Due diligence | European Foundation for the Improvement of Living and Working Conditions (2024)

Definition

Due diligence is how a business understands, manages and communicates about risk. This includes the risks it generates for others, and the risks it encounters through its strategic and operational decisions and actions. Due diligence is defined by the 2011OECD guidelines for multinational enterprisesas:

the process through which enterprises can identify, prevent, mitigate, and account for how they address their actual and potential adverse impacts as an integral part of business decision-making and risk management systems.

Specifically, human rights due diligence is the process through which companies should identify, prevent, mitigate and account for their human rights impacts.

Background

There is currently no single EU legislative framework on due diligence; however, there are several initiatives in place that address some of the negative impacts of businesses on human rights and the environment. For instance, the EU has adopted three main directives: the Non-financial Reporting Directive, which is currently under revision; the Timber Regulation, which aims to reduce illegal logging by ensuring that no illegal timber or timber products can be sold in the EU; and the Conflict Minerals Regulation, which ‘lays down the supply chain due diligence obligations of Union importers of minerals or metals containing or consisting of tin, tantalum, tungsten or gold’ (Article 1(2)).

  • European Parliament and Council of the EU: Directive 2014/95/EU of 22 October 2014 amending Directive 2013/34/EU as regards disclosure of non-financial and diversity information by certain large undertakings and groups
  • European Parliament and Council of the EU: Regulation (EU) No 995/2010 of 20 October 2010 laying down the obligations of operators who place timber and timber products on the market
  • European Parliament and Council of the EU: Regulation (EU) 2017/821 of 17 May 2017 laying down supply chain due diligence obligations for Union importers of tin, tantalum and tungsten, their ores, and gold originating from conflict-affected and high-risk areas

Regulatory aspects

Non-financial information

The most relevant and broadest initiative in the field of fundamental rights is the Non-financial Reporting Directive. This requires large companies to disclose information on the policies they implement in relation to environmental protection, social responsibility and treatment of employees, respect for human rights, measures to counter corruption and bribery, and measures to ensure diversity on company boards. It applies only to large public interest companies with more than 500 employees.

According to the directive, such companies must include in their management report a non-financial statement containing information pertaining to the undertaking’s development, performance, position and impact of its activity, relating to environmental, social and employee matters, respect for human rights, anti-corruption and bribery matters. This would include the following:

  • a brief description of the undertaking's business model.
  • a description of the policies pursued by the undertaking in relation to those matters, including due diligence processes implemented.
  • the outcome of those policies.
  • the principal risks related to those matters linked to the undertaking's operations including, where relevant and proportionate, its business relationships, products or services which are likely to cause adverse impacts in those areas, and how the undertaking manages those risks.
  • non-financial key performance indicators relevant to the particular business.

However, the main loophole in the directive is the absence of any real sanctions for companies that do not provide such reports. According to a report on due diligence prepared for the European Commission in 2020, this explains why efforts to achieve self-regulation by introducing voluntary corporate accountability initiatives have been ineffective.

  • European Commission:Study on due diligence requirements through the supply chain

Revision of the Non-financial Reporting Directive

To address the shortcomings in the Non-financial Reporting Directive, the European Commission announced its intention to revise the directive, while in March 2021 the European Parliament passed a resolution on corporate due diligence and corporate accountability, urging the Commission to act. For the Parliament, a revision of the directive is needed to ensure that companies meet their obligations in terms of respect for human rights, the environment and good governance, wherever they operate in the world. The MEPs’ proposal is aimed at ensuring that undertakings:

do not cause or contribute to potential or actual adverse impacts on human rights, the environment and good governance through their own activities or those directly linked to their operations, products or services by a business relationship or in their value chains, and that they prevent and mitigate those adverse impacts.

This best-efforts obligation extends to large undertakings and high-risk or publicly listed small and medium-sized undertakings, a notion that will have to be defined in more detail by the future directive, taking into account ‘the sector of the undertaking or its type of activities’ but disregarding the size of its workforce or turnover. It is noteworthy that MEPs firmly rejected an amendment seeking to exclude small and medium-sized undertakings from the directive’s scope of application. Undertakings will be required to draw up a ‘due diligence strategy’ for risk assessment purposes, including within their chain of subcontractors and suppliers, and to adopt ‘proportionate and commensurate policies and measures with a view to ceasing, preventing or mitigating potential or actual adverse impacts on human rights, the environment or good governance’. Member States will be required to guarantee:

the right for trade unions at the relevant level, including sectoral, national, European and global levels, and for workers’ representatives to be involved in the establishment and implementation of the due diligence strategy in good faith with their undertaking.

Employee representatives, including European works councils and European company works councils, will have to be kept informed of companies’ due diligence strategies and their implementation. An amendment has also been adopted to prevent undertakings explicitly passing the burden of their obligations on to their subcontractors.

  • European Parliament:Resolution on corporate due diligence and corporate accountability

Related dictionary terms

Corporate social responsibility;Global Deal;global union network;International Labour Organization

Due diligence | European Foundation for the Improvement of Living and Working Conditions (2024)

FAQs

What is the penalty for CSDDD? ›

Large companies working in the EU will be liable for fines equal to 5% of their global net turnover for breaching the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD), following an agreement between the European Council and Parliament.

What are the obligations of CSDDD? ›

Obligations for companies:

The CSDDD sets out obligations for larger companies in relation to environmental impacts and human rights in their value chain, including responsibility for upstream value chain and partly downstream activities such as transportation, storage and disposal.

What does Eurofound do? ›

Eurofound provides information, advice and expertise on working conditions and sustainable work, industrial relations, labour market change and quality and life and public services, to support the EU Institutions and bodies, Member States and Social Partners in shaping and implementing social and employment policies, ...

What is the CSDDD summary? ›

Continuing this trend, the EU parliament approved the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD) in 24 April 2024. The directive aims to ensure that companies take proactive measures to respect human rights and mitigate environmental impacts within their operations and supply chains.

Who does the CSDD apply to? ›

Which companies does the CSDDD apply to? The CSDDD applies to EU and non-EU companies, including most regulated financial undertakings, that satisfy the turnover and employee thresholds. It also applies to ultimate parent companies of groups that satisfy the same thresholds on a consolidated group basis.

What is the timeline for CSDDD? ›

CSDDD timeline

2024-2026: EU members states transpose CSDDD into national law. 2026/2027: CSDDD takes effect at national level. From 2027: Companies with 5,000+ employees and a net turnover of 1 ,500 million EUR must comply. From 2028: Companies with 3,000+ employees and a net turnover of 900 million EUR must comply.

How to comply with CSDDD? ›

In-scope companies must take the following steps to comply:
  1. Identify any actual or potential negative impacts on the environment and human rights within your operations and along your value (supply) chain.
  2. Put in place measures to prevent, mitigate and remediate these impacts.
Apr 11, 2024

What is the difference between CSRD and CSDDD? ›

Differences between the CSDDD and CSRD

‍The CSDDD also has a reporting component (reinforced by the CSRD), but focuses more broadly on supply chain due diligence related to sustainability, the environment, and human rights.

How to implement CSDDD? ›

Compliance with CSDDD involves implementing due diligence, risk assessment, mitigation strategies, and transparent reporting. Companies need to show that they've addressed any risks they identify in accordance with the below implementation timeline.

Where is Eurofound headquarters? ›

It is headquartered in Loughlinstown, County Dublin, Ireland. The offices of Eurofound are located at Wyattville Road, Loughlinstown, County Dublin, D18 KP65, Ireland.

How many EU agencies are there? ›

The EU Agencies Network (EUAN) supports the work of the 51 EU decentralised Agencies, Joint Undertakings and bodies and their 12.000 staff located in 24 Member States.

What does CSDDD stand for? ›

In December 2023, the European Parliament and European Council reached provisional agreement on the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD) that was proposed by the European Commission in February 2022.

What does doing due diligence mean? ›

What Is Due Diligence? Due diligence is an investigation, audit, or review performed to confirm facts or details of a matter under consideration. In the financial world, due diligence requires an examination of financial records before entering into a proposed transaction with another party.

What is the green claims directive? ›

The proposed directive would require companies to substantiate the voluntary green claims they make in business-to-consumer commercial practices, by complying with a number of requirements regarding their assessment (e.g. taking a life-cycle perspective). The proposal is now in the hands of the co-legislators.

What is the corporate sustainability due diligence directive? ›

What does the new law do? 'Sustainability due diligence' refers to the steps companies take to identify and address the human rights and environmental risks in their value chains. It has global and cross-stakeholder acceptance as an essential element of 'responsible business'.

Does CSDR apply to non-EU companies? ›

One significant addition of the CSRD to the NFRD requirements is to extend the scope of the reporting obligations to include international companies. A subsidiary company with a parent based outside of the EU may be required to report under the CSRD. In this case, the non-EU parent company will also have to report.

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