17 Feb 2026

Time for action as Australia considers mandatory due diligence on modern slavery

Australia faces a critical moment to strengthen its response to modern slavery. Introducing mandatory due diligence into the Modern Slavery Act would help prevent forced labour and secure the global competitiveness of Australian businesses.

Port Melbourne, Australia, September 2025. Like other G20 countries, Australia is exposed to the risk of modern slavery including through the products it imports.
Port Melbourne, Australia, September 2025. Like other G20 countries, Australia is exposed to the risk of modern slavery including through the products it imports. Photo Credit: Vu Viet Dzung / 500px via Getty Images.

The current review of Australia’s Modern Slavery Act presents a crucial opportunity to introduce mandatory due diligence and prevent exploitation in supply chains linked to the country’s economy.

The new report Overdue Diligence outlines why reform is essential to strengthen Australia’s legal framework and drive effective action to address forced labour.

Introducing a due diligence requirement will better protect people from exploitation while ensuring Australian businesses remain competitive in a rapidly changing global regulatory landscape.

With industry consultations on the Modern Slavery Act review underway, Australia has a clear opportunity to improve its response to modern slavery.

Global expectations are shifting from transparency toward accountability, and our laws should reflect this.

Why mandatory due diligence matters for business

Mandatory due diligence is not only a regulatory shift but a practical tool for stronger governance, clearer risk visibility, and more resilient supply chains.

Clear and consistent legal requirements would help businesses:

  1. Protect workers linked to Australian supply chains from forced labour.
  2. Level the playing field for responsible businesses in Australia.
  3. Strengthen Australia’s global competitiveness and maintain access to key export markets.
  4. Build both business resilience alongside investor and consumer trust.
  5. Align with the global shift towards mandatory action and reduce legal risk.

Embedding due diligence into core business practice positions Australian companies to compete in markets where responsible production is becoming a baseline expectation.

Transparency alone has not delivered meaningful change

When introduced 8 years ago, Australia’s Modern Slavery Act marked a significant step forward by requiring large companies to report on modern slavery risks across operations and supply chains.

However, after almost a decade, evidence shows transparency alone has not driven meaningful reduction in harm or consistent action across the private sector.

Many businesses still struggle to identify specific risks, while fewer implement effective measures to prevent or address exploitation.

Without a clear obligation to act, reporting often becomes a compliance exercise rather than a driver of systemic.

Mandatory due diligence strengthens risk management and resilience

Mandatory due diligence requires businesses to actively manage the risk of modern slavery across their operations and supply chains.

An effective framework requires companies to identify and assess risk, and take action to prevent harm, monitor effectiveness, ensure access to remedy for those affected and report on progress.

This approach aligns with emerging global standards while embedding prevention into governance, procurement, and investment decisions.

Global trade partners are moving ahead

Major trading partners are rapidly introducing mandatory due diligence requirements through regulation, procurement rules, and market expectations.

Jurisdictions including Thailand, Indonesia, and the European Union are reshaping the baseline for responsible business conduct in international trade.

Without comparable reform, Australian companies risk competitive disadvantage, restricted market access, and growing compliance complexity across multiple jurisdictions.

Industry consultation offers a critical opportunity for business leadership

Consultations on the Modern Slavery Act review are underway this month, creating an important window for businesses to shape the future regulatory framework.

Private sector engagement will influence whether reform delivers practical prevention, regulatory clarity, and alignment with global trade expectations.

By demonstrating support for due diligence reforms in these public fora and in their sector, businesses would help secure consistent standards, reduce long-term risk, and reinforce Australia’s reputation for responsible commerce.

Engagement at this stage will shape future competitiveness, market access, investor confidence, and supply chain resilience for Australian companies.

Acting early positions Australian business to meet rising expectations while reducing exposure to forced labour risk.