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New Zealand’s Modern Slavery Bill: The Social ‘S’ of ESG Comes of Age

New Zealand’s Modern Slavery Bill: The Social  ‘S’ of ESG Comes of Age

After years of delay, New Zealand’s proposed modern slavery law marks a shift from voluntary supply chain human rights commitments to enforceable corporate accountability.

On 10 February 2026, New Zealand entered unfamiliar legislative territory.

A bipartisan Modern Slavery Bill was introduced in Parliament through an unprecedented cross-party process, marking the first time a member bill bypassed the traditional ballot under Standing Order 288. Co-sponsored by National MP Greg Fleming and Labor MP Camilla Belich, the bill represents more than parliamentary innovation; it signals a significant shift in the region's approach to the “Social” pillar of ESG. Legal analysis from Bell Gully notes that the process reflects strong political consensus on modern slavery transparency and supply chain accountability.

For multinational companies operating in or supplying New Zealand, this development introduces a compliance framework with regional implications.

Why This Matters Beyond New Zealand

For years, New Zealand stood out for what it lacked.

While Australia, the United Kingdom, and Canada developed modern slavery disclosure regimes, New Zealand remained absent from this regulatory landscape. That gap is now closing.

The urgency behind the legislation is clear. According to the Walk Free Foundation and its

Global Slavery Index, an estimated 8,000 people live in conditions of modern slavery within New Zealand, highlighting that forced labor and exploitation are not limited to distant supply chains or offshore factories.

This reality helps explain the bill’s recent momentum after years of stalled debate.

Historically, ESG discussions have prioritized environmental metrics. Carbon targets, renewable energy, and climate disclosures have dominated boardroom agendas, while labor rights and human rights due diligence were often secondary. However, social risks are increasingly linked to business resilience and corporate legitimacy.

New Zealand’s proposed legislation reflects this shift.

What the Bill Would Require

The proposed framework leaves no gaps.

According to the bill text published on New Zealand Legislation and Fair Supply's compliance analysis, the legislation would apply to entities operating in New Zealand with consolidated annual revenue of NZD 100 million or more, including overseas companies with significant New Zealand operations. 

Around 1,000 companies will fall under the scope of legislation.

Unlike voluntary ESG reporting, the bill mandates specific, recurring disclosures.

Companies must annually disclose modern slavery statements addressing supply chain mapping, identified risks, incidents, remediation actions, complaints, and training. As Newsroom’s analysis stresses, the intention is to force transparency on exploitation of risk management within operations and supply chains—not merely require disclosures.

Furthermore, the legislation includes robust enforcement measures.

Entities that fail to comply with or provide false or misleading statements may face criminal fines up to NZD 200,000 and civil penalties up to NZD 600,000. Notably, the framework introduces potential personal liability for directors and senior managers, as highlighted by Bell Gully’s legal review and Ropes & Gray. Newsroom’s explainer notes that public disclosure and enforcement are intended to increase scrutiny from consumers, investors, and civil society, not just regulators.

Stronger Than Australia — But Not Europe

Comparisons with Australia are inevitable.

Australia’s Modern Slavery Act, introduced in 2018, established a similar AUD 100 million reporting threshold but notably lacks penalties for non-compliance.

New Zealand’s proposal intentionally goes further.

As noted by Bell Gully and the Walk Free Foundation, the proposed regime includes fines, director liability, and stronger disclosure requirements, including reporting on complaints and identified incidents.

That said, the bill stops short of imposing mandatory human rights due diligence.

This distinction is important.

The legislation requires companies to disclose and explain their risks and responses but does not mandate prevention or elimination of those risks.

This disclosure-based approach aligns more closely with Australia and the UK than with recent European legislation. Germany’s Supply Chain Due Diligence Act and broader European frameworks increasingly require companies to identify and address human rights risks proactively.

The Walk Free Foundation described the bill as “a pivotal moment and the result of years of advocacy,” while also cautioning that transparency alone may not drive sufficient behavioral change.

This debate reflects a broader global divide: should modern slavery laws require companies to report, or to act?

Why the Region Should Pay Attention

The implications extend well beyond New Zealand.

Australian multinationals with New Zealand operations may experience minimal disruption. Existing Australian modern slavery statements can likely be adapted rather than rebuilt, as highlighted by Fair Supply and Bell Gully. The impact may be more significant for Asia-Pacific suppliers.

Factories and suppliers across Southeast and South Asia increasingly serve New Zealand head quartered companies or multinational buyers operating in the country. Once disclosure obligations take effect, procurement scrutiny is likely to intensify, especially in sectors already associated with higher labor risks.

One example illustrates complexity.

A sector-focused discussion from Newsroom and a consumer explainer from The Spinoff highlighted a paradox in the green transition: nearly all solar panels used in New Zealand reportedly contain components linked to forced labor risks in their supply chains.

Modern slavery legislation increasingly brings this uncomfortable tension to light.

The transition to clean energy may advance environmental goals while also presenting unresolved human rights risks. This underscores the need for vigilance regarding both environmental and social impacts.

In this context, ESG’s environmental and social dimensions are no longer independent.

US and Canadian multinationals with New Zealand operations should also take note. Revenue thresholds and operational exposure may bring entities within scope sooner than expected, especially where consolidated group structures are involved.

What Companies Should Do Now

The bill has not yet become law.

However, waiting for the final passage may be a strategic mistake.

The current parliamentary process, including select committee consultation, still offers companies an opportunity to influence implementation details and reporting expectations.

Preparation should begin now.

Organizations should assess whether they meet the NZD 100 million threshold, including revenue from New Zealand operations. Procurement and risk teams should begin supply chain mapping focused on sectors and regions with higher labor vulnerability. Existing Australian or UK modern slavery statements should be reviewed for adaptability rather than duplicated.

The broader regional context matters, too.

Australia’s modern slavery framework is facing renewed pressure for reform. New Zealand’s momentum may accelerate expectations across the Pacific and reshape what investors and customers consider baseline human rights governance.

The 'S' Is Becoming Regulated

For years, companies treated social disclosures as largely voluntary, important for reputation but rarely backed by legal consequence.

That era is beginning to change.

New Zealand’s Modern Slavery Bill signals that supply chain human rights are shifting from ESG aspiration to regulated compliance.

Companies that treat this solely as a reporting obligation may meet minimum legal requirements, but risk reputational and operational exposure.

Those that build genuine visibility into labor conditions and supplier relationships may find that transparency is no longer merely defensive; it is becoming a source of competitive credibility.

The “S” in ESG is no longer waiting its turn. It is arriving with enforcement.