Without question, the Act and its associated reporting obligations have been successful in raising awareness about forced labour and child labour risks in business and supply chain activities. Between the announcement of the Act and the weeks following the filing deadline, there was a nearly 100 percent increase in online searches referencing related terms (such as “Bill S-211”, “Fighting forced labour in supply chains act”, and “modern slavery”).1
Similarly, over the past year, entities and their advisors have been immersed in discussions about the Act and emerging global expectations around supply chain management, and benchmarking policies and practices against the reporting criteria of the Act for the purposes of drafting 2023 disclosures.
KPMG in Canada reviewed 5,794 report submissions for the Act uploaded onto the library catalogue of Public Safety Canada.2,3 Reporting entities included organizations of all sizes across all sectors, including the public sector; the majority (approximately 80 percent) source goods and services globally, and 15 percent of entities also report under other global reporting requirements.
The reporting process has highlighted examples of positive performance in the management of forced labour and child labour within business activities and supply chains. Such examples provide useful benchmarks for industry improvement. Among reporting entities:
- 20 percent assert that they have undertaken mapping of their supply chain to some extent. However, only 5 percent clearly indicate that mapping extends beyond Tier 1 suppliers (also referred to as “direct”, “primary”, “level 1”).
- 40 percent state that they have some form of supplier risk assessment in place for modern slavery. 35 percent conduct due diligence programs within their own operations, and 40 percent carry out due diligence of suppliers.
- 60 percent reportedly provide some examples of human rights training for their workforce.
- Just under 5 percent of reporting entities demonstrate clear alignment with multiple reporting criteria, including supply chain mapping, supplier risk assessment, due diligence of operations and suppliers, evaluation of performance, and human rights training. Of these entities, the majority (70 percent) also claim adherence to global human rights standards.
Reporting under the Act, along with evolving global supply chain requirements, has generated commitments to performance improvement. Among reporting entities, 90 percent have publicly committed to implement additional measures, including the development of policies and procedures (30 percent), training (20 percent), and risk assessment / risk management (15 percent). Behind the scenes, many companies have been reflecting on gaps in their internal processes and associated risks and opportunities; they are taking targeted steps to understand their supply chain and develop appropriate mitigation and management measures.