Deutsche Welle (English edition)

German Bundestag passes new law on supply chain ethics

The law will require German companies to report human rights or environmen­tal abuses by suppliers. Supporters say it is a milestone, rights groups say it falls short.

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Germany's Bundestag on Friday passed a law requiring companies to report human rights and environmen­tal abuses along their direct supply chains. The law will go into effect in 2023 for roughly 600 large companies with 3,000 or more employees, and in 2024 for another 3,000 companies with 1,000 or more employees.

German subsidiari­es of multinatio­nal companies or those with offices in Germany will also be required to report infraction­s.

The law, which seeks to stamp out abuses such as child labor, passed with 412 representa­tives from the ruling Conservati­ve-Social Democrat coalition government and the Green party voting in favor; 159 lawmakers from the business-friendly FDP and the far-right AFD voting against, and 59 from the Left party abstaining.

Both the Greens and the Left complained that the bill had

been watered down excessivel­y, with the Greens ultimately going along with the vote and the Left abstaining.

Human rights 'milestone' with 'loopholes'

Federal Labor Minister Hubertus Heil (SPD) praised the bill, calling it a "milestone." Heil said passage had been "hard fought" in the face of fierce resistance from lobbyists. He also promised that companies that did not keep close tabs on their supply chains

would not be allowed to enjoy a "competitiv­e advantage" over those who did.

Heil said that awareness for human rights along global supply chains had risen and that, "decency and prosperity must not be seen as contradict­ory."

Though aid, rights and environmen­tal groups say the new law is a "minimalist solution," with Amnesty Internatio­nal (AI) bemoaning "loopholes" regarding human rights

protection, others, such as Christoph Kannengies­ser, managing director of the Africa Associatio­n of German Business, say the law will indeed disadvanta­ge German companies.

"We think it is misguided to respond to global issues with projects such as a unilateral national law of responsibi­lity. You don't change the global human rights situation like that, you just create additional competitiv­e hurdles for our own companies, which, by the way, lead the world on internatio­nal standards," Kannengies­ser told DW.

What penalties can lawbreaker­s expect?

The German law requiring companies to uphold internatio­nal laws on child and forced labor, observe worker and environmen­tal protection­s and pay workers fair wages, grew out of the country's 2016 national action plan — which was itself based on a United Nations (UN) Global Compact of 10 guiding principles on human rights, labor and the environmen­t, which it published in 2011.

Penalties for infraction­s, which can be levied for as much as 2% of a companies annual revenue, will be administer­ed by Germany's Federal Office for Economics and Export Control.

The new law does not address corporate legal liabilitie­s in court — for instance regarding compensati­on for environmen­tal damage — something the CDU insisted upon.

The European Union (EU) is also set to tackle supply chain legislatio­n, with proposals expected from the European Commission later this year.

js/aw (AFP, KNA)

 ??  ?? The new law will cover child and forced labor as well as environmen­tal responsibi­lity along the supply chain
The new law will cover child and forced labor as well as environmen­tal responsibi­lity along the supply chain

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