The Core Distinction
The CSRD and CSDDD are both landmark EU sustainability directives, but they serve fundamentally different purposes. The CSRD focuses on sustainability reporting transparency, requiring companies to disclose ESG data in a standardized and comparable format. The CSDDD, by contrast, requires active due diligence on human rights and environmental impacts across the entire value chain. One is about disclosure; the other is about action.
Four Key Differences
1. Scope of Application
The CSRD applies to companies exceeding defined size and revenue thresholds within the EU. The CSDDD extends corporate responsibility throughout the entire supply chain, regardless of where suppliers are located. This means CSDDD obligations reach far beyond a company’s direct operations.
2. Nature of Obligations
The CSRD mandates reporting with clear, measurable metrics aligned to European Sustainability Reporting Standards. The CSDDD enforces operational obligations to identify, prevent, and remedy real environmental and human rights impacts. Companies must take concrete action, not just report on conditions.
3. Data Requirements
CSRD requires structured ESG data with comparable metrics that enable stakeholders to assess performance across companies and sectors. CSDDD demands evidence of due diligence processes, including documentation of risk assessments, corrective actions, and grievance mechanisms.
4. Operational Impact
CSRD integrates sustainability into corporate strategy and annual reporting cycles. CSDDD redesigns specific operational processes from procurement to supplier management, requiring fundamental changes in how companies engage with their supply chains.
Strategic Integration
The two regulations complement rather than compete with each other. Managing them together in a coordinated way streamlines processes and maximizes the value of a company’s ESG strategy. Organizations that centralize their ESG data can serve both reporting and due diligence requirements simultaneously, avoiding duplicated data collection and analysis efforts.
Supply Chain Implications
Both directives significantly impact supplier relationships, but from different angles. CSRD requires transparency about supply chain impacts in reporting. CSDDD requires companies to actively validate, audit, and implement corrective measures throughout their supplier networks, with particular emphasis on complete traceability across multiple tiers and jurisdictions.
A Unified Approach
Companies subject to both directives benefit most from establishing a single ESG data infrastructure that supports reporting under CSRD while simultaneously documenting the due diligence processes required by CSDDD. This prevents silos, reduces costs, and ensures consistency between what a company reports and what it actually does.