Contract clause

Supplier shall integrate the commitments in the Supplier Code of Conduct into policies and assign responsibility for policies and due diligence, by

a) ensuring that relevant policies, established at the highest management level, are adopted or revised to align with the commitments in the Supplier Code of Conduct,
b) making the policies publicly available and communicating them to rights-holders affected by its own operations,
c) ensuring that the board of directors considers the policies when making decisions,
d) appointing one or more persons in management positions as responsible for the due diligence process and
e) assigning responsibility for the implementation of the policies to employees whose decisions are most likely to increase or decrease the risks of adverse impacts.

a) Policies

You shall ensure that relevant policies, established at the highest management level, are adopted or revised to align with the commitments in the Supplier Code of Conduct.  

Policies are high-level public statements that outline your commitments. They differ from operational guidelines and processes, which are internal tools used to implement policies in practice.

One or more policies

Your commitments may be divided into one or more policies. For example, you should have a human rights policy, an environmental policy, and a business ethics policy for your own operations and a supplier code of conduct.

You may also have policies for specific issues in your own operations, which in some cases are required by law. Examples of such policies are:

  • Collective agreements
  • Work environment policy
  • Health and safety policy
  • Discrimination policy
  • Anti-harassment and retaliation policies
  • Mineral policy
  • Climate policy
  • Tax policy

The most important thing is that your policies cover the commitments for your own operations and supply chain.

Established at the highest management level

All relevant policies shall be established at the highest management level, which includes the board of directors and CEO. The easiest way to demonstrate this is through the CEO’s signature and date on the policy. Alternatively, companies can provide the board’s date of adoption or use other methods to demonstrate compliance.

Adopted or revised

Most suppliers to the public sector already have a policy framework in place, which means the commitments can often be integrated through revisions rather than by adopting new policies.

If you are missing any policy, you can use our templates for:

  • Human Rights Policy
  • Environmental Policy
  • Business Ethics Policy
  • Supplier Code of Conduct

These are available under Templates process requirement 1.

Aligned with the commitments

By aligned with the commitments, we mean the following:

There must be a commitment to respect all internationally recognised human rights as expressed in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. Collectively, these are the International Bill of Human Rights. This commitment shall be reflected in policies for both your own operations and supply chains.

All areas of responsibility under workers’ rights need to be covered – but the same wording as in the Supplier Code of Conduct is not required.

  • Freedom of association and collective bargaining
  • Forced labour
  • Child labour
  • Discrimination and inhumane treatment
  • Health and safety
  • Wages
  • Working hours
  • Regular employment

When it comes to climate and environmental impact, the risks differ depending on sector. Therefore, not all commitments need to be covered, but during monitoring you shall be able to account for your considerations and decisions.

As for environmental rights, these do not need to be specifically mentioned as they are part of the overall commitment to respect all internationally recognised human rights.

All areas of responsibility under business ethics need to be covered – but the same wording as in the Supplier Code of Conduct is not required.

  • Corruption
  • Anti-competitive behaviour
  • Taxation

Multi-stakeholder initiatives' codes of conduct

If you participate in a multi-stakeholder initiative with a shared supplier code of conduct, such as amfori BSCI and Responsible Business Alliance, it may be difficult to revise the code of conduct. In such cases, you need to compare the code with the commitments and work to ensure that the initiative updates it.

Supplier Code of Conduct & Due Diligence

Do you want to learn more about the Supplier Code of Conduct and due diligence? 

Spend 15 minutes on our training. 

Suggested verifications

  • All relevant policies with the CEO’s signature and date of signing or a statement indicating the board of director’s adoption date.
  • If you use a multi-stakeholder initiative’s code of conduct, you shall be able to present a comparison of the code against the commitments and a description of how you are working to have the initiative revise its code if necessary.

Guidance for auditor

b) Make policies publicly available

You shall make the policies publicly available and communicate them to rights-holders affected by your own operations.

​​By rights-holders affected by your own operations, we primarily mean employees. With them, policies can be shared:

  • via the intranet
  • in your premises
  • during onboarding and training sessions, and
  • regularly as needed.

In addition, policies shall be publicly available to other affected stakeholders. For example, policies aimed at suppliers or local communities shall be published on your website.

Regardless of where the policies are made publicly available, they shall always be provided in local languages if you, for instance, operate in other countries or have received permission to post your supplier code of conduct in the factories you source from.

Suggested verifications

  • Links to websites.
  • Photos of policies publicly available in your premises.
  • Screenshots or printouts of intranet pages or onboarding systems.
  • PowerPoint presentations from employee introductions or training sessions.

Guidance for auditor

c) Board of directors’ responsibility

You shall ensure that the board of directors considers the policies when making decisions.

The board typically approves policies and sustainability reports and makes strategic decisions that impact people, the environment, and society. Therefore, having board members with sustainability expertise can be valuable.

To ensure that the board considers the policies in its decision-making, you can, for example, use a checklist or develop clear instructions. We have developed a checklist and included provisions on the board’s responsibilities in our due diligence instruction template. Both are available under Templates process equirement 1.

There is no requirement to use our templates.

Suggested verifications

  • Instructions describing how the board of directors considers the policies when making decisions, both for your own operations and the supply chain.
  • Checklists for decisions.
  • Meeting minutes where considerations have been recorded.

Guidance for auditor

d) Responsible persons in management positions

You shall appoint one or more persons in management positions as responsible for the due diligence process.

Management functions are responsible for implementing policies in practice. These typically include the roles of CEO, CFO, HR Director, General Counsel, Procurement Director, and Sustainability Director. However, the most relevant roles depend on your operations and risks.

Suggested verifications

  • Instructions
  • Organisational charts
  • Job descriptions for management positions

Guidance for auditor

e) Employees who increase or decrease risks​

You shall assign the responsibility for the implementation of the policies to employees whose decisions are most likely to increase or decrease the risks of adverse impacts.

Example of assignment of responsibilities:

Departments and functionsExamples of commitments
SustainabilityAll commitments
Environmental and social expertsHuman rights, workers’ rights (including health and safety,) the environment
Personnel/HRWorkers’ rights (including recruitment, industrial relations, health and safety)
Operations, productionHuman rights, workers’ rights (including health and safety,) the environment
Legal/ complianceHuman rights, workers’ rights (including industrial relations), business ethics, supplier agreements
Purchasing/supply chain managementAll commitments (including risk assessments, supplier assessments, contracts and monitoring)
Community development/stakeholder engagementHuman rights, the environment, community health and safety, stakeholder engagement, disclosure
Risk managementAll commitments

A clear assignment of responsibilities requires effective internal communication regarding policies and processes. However, since responsibilities often span multiple departments, cross-functional groups may also be needed to facilitate coordination and decision-making. It is also important that relevant employees have the appropriate competence, training, and authority.

Resources should be adapted to the company’s risks and size. Smaller companies can often manage the work within existing roles, while companies facing greater risks may require dedicated staff and budget.

Suggested verifications

  • Instructions
  • Organisational charts
  • Job descriptions for management positions
  • PowerPoint presentations from training sessions

Guidance for auditor