On 12 December 2024, the Forced Labour Regulation (FLR) was published prohibiting products made with forced labour on the EU market. This is the definitive and legally binding version of the FLR.
As detailed in an earlier client insight, the prohibition on products made with forced labour, as set out in the FLR, and the resulting obligations and associated checks and enforcement, will only enter into force on 14 December 2027. Nevertheless, some provisions requiring EU Member States and the European Commission (EC) to prepare the framework for the application and enforcement of the FLR are already in force (e.g. in relation to the designation of competent authorities or the creation of forced labour databases). Companies operating in the EU would be well advised to begin surveying potential risks in their supply chains and establishing their own internal compliance programs.
Once the FLR fully enters into force, it will prohibit economic operators (meaning any natural or legal person, or association thereof) from placing or making available products made using forced labour on the EU market (including distance sales). It will also prohibit them from exporting such products from the EU.