2024年10月22日
Companies developing operations within the EU are increasingly confronted with sustainability regulations and other ESG-related issues. An important part of this concerns non-financial reporting, which requires companies to identify and report on their impact on (among other things) climate and human rights.
We are witnessing a shift from responsibility for the activities of one's own company and (legally) related entities, to a responsibility for the entire chain of companies that help the company market its products or services.
In this article, we zoom in on the chain of activities, and the profound impact that particular concept has and will have for business.
The Supply Chain: concept and connotation
The term “supply chain ” (“value chain”, “chain of activities”) refers to the entire network of entities associated with an enterprise that are directly or indirectly involved in its activities, both upstream and downstream.Legal context and evolution: shift from the corporate group to the (activity) chain influenced by Europe
The trend in regulation of (supply chains of) companies in Europe shows a clear shift from national to supranational approaches, with a growing focus on chain responsibility.The Supply Chain in European regulations other than the CSRD and CSD
The chain concept is further used in other European regulation:The Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD)
IntroductionTo whom does the CSDDD apply?
Applicability to companies within the EUApplicability to companies from third countries
Companies incorporated outside the EU must also comply with all obligations of the CSDDD as soon as they fall under one of the following criteria:
Again, the Directive will only apply if the first two thresholds are exceeded in two consecutive financial years.
Special regime for parent companies
Parent companies that fall within the scope of the CSDDD but that do not engage in operational decisions and merely have as their main activity the holding of shares in operational subsidiaries may be exempted. This applies to both EU and non-EU companies.
However, if a company wants to make use of this exemption in the capacity of a parent company, it must designate a subsidiary company established in the EU and meet all the conditions of the CSDDD Directive on behalf of the parent.
Moreover, the parent company remains jointly and severally liable for the subsidiary's failure to comply with the requirements.
Transitional rules for transposition into national law
The previous thresholds are somewhat mitigated by the temporal entry into force of the CSDDD. This provides for a (very) long transitional period to comply with the set obligations.
Each national member state will only have to take the necessary measures to transpose the directive by July 26, 2026 at the latest. And the application will be phased thereafter:
Only as of July 26, 2027 will the member states have to apply the rules of the CSDDD to EU companies that had an average of more than 5,000 employees (instead of 1,000 employees) and a worldwide net turnover of more than EUR 1.5 billion (instead of EUR 450 million in the EU only) in the financial year before July 26, 2027;
A very broad transition period is thus envisaged, which should allow companies to prepare both themselves, and their entire activity chain.
But what are now the concrete obligations for companies that fall within the scope of the CSDDD, and how does that translate concretely to their chain of activities? We will discuss this further in a subsequent contribution.