The big EU deregulation: Disastrous Omnibus proposal erodes EU’s corporate accountability commitments and slashes human rights and environmental protections

Euro-Mediterranean regionBusiness & human rights

The publication by the European Commission of its Omnibus proposal revising key corporate sustainability laws sends a clear political signal: President Ursula von der Leyen is deprioritising human rights, workers’ rights and environmental protections for the sake of dangerous deregulation.

When President Ursula von der Leyen announced late last year an Omnibus proposal to simplify reporting and sustainability requirements for companies, she committed to upholding in full the spirit and “content of the law,” and stated that the goal of the exercise was to reduce overlapping obligations. The proposal published on 26 February represents a stark departure from this promise and, if implemented, will wipe-out the core purpose of these laws.

The Omnibus proposal would axe many of the CSDDD’s key provisions, making it virtually toothless

If implemented, in practice this could result in:

“Omnibus is a roadmap to perpetuating corporate impunity. This proposal guts corporate due diligence, turning it into a hollow box-ticking exercise while stripping victims of their right to justice. The message from Brussels couldn’t be clearer: industry interests come first, while people and the planet are left behind. Today, hundreds of civil society organisations around the world are standing up—no to deregulation, no to greenwashing, and no to this reckless rollback of corporate accountability.”

Marion Lupin, policy officer at European Coalition for Corporate Justice