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Labrish
Nyuuz
EU envoys back bill easing supply chain due diligence rules
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[QUOTE="Munyaradzi Mafaro, post: 45840, member: 636"] European Union ambassadors approved new rules that make environmental reporting easier for businesses. The changes reduce strict requirements that many companies currently face. Polish EU Minister Adam Szlapka said the move helps create better conditions for business growth and job creation. Officials want to boost the economy through less regulation. The amendments target two major environmental laws that govern corporate responsibility. Companies with fewer than 5,000 workers will escape reporting requirements under the new rules. Previous laws demanded environmental reporting from businesses with just 1,000 employees. Revenue thresholds also jump from $522 million to $1.7 billion for supply chain monitoring duties. Lawmakers believe larger corporations can better handle compliance costs and administrative work. The changes affect how companies track environmental damage and human rights problems. Climate transition planning obligations become less demanding under the proposed system. The EU Council gains power to guide companies through creating and executing environmental plans. Businesses receive up to two years for putting these plans into action. Officials say this gives companies adequate time for proper preparation. The Council can offer advice about meeting climate goals. Nearly 50,000 companies currently must follow these environmental rules. The new system would apply to fewer than 1,000 businesses across Europe. Environmental group ClientEarth warns the changes create legal uncertainty. The organization says the amendments might violate existing laws. Legal experts predict court challenges if the new rules become official policy. [/QUOTE]
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EU envoys back bill easing supply chain due diligence rules
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