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Human Rights and Environmental Due Diligence

Building an effective human rights and environmental due diligence system

Human rights and environmental due diligence is rarely something organisations set out to design from scratch.

It shows up indirectly — through new legal requirements, customer expectations, audit findings, NGO scrutiny, or an incident somewhere in the supply chain, forcing decisions about how risks are actually managed.

The good news is that most organisations are not starting from zero. Policies, codes of conduct, supplier requirements, audits and risk processes are already in place. What is often missing is a way to connect these elements into a single operating logic — so that risks are prioritised consistently, responsibilities are clear, and issues escalate early enough for management to act.

Human rights and environmental due diligence (HREDD) provides that integration.

It helps organisations identify where the most severe impacts sit in their value chain, decide which deserve attention first, and then make those priorities usable in sourcing decisions, supplier engagement and escalation within existing governance and risk processes.