learn how exporters and smallholders can stay audit-ready with digital tools.
Discover EUDR Solutions
Most palm oil mills cannot meet their processing capacity with their own plantations alone. To fill the gap, they depend heavily on third-party suppliers of Fresh Fruit Bunches (FFBs). In Indonesia, for example, mills often work with one or two large traders who, in turn, rely on a network of sub-agents.
For independent smallholders, this means the only contact point in the supply chain is the sub-agent, not the mill. Transactions are typically informal: a smallholder delivers FFBs, receives a paper receipt for weight and payment, and the fruit is passed along.
This creates three major issues:
Under the EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR), this is a critical bottleneck. The regulation requires mills and exporters to prove:
If FFB origins canāt be traced back to verified farms, the entire shipment risks rejection at port.
The weakest link isnāt the farmer or the mill, itās the informal middle layer of agents and collection centres. Without digitizing this interface, mills cannot prove compliance, no matter how strong their own systems are.Ā
TraceX EUDR Platform solves this by digitally onboarding agents, linking every FFB batch to farmer polygons, and ensuring clean data flows all the way into DDS filings in TRACES.
The palm oil supply chain involves multiple actors, plantations, scheme smallholders (linked to large companies), independent smallholders, mills, traders, exporters, and EU importers. While operators such as exporters are the ones legally responsible for filing Due Diligence Statements (DDS) in the EU TRACES system, the burden of proof ultimately rests at the source, with plantations and smallholders.Ā
To meet EUDR requirements, they must provide:
Large plantations and smallholder schemes are better positioned to comply since they already receive agronomic, technical, and logistical support from plantation companies. They often have documented land tenure and digital mapping systems.Ā
In contrast, independent smallholders are the weakest link. Many lack formal land titles, have no digital farm maps, and sell their Fresh Fruit Bunches (FFBs) through informal agents. This makes it extremely difficult to provide verifiable evidence for legality and geolocation, two core EUDR requirements.
EUDR shifts the compliance challenge upstream: exporters can only file if farmers can prove their fruit is compliant. Without interventions, digital onboarding, legal documentation support, and affordable geolocation tools, independent smallholders risk systemic exclusion from EU supply chains.Ā
EUDR compliance for palm oil will only succeed if the last mile of the supply chain, smallholders and FFB agents, is digitized and connected. Hereās how exporters and mills can bridge the gap:Ā
Platforms from TraceX bring these solutions together, from farmer onboarding and geolocation mapping to DDS automation and TRACES integration, making EUDR compliance both scalable and inclusive.Ā
The EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR) will shape the future of palm oil trade, deciding who wins and who loses in the EU market. Since smallholders and FFB agents account for a large share of production, excluding them is not an option; it would weaken supply chains and devastate livelihoods. The real path forward is to digitally onboard and empower these actors, ensuring their geolocation, legality, and transactions flow into Due Diligence Systems. With the right tools, compliance becomes more than survival ā it becomes an opportunity to build trust, secure markets, and create lasting resilience.Ā
Traceability is the backbone of EUDR compliance. Learn how to digitize supply chains and build farm-to-market visibility.Ā
[Read our Blog on Digital Traceability for EUDR]Ā
Donāt risk TRACES rejections. Step-by-step guidance on preparing and filing audit-ready DDS declarations.Ā
[Explore our Blog on How to File DDS for EUDR]Ā
One bad polygon can block a shipment. See how TraceX validates GeoJSONs to ensure clean, compliant geolocation data.Ā
[Check our Blog on GeoJSON Validation with TraceX]Ā
Smallholders produce 35ā40% of global palm oil, making their inclusion essential for traceability, legality, and deforestation-free verification.Ā
No. FFB agents aggregate fruit from many farmers, and without digitizing their records, the chain of custody breaks, risking EU shipment rejection.Ā
Platforms like TraceX capture geolocation polygons, link deliveries to verified farmers, digitize FFB records, and auto-generate DDS filings in TRACES.Ā