...

Logo Pasino du Havre - Casino-Hôtel - Spa
in partnership with
Logo Nextory

EU lawmakers vote to ease corporate due diligence requirements

Business • Oct 14, 2025, 12:14 AM
7 min de lecture
1

Businesses across the EU will see certain obligations eased to help them thrive and contribute to Europe’s competitiveness — at least that is the European Parliament's pledge.

The Parliament’s objective is to reduce reporting requirements on sustainability and human rights, as lawmakers voted on Monday to water down the bloc’s corporate due diligence rules.

Only companies with more than 5,000 employees — instead of the 1,000 adopted last year by the EU — and with a yearly turnover of €1.5 billion — instead of €450 million — will be obliged to comply with the bloc’s due diligence law, according to the vote cast by MEPs in the legal affairs committee with 17 votes in favour and six against.

The EU’s corporate due diligence law requires companies to check their supply chains for shady environmental and labour practices, to avoid disasters like Rana Plaza, the Bangladesh garment factory whose collapse in 2013 cost over 1,000 lives.

After its adoption in May 2024, the bloc’s corporate due diligence law drew backlash from several business operators, who claimed it was an onerous burden and harmed the bloc’s competitiveness.

Pressure from Washington, amid ongoing trade discussions, is also seen as a major factor in the EU's decision to dismantle sustainability rules.

As a result, the European Commission proposed administrative simplifications in February — the so-called Omnibus — which aims to reduce reporting obligations under EU sustainability laws, such as the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD) and the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD).

Simplification for predictability

Swedish MEP Jörgen Warborn (EPP), responsible for the due diligence file in the Parliament, said the vote meant predictability for European companies.

Warborn led the legislative file with an iron fist, as the centrist lawmaker threatened to side with the far-right if the left did not make concessions to reach a compromise text, leading to the resignation of Lara Wolters (Netherlands/S&D), the lawmaker co-leading negotiations on the file.

The lobby against the bloc’s sustainability rules has been stiff, with nearly 50 European companies, led by TotalEnergies and Siemens, calling on German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and French President Emmanuel Macron to “abolish” the bloc’s corporate due diligence rules.

US oil and gas giant Exxon Mobil has also been heavily lobbying both US lawmakers and EU institutions to ease these rules, the Centre for Research on Multinational Corporations claimed.

Ann Mettler, former Commission director-general and vice president for Europe at Breakthrough Energy, a network of organisations founded by US tech magnate Bill Gates to accelerate the transition to clean energy, regretted the lack of supportive mechanisms for companies growing, after EU governments struck a first deal in the summer.

“(There are) only punitive (schemes) that assign extra responsibilities to ‘big’ firms, such as additional compliance, complex governance," Mettler said.

"What is adding insult to injury, however, is first making our companies dangerously dependent on ‘cheap’ made-in-China products and now demanding a squeaky-clean supply chain via (the EU’s corporate due diligence law),” she added.

But not everyone agrees that simplifying crucial rules is a deterrent to competitiveness.

AP / Susan Montoya Bryan
AP / Susan Montoya Bryan AP / Susan Montoya Bryan

'False dichotomy'

Former European leaders, such as Finland’s Sanna Marin and the EU's Josep Borrell, were among the signatories of a letter calling on the bloc to save EU sustainability rules, rejecting the “false dichotomy” between sustainability and social responsibility and efficiency and competitiveness.

“Weakening and delaying sustainability rules carries a price tag we cannot afford. Sustainability isn’t the burden — the burden is not being sustainable”, said Enrico Giovannini, former Italian Minister under Mario Draghi and Enrico Letta’s governments, who also signed the letter.

The Swedish law firm Cirio said the Commission’s proposal to simplify sustainability rules is at odds with EU law as it fails to provide any sort of impact assessment, a claim that was backed by a preliminary legal analysis by Baldon Avocats, commissioned by the non-profit ClientEarth.

Audrey Changoe, trade and investment policy coordinator at the NGO Climate Action Network Europe (CAN), said Monday’s vote was a “clear win for Big Oil”.

"With the scrapped implementation requirements, what’s left is little more than a greenwashing paperwork exercise," said Changoe.

"EU lawmakers are losing sight of both their democratic duty and the climate reality, siding with fossil fuel giants while ignoring the majority of EU citizens who want stronger climate action," she added.

While the report, which will kickstart inter-institutional talks, keeps mandatory climate transition plans and maintains a relatively robust due diligence framework for companies, the rise of the company size threshold does not improve the civil liability regime, marking a significant setback for enforcement and corporate accountability.

After Monday’s vote in the Parliament, lawmakers will need to ratify the decision during a plenary session in Strasbourg, likely due on 20 October. Once the full house has cast its vote, negotiations between the Council, the Parliament and the Commission will begin.

Euronews has reached out to Exxon Mobil for comment.


Today

EU should stand its ground despite US pressure, former EU competition chief says
Business • 3:40 PM
6 min
Brussels’s tech laws have come under pressure ever since the new US administration took office in January.
Read the article
Rome clears EU-bound budget draft with healthcare trims
Business • 2:12 PM
4 min
With the EU’s filing deadline looming, Rome approved its draft budget plan on Tuesday and will reconvene this Friday to lock in the tax cuts and funding. That's before sending the full budget bill to parliament by 20 October.
Read the article
Stellantis to pour €11bn into US expansion to avoid tariff-induced losses
Business • 11:45 AM
3 min
The car giant says its biggest-ever US investment will increase output by 50%, add more than 5,000 jobs, and counter some tariff costs by boosting North American profitability.
Read the article
US charges Cambodian crypto kingpin after largest ever bitcoin seizure
Business • 10:59 AM
4 min
Prosecutors say individuals in forced-labour camps convinced victims to funnel billions into fake investments. The state may now use the seized crypto to repay the defrauded parties.
Read the article
Waymo says it will expand to Europe next year with driverless robotaxis in London
Business • 10:32 AM
3 min
Waymo is the second company to say it will bring robotaxis to the UK.
Read the article
French telecom bid: Orange, Bouygues, and Free offer €17bn for SFR
Business • 9:22 AM
2 min
The three French groups submitted a joint non-binding offer to take over the telecom activities of the Altice Group in France, which includes most of SFR.
Read the article
ChatGPT will soon allow adults to use AI chatbot for ‘erotica,’ OpenAI’s Sam Altman says
Business • 9:18 AM
2 min
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said that verified adults will be able to use ChatGPT for ‘erotica’ by the end of the year.
Read the article
ASML gains on earnings beat, but warns of China sales decline
Business • 8:57 AM
4 min
ASML shares rose on strong third-quarter results and an upbeat outlook, driven by demand for AI and chipmaking tools, despite concerns over future China sales.
Read the article
Could NASA really put a nuclear reactor on the Moon by 2030? |Euronews Tech Talks
Business • 8:01 AM
8 min
NASA’s plans to build a nuclear reactor on the Moon has raised questions about the US space strategy and renewed curiosity about the use of nuclear energy beyond Earth. Euronews Tech Talks hosted nuclear energy experts to discuss.
Read the article
Europe wants to bring industry to space. What is the ‘Moon economy?’
Business • 7:43 AM
7 min
Some of the world’s space agencies are getting ready for commercial activity on the Moon.
Read the article
Philanthropists to invest €427 million to curbs tech giants’ influence on new AI
Business • 7:39 AM
4 min
Many are questioning whether AI's rapid deployment is actually improving their quality of life.
Read the article
Flying taxis may soon ferry passengers above the congested roadways of Dubai
Business • 6:01 AM
3 min
Dubai plans to have flying cars in its skies as soon as 2026.
Read the article
Loneliness may raise risk of dying from cancer, new study warns
Business • 4:31 AM
3 min
The findings suggest our social connections could help shape cancer outcomes.
Read the article