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Process requirement 3

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Excerpt from the contract clause

Supplier shall prevent and mitigate actual and potential adverse impacts that Supplier causes or contributes to, by

 

a) ceasing activities that cause or contribute to adverse impact in its own operations or supply chains,

b) establishing action plans in meaningful consultation with affected rights-holders or their representatives, with a particular focus on the most significant risks identified and

c) promoting purchasing practices that do not hinder sub-suppliers from complying with the commitments in the Supplier Code of Conduct.

We explain the responsibility to cease activities that cause or contribute to adverse impacts, establish action plans, and promote sustainable purchasing practices.

Ceasing activities

Ceasing activities

You shall cease activities that cause or contribute to adverse impact in your own operations or supply chains. The term activities includes both active actions and omissions, such as failing to provide safety equipment.

Causation

You cause an adverse impact if your activities on their own are sufficient to result in the adverse impact.

Contribution

You contribute to an adverse impact if your activities assist, facilitate, or encourage another party to cause it, or if the impact results from a combination of your activities and those of other parties.

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Generally, you cause adverse impact within and in connection to your own operations, while contributions can occur both within your own operations and in the supply chains.

Examples of causation

  • You expose your factory workers to hazardous working conditions by failing to provide adequate safety equipment.

  • You discriminate against women or ethnic minorities in your hiring processes. 

  • You cause significant contamination of the local community’s drinking water through chemical discharges from your production.

  • You pay bribes to Swedish or foreign public officials.

Examples of contribution

  • You lend vehicles to security forces, who use them to travel to local villages and commit abuses.

  • You set an unreasonably short delivery time or make last-minute changes without adjusting deadlines and prices, forcing your suppliers to violate workers' rights, such as through excessive overtime.

  • You emit large amounts of carbon dioxide from your factory. While you cause your own emissions, you are not solely accountable for climate change.

For a contribution to be considered under the contract clause, it must be substantial – minor or trivial contributions do not count. Several factors shall be taken into account in this assessment:

Your impact on another party's actions

The extent to which your activities increase the risk of an adverse impact occurring.

Your awareness of the adverse impact

The extent to which you can or should be aware of the impact or the risk of it occurring (foreseeability).

Your ability to mitigate the adverse impact

The extent to which your activities actually mitigate the adverse impact or reduce the risk of it occurring.

In the supply chain risk assessment template we have developed, available below under Templates process requirement 3, we help you define the responsibility for adverse impact in the supply chain.

If you contribute to adverse impact, you should, to the greatest extent possible, use your leverage to mitigate any remaining adverse impact. See Process requirement 4 for more information.

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  • Instructions describing how you determine whether you cause, contribute to, or are linked to adverse impact.

  • Supply chain risk assessments for sample products, where the responsibility has been defined.

  • Meeting minutes documenting decisions to cease activities, for sample products.

  • Incident reports and investigations, for sample products.

Establishing action plans

Establishing action plans

You shall establish action plans in meaningful consultation with affected rights-holders or their representatives, with a particular focus on the most significant risks identified. 

The purpose is to prevent and mitigate future adverse impacts. Measures shall be tailored to the specific impact, and it is crucial that they address the root cause of the problem. 

The action plans shall be documented, communicated with the affected parties, and include:

  • Proposed measures – descriptions of how you intend to prevent and mitigate the adverse impact, including the identified root cause.

  • Timeframes – dates for when the measures must have been implemented. 

  • Responsible persons – persons responsible for the implementation of the measures.

In Sweden, legislation such as the Work Environment Act, the Discrimination Act, and the Environmental Code require that measures be planned and implemented as soon as possible.

​In the supply chain risk assessment template we have developed, available below under Templates process requirement 3, we help you develop action plans for adverse impacts in the supply chain.

Below are proposed measures for the examples provided above.

Examples of causation

Proposed measures

You expose your factory workers to hazardous working conditions by failing to provide adequate safety equipment.
Eliminate the hazard to prevent injury and ill health. If this is not possible, provide safety equipment and adapt production processes as necessary.
You discriminate against women or ethnic minorities in your hiring processes.
Introduce a policy against discrimination in employment, with clear guidelines for implementation.
You cause significant contamination of the local community’s drinking water through chemical discharges from your production.
Install water purification to reduce the impact of pollutants.
You pay bribes to Swedish or foreign public officials.
Train employees in anti-corruption, including how to report bribes to authorities.

Examples of contribution

Proposed measures

You emit large amounts of carbon dioxide from your factory. While you cause your own emissions, you are not solely accountable for climate change.
Invest in a better facility and equipment, such as climate-smart technology or renewable energy.
You set an unreasonably short delivery time or make last-minute changes without adjusting deadlines and prices, forcing your suppliers to violate workers' rights, such as through excessive overtime.
Adapt purchasing practices through long-term planning and close collaboration with suppliers to prevent excessive overtime.
You lend vehicles to security forces, who use them to travel to local villages and commit abuses.
Introduce a human rights policy, including your approach to security forces, with clear guidelines for implementation.
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  • Instructions describing how you establish action plans in meaningful consultation with affected rights-holders or their representatives.

  • Action plans for sample products, developed in consultation with rights-holders or their representatives, or with suppliers.

  • Meeting minutes from consultations with rights-holders, for sample products.

Promoting sustainable purchasing practices

Promoting sustainable purchasing practices 

 

You shall ​promote purchasing practices that do not hinder sub-suppliers from complying with the commitments in the Supplier Code of Conduct, meaning responsible purchasing practices.

Your purchasing practices play a crucial role in either protecting or harming workers. As a buyer, it is important to understand that your decisions can contribute to better conditions in the supply chain – or, conversely, intensify and worsen the adverse impact. 

 

Here are examples of purchasing practices and the risks they may entail:

Purchasing practice

Risk of adverse impact

Time pressure
Excessive overtime
Price pressure
Unfair wages
Last-minute order changes, such as quantity increases or design changes
Excessive overtime, insecure employment
Changes to payment terms during the contract period
Unfair wages
Take-it-or-leave-it contracts, which make it difficult for suppliers to fulfill commitments
Deficiencies in health and safety, unfair wages, excessive overtime, insecure employment
Insufficient weighting of sustainability in evaluation criteria, including the supplier's capacity to exercise due diligence
All commitments
Lack of remedy for contributions to adverse impacts
All commitments
Termination without responsible exits
All commitments

An important way to promote responsible purchasing practices is to train and encourage the purchasing team to understand the link between purchasing practices and sustainable supply chains.

For practical guidance on responsible purchasing practices, we recommend the Buyer Code, developed by a working group of the American Bar Association Business Law Section, and the draft European Model Clauses. The Buyer Code is included in the Responsible Contracting Project Toolkit. The Repsonsible Contracting Project is currently leading the consultation process to finalize the European Model Clauses, developed by a European working group and designed to align with the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive, as well as the UN Guiding Principles and the OECD Due Diligence Guidance. A draft of the European Model Clauses is available on the RCP website.

We also recommend the Ethical Trading Initiative’s Guide to Buying Responsibly, which provides practical insights into responsible purchasing practices. Below is a short video on the topic.

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  • Guidelines for sustainable purchasing.

  • Buyer codes of conduct.

  • PowerPoint presentations or screenshots from training sessions on responsible purchasing practices.

  • Meeting minutes documenting decisions on longer lead times, adjusted pricing models, revised payment terms, etc., for sample products.

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