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Article

23 Sep 2025

Author:
Philippa Nuttall, FT Sustainable Views

EU: Scandinavian companies urge MEPs to uphold original CSDDD text

'Editor’s note: policymakers aren’t really listening to business', 23 September 2025

Representatives from Scandinavian businesses — Ikea, Lego, jewellery giant Pandora, and energy companies Ørsted, Norsk Hydro, Statkraft and Neste — were in the European parliament this morning to voice their support for the original version of the EU Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive. None of the MEPs proposing to water down the law massively, supposedly in the name of business, were, however, in the room to hear their arguments.

During the breakfast roundtable hosted by the Danish Institute for Human Rights and CSDDD-supporting MEPs, the companies insisted on the importance of ensuring they can carry out due diligence along the whole of their value chain (as per the original proposal and UN guiding principles)...

They also expressed support for EU-level civil liability (scrapped under current proposals)...

And they dismissed the idea the scope of the CSDDD needs widening. The 2022 Norwegian Transparency Act was cited that applies to companies with 50 employees or more and with a sales revenue upwards of €6mn, compared with the proposal by the parliament’s lead negotiator, Jörgen Warborn, who wants to raise thresholds to more than 3,000 employees and €450mn in turnover.

Their arguments were clear and convincing and based on the lived experiences of businesses. Yet, the lack of MEPs in the room suggests some policymakers have made up their mind to listen only to a very specific group of big businesses and their lobbyists...

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