Press Release

STATEMENT | COMECE and CIDSE urge Council to adopt Due Diligence Directive

In anticipation of the imminent vote by the Council of the EU on the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD) scheduled for Wednesday, February 14, 2024, COMECE and CIDSE jointly issue the following Statement. Together, they urge the governments of EU Member States to promptly adopt the compromise text resulting from the political trialogue negotiations held last December. “Now more than ever, we need mandatory supply chain due diligence to stop corporate abuse and guarantee global solidarity.”  Read the Statement

Deforestation in the Amazon forest. (Photo: Tarcisio Schnaider/Shutterstock)

“EU Member States must deliver the
EU Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive”

The negative impacts of corporate activities on human rights and the environment are not the hazardous and occasional externalities of business activities; they are often the consequences of an economic system that puts profit over people and the extraction of wealth over care for the planet.

Mandatory human rights and environmental due diligence could become a reality after many years of advocacy efforts from civil society and faith-based and religious organisations. It is now on the Council of the European Union to ensure that the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD) is adopted to guarantee access to justice for those affected by corporate abuses.

Echoing the 2020 Catholic Bishops’ statement asking for mandatory human rights and environmental due diligence legislation, CIDSE and COMECE call now on the governments of EU Member States to urgently adopt the compromise text resulting from political trialogue negotiations last December in order to address the risks that corporate activities pose to our Human Family and our Common Home.

Our call joins that of the 2023 Faith Leaders Statement calling on EU lawmakers to adopt a strong law holding companies accountable for their actions that damage the environment and abuse human rights, as well as that of a large number of EU citizens, European and global businesses, investors and international organisations such as the OECD, OHCHR and the ILO. Large, medium-size and small companies support the current compromise as “feasible and appropriate”.

As the 2020 Bishops’ statement stressed: “Now more than ever, we need mandatory supply chain due diligence to stop corporate abuse and guarantee global solidarity.”

Download the Statement