Although mainly aimed at EU businesses, the directive will also affect UK and other non-EU businesses which either have sufficiently large EU activities, have EU parents or are involved in EU supply chains. The costs involved may be significant.
he European Commission
published its proposed, long-awaited and potentially highly significant
directive on due diligence on 23 February 2022. The directive will
impose a duty on major businesses to carry out human rights and
environmental due diligence in their global value chains.
Although mainly aimed at EU businesses, the directive will also
affect UK and other non-EU businesses which either have sufficiently
large EU activities, have EU parents or are involved in EU supply
chains. The costs involved may be significant.
Who does it apply to?
The directive applies to companies and some other legal entities,
such as credit institutions, insurance companies and some pension funds.
It covers three groups, starting with EU entities with more than 500
employees and a net worldwide turnover of more than €150 million.
Second are EU entities with more than 250 employees and a net
worldwide turnover of more than €40 million, if half or more of their
turnover comes from certain ‘high impact’ sectors. These include the
manufacture and wholesale trade of textiles and leather, agriculture,
forestry, fisheries, food manufacture, mineral resource extraction and
wholesale trade and manufacture of metal and other mineral products.
Finally come non-EU entities which generate a net turnover of more
than €150 million in the EU or between €40 million and €150 million in
the EU with at least half coming from the high impact sectors. This
means that companies registered in England and Wales, Scotland or
Northern Ireland must meet the directive requirements if they satisfy
this test.
What does it require?
Companies covered by the directive must identify actual and potential
adverse human rights violations and environmental impacts from their
operations and supply chains, including established relationships with
contractors, subcontractors, and partners.
Adverse impacts cover, for example, human rights issues such as
inadequate workplace health and safety and child labour and
environmental impacts such as loss of endangered species and greenhouse
gas emissions.
Financial services must identify adverse impacts before providing credit, loan or other financial services. Where relevant, entities must consult potentially affected groups such as workers and other stakeholders.
Companies must also take appropriate measures to prevent or mitigate
identified impacts. This includes having a prevention action plan with
timelines for action, indicators to measure improvements, and measures
to end or minimise adverse impacts. They must monitor the effectiveness
of their operations and measures once a year, update their policy and
report annually on what they have done.
Affected companies must have a due diligence policy which sets out
their approach, with the processes and measures to be taken, and a code
of conduct for employees and subsidiaries. The policy must be updated
annually and be integrated into other corporate policies.
EU and non-EU entities with a turnover of more than €150 million must
also make their business model and strategy compatible with
transitioning to a sustainable economy and limiting global warming to
1.5 degrees celsius, in line with the Paris Agreement. They must
identify climate change risks and impacts and include emission reduction
objectives.
To reinforce the general approach, directors of EU companies will
also be personally responsible for putting the various due diligence
actions in place and considering relevant input from stakeholders and
civil society organisations. They must also ensure the corporate
strategy takes account of the adverse impacts identified and the
measures taken to prevent or end them.
When things go wrong
Member states will have to establish supervisory authorities to make
sure entities comply. Non-EU companies will be supervised by the
authority in the member state where they have a branch or where most of
their relevant net turnover is generated.
Businesses must have a complaints procedure where trade unions, civil
society organisations and anyone affected by an adverse impact can
raise concerns about adverse human rights and environmental impacts.
Businesses may face fines imposed by a national authority based on
turnover as well as civil liability...
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