Supply Chain Verification
Vendor and supply chain verification assesses the labour, environmental, and governance practices of suppliers and supply chain partners across complex, multi-tier global supply chains. The EU CSDDD (Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive) requires companies to identify, prevent, and mitigate adverse human rights and environmental impacts throughout their value chains. The US Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act creates a rebuttable presumption regarding Xinjiang goods. These are enforceable legal obligations applying to Gulf entities with European or American touchpoints — which means effectively all major Gulf enterprises.
Verification Methodology
Kaelo conducts: tiered supply chain mapping (identifying Tier 1, 2, and 3+ suppliers across geographies and sectors), on-the-ground supplier assessments (physical site visits to manufacturing facilities, farms, mines across South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Africa, and the Gulf), labour practice evaluation (forced labour indicators, working conditions, wage compliance, freedom of association), environmental assessment (emissions, water usage, waste management, biodiversity impact), and the ongoing monitoring programmes (satellite imagery, worker voice technology, trade data analytics, periodic physical audit) that continuous supply chain assurance requires. Our verification and ESG practices combine for comprehensive supply chain assurance.
Gulf Supply Chain Risks
Gulf supply chains face specific risks: construction sector labour practices (the kafala system and migrant worker welfare), agricultural imports from regions with documented forced labour, conflict minerals transiting through Gulf trading centres, and the complexity of verifying practices in supply chains that may span 30+ countries.
Supply chain verification is no longer voluntary corporate responsibility — it is a legal obligation enforced by regulators in Europe and the US with penalties that make non-compliance commercially unacceptable.