CSDDD

The Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive, also known as the CS3D, is European law that requires large companies (under the original directive: >1,000 employees and turnover >450 million euro) to identify, assess, prevent and address human rights and environmental harms in their own operations and across their global supply chain. Due diligence needs to be incorporated into company policies and business processes and be subject to board level oversight.

There are administrative penalties for non-compliance up to 3% of the global turnover and so you better be be safe than sorry.

Curious how Intire can support you in getting ready for CSDDD?
Reach out to our Human Rights and Due Diligence lawyer Andreea Holwerda-Gavrilla


Click on one of our blogs below to learn more about the CSDDD

CSRD

In the news: CSRD in effect

Over the last few weeks, it’s been hard to miss the buzz around the anticipated acceptance of the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD). On November 10th, the European Parliament has approved the proposed directive (with 85% of the Parliament in favor!), which will become effective as of for the first group of corporations in the beginning of next year at the latest. With the acceptance of the Directive, the sustainability reporting standards have seen updates as well.
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CSRD regulation timeline

The CSRD, a topic many organizations will be facing soon. However, there is quite some misunderstanding, misinformation, and general unclarity about the upcoming CSRD regulation. What do you need to … read more

Deep dive on CSRD and EU Taxonomy

Following up on a successful session during the Future of Corporate Reporting about EU regulation and sustainability reporting frameworks, Intire hosted another webinar specifically about the CSRD and the EU Taxonomy, in collaboration with Reinoud Clemens of DSM.
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What is CSRD?

As of the reporting year 2023, all large or listed companies within the EU will have to report according to the new CSRD (Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive). This directive is … read more