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At the Annual Compliance conference recently held in London, the session on ‘Supply chains – Navigating ESG and Trade-related Risks’ examined the intensifying ESG and trade-related risks facing global supply chains, shaped by shifting political priorities and evolving regulatory frameworks. In the US, enforcement of forced labour laws has become increasingly stringent, with companies facing compliance burdens. Additionally, existing laws—including the Trafficking Victims Protection Act and the Alien Tort Statute—are being creatively leveraged by plaintiffs, increasing litigations risks and carrying reputational risks.

In the UK, scrutiny is growing amid criticism of weak enforcement and limited anti-forced labour provisions. Recent government guidance and proposed legislation suggest more robust supply chain due diligence requirements may be on the way.

Across the EU, shifting regulations—including the EU Forced Labour Regulation, the Deforestation Regulation (EUDR), and green claims rules—are reshaping compliance expectations. While some implementation timelines have been delayed, the underlying obligations remain complex and far-reaching, particularly for companies sourcing from high-risk jurisdictions. Despite talk of regulatory rollbacks, the consensus was clear: ESG regulation is here to stay.

You can access all materials from the Annual Compliance Conference 2025 here.

Author

Jennifer Revis is a partner in Baker McKenzie's London office and co-leads our EMEA Customs Team.
Jennifer focuses her practice on the public regulation of international trade, particularly in a wide range of customs compliance issues. She regularly advises clients on import matters, including customs valuation, rules of origin, and classification. She has worked with clients designing and implementing their compliance programs, policies, procedures and risk assessments, and assisting them in customs audits. She has significant experience in managing global customs projects and disputes, particularly in the area of customs valuation (transfer pricing; assists; royalties). Jennifer also advises on FTAs and trade remedies matters.
Jennifer has been consistently recognised as a "Leading Individual" for Customs & Excise and “Next Generation Partner” for Trade, WTO Anti-Dumping And Customs. Clients describe her as "an outstanding customs lawyer and litigator with fantastic experience. She is also easy to work with and leads her team with aplomb", "without a doubt, one of the best customs lawyers in the business (…) with an exceptionally deep knowledge of customs valuation concepts, as well as considerable experience applying those concepts in a variety of jurisdictions."
Jennifer has been on secondment to the UK customs authorities (Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs) in their tax and excise litigation department and to the Firm's European Law Centre in Brussels.

Author

Jon Cowley is a partner in the Firm’s International Trade practice, experienced in customs, tariff mitigation, and supply chain structuring.
Previously, Jon was a member of Baker McKenzie’s International Trade Controversies and Planning practice in Hong Kong between 2018 – 2020 and 2010-2012 where he focused on Asia-Pacific customs and trade matters.
Throughout his career, Jon held prominent in-house roles, most recently as the sole trade and export counsel with a major global technology company, and earlier as an assistant general counsel for customs and international trade at a major footwear and apparel company.
Earlier in his career, Jon was a trade advisor with consulting firms in Silicon Valley and Chicago.

Author

Maria Piontkovska is a partner with Baker McKenzie's Litigation & Government Enforcement group, co-editor of the Firm's Global Supply Chain Compliance Blog and a member of the Firm’s Technology, Media & Telecoms Global Industry Group. She has significant experience working on behalf of companies operating in emerging markets and high-risk jurisdictions. Maria has managed a number of internal and government-facing legal compliance investigations for a variety of Fortune 500 companies and advised on related settlement negotiations with the US Department of Justice, US Securities and Exchange Commission, and other federal and state regulatory entities.
Maria has been recognized as a "Rising Star" by Southern California Super Lawyers (2022-23). Maria has written and spoken extensively on emerging compliance trends in environmental, social and governance (ESG) legal risk, corruption and sanctions, and advises on best practices in compliance program development.

Author

Anahita Thoms heads Baker McKenzie's International Trade Practice in Germany and is a member of our EMEA Steering Committee for Compliance & Investigations. Anahita is Global Lead Sustainability Partner for our Industrials, Manufacturing and Transportation Industry Group. She serves as an Advisory Board Member in profit and non-profit organizations, such as Atlantik-Brücke, and is an elected National Committee Member at UNICEF Germany. She has served for three consecutive terms as the ABA Co-chair of the Export Controls and Economic Sanctions Committee and as the ABA Vice-Chair of the International Human Rights Committee. Anahita has also been an Advisory Board Member (Beirätin) of the Sustainable Finance Advisory Council of the German Government.

Anahita has won various accolades for her work, including 100 Most Influential Women in German Business (manager magazin), Top Lawyer (Wirtschaftswoche), Winner of the Strive Awards in the category Sustainability, Pioneer in the area of sustainability (Juve), International Trade Lawyer of the Year (Germany) 2020 ILO Client Choice Awards, Young Global Leader of the World Economic Forum, Capital 40 under 40, International Trade Lawyer of the Year (New York) 2016 ILO Client Choice Awards. In 2023, Handelsblatt recognized her as one of Germany’s Dealmaker and “most sought after advisors of the country” in the field of sustainability.

Author

Graham Stuart is a partner in Baker McKenzie's London office specialising in product regulation and environmental, health and safety law.