US Justice Department cracks down on sanctions-busting
Forwarders are among those recently charged by US authorities with breaching sanctions on Russia by ...
Stricter due diligence laws surrounding the import of products made using forced labour could shake up supply chains and cause “significant disruption to companies’ operations”.
Global risk intelligence specialist Verisk Maplecroft told The Loadstar that over the past half-decade, global advancements in labour rights had stalled.
Currently, most legislation only requires companies to file reports on any exposure to modern slavery abuses, rather than to act on it, which has had little impact on the ground.
Fortunately though, tougher mandatory due diligence laws ...
Ceva Logistics UK named and shamed as a 'serial late-payer'
Freightmate 'a product of theft, not ingenuity' says Flexport
Box ship in collision with tanker off UK coast
GXO Wincanton deal could see supermarkets funded to invest in new 3PL
M&A speculation swirls as EV Cargo unveils 'robust financial position'
White House can't see that trade war will hit US agriculture hardest
Comment on this article