Forced Labor & Supplier Risk

Continuous watchlist monitoring and transaction-level traceability aligned to US import enforcement, the EU Forced Labour Regulation, and Canadian importer guidance.

Sourcemap Supply Chain Mapping App Screenshot

Forced Labor & Supplier Risk

Continuous watchlist monitoring and transaction-level traceability aligned to US import enforcement, the EU Forced Labour Regulation, and Canadian importer guidance.

Sourcemap Supply Chain Mapping App Screenshot

Forced Labor & Supplier Risk

Continuous watchlist monitoring and transaction-level traceability aligned to US import enforcement, the EU Forced Labour Regulation, and Canadian importer guidance.

Sourcemap Supply Chain Mapping App Screenshot
Forest drone shot

01

Screening the end-to-end supply chain

Sourcemap screens every mapped supplier against 80,000+ entities using geographic and linguistic AI matching on trusted US and EU sources, continuously, from discovery onward. Matching handles transliterations, aliases, and third-country routing, where restricted-origin material moves through intermediary geographies before reaching you. When a flag appears, as it did for a customer whose sub-tier map surfaced a watchlisted battery supplier its previous tools had missed, you know before the border does.

Forest drone shot

01

Screening the end-to-end supply chain

Sourcemap screens every mapped supplier against 80,000+ entities using geographic and linguistic AI matching on trusted US and EU sources, continuously, from discovery onward. Matching handles transliterations, aliases, and third-country routing, where restricted-origin material moves through intermediary geographies before reaching you. When a flag appears, as it did for a customer whose sub-tier map surfaced a watchlisted battery supplier its previous tools had missed, you know before the border does.

Forest drone shot

01

Screening the end-to-end supply chain

Sourcemap screens every mapped supplier against 80,000+ entities using geographic and linguistic AI matching on trusted US and EU sources, continuously, from discovery onward. Matching handles transliterations, aliases, and third-country routing, where restricted-origin material moves through intermediary geographies before reaching you. When a flag appears, as it did for a customer whose sub-tier map surfaced a watchlisted battery supplier its previous tools had missed, you know before the border does.

Tech girl working in factory

02

Evidence that rebuts a presumption

A clean screen means little without documents. Every screened entity links to the transaction and custody records for its link in the chain, so an admissibility package assembles per shipment: the map, the purchase orders and invoices, the origin evidence, in the structure reviewers expect. Companies replacing manual, spreadsheet-based forced labor reviews consolidate the trace, the screen, and the evidence into one repeatable process that scales to each new statute instead of restarting for it.

Tech girl working in factory

02

Evidence that rebuts a presumption

A clean screen means little without documents. Every screened entity links to the transaction and custody records for its link in the chain, so an admissibility package assembles per shipment: the map, the purchase orders and invoices, the origin evidence, in the structure reviewers expect. Companies replacing manual, spreadsheet-based forced labor reviews consolidate the trace, the screen, and the evidence into one repeatable process that scales to each new statute instead of restarting for it.

Tech girl working in factory

02

Evidence that rebuts a presumption

A clean screen means little without documents. Every screened entity links to the transaction and custody records for its link in the chain, so an admissibility package assembles per shipment: the map, the purchase orders and invoices, the origin evidence, in the structure reviewers expect. Companies replacing manual, spreadsheet-based forced labor reviews consolidate the trace, the screen, and the evidence into one repeatable process that scales to each new statute instead of restarting for it.

Sourcemap Supply Chain Mapping App Screenshot

03

EUFLR readiness

The EU regulation bans products made with forced labor anywhere in the world and lets authorities open investigations on their own initiative. Its finalized guidance describes the risk-based evidence they will request: mapping depth, worker-voice indicators, remediation records.

Sourcemap Supply Chain Mapping App Screenshot

03

EUFLR readiness

The EU regulation bans products made with forced labor anywhere in the world and lets authorities open investigations on their own initiative. Its finalized guidance describes the risk-based evidence they will request: mapping depth, worker-voice indicators, remediation records.

Sourcemap Supply Chain Mapping App Screenshot

03

EUFLR readiness

The EU regulation bans products made with forced labor anywhere in the world and lets authorities open investigations on their own initiative. Its finalized guidance describes the risk-based evidence they will request: mapping depth, worker-voice indicators, remediation records.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is supply chain mapping?

Supply chain mapping is the process of documenting every tier in a company's physical supply chain including all raw material extraction/production, all refining and manufacturing sites, and all logistics waypoints involved in bringing goods to market. EU and US regulations require supply chain mapping to be performed by collecting supplier-attested data and validating it using third-party data and/or assurance. Sourcemap introduced the first software for large-scale supply chain mapping based on supplier-attested data in 2011.

What is supply chain traceability?

Supply chain traceability is the process of documenting every transaction in a company's physical supply chain from raw materials to finished goods. US and Canadian authorities require supply chain traceability as part of importer guidance, and both EU and US authorities require supply chain traceability for content claims such as '100% recycled'. In order for companies to trace transactions at every tier of their supply chain they must collect evidence of transactions at every tier. Sourcemap introduced the first software for large-scale raw material-to-finished goods traceability to comply with US forced labor regulation in 2021.


What is supply chain transparency?

Supply chain transparency is the process of disclosing the physical flow of goods behind products in a way that can be readily understood by customers, consumers and/or regulators. Supply chain transparency is becoming commonplace in industries including apparel and food, and may be required by forthcoming regulations in North America and Europe. Supply chain transparency can only be achieved based on validated supplier-attested data since it necessitates the consent of all upstream suppliers. Sourcemap introduced the first platform for supply chain transparency on a global scale in 2008.


How are customs compliance and supply chain transparency related?

The US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and the EU all require some degree of supply chain mapping to comply with trade regulation. The US, Canada, Australia and New Zealand all require companies to import products free of forced labor, which is based on accounting for all of the suppliers in the supply chain from raw material to import. The EU requires companies to identify upstream suppliers at high risk of social or environmental non-compliance, and to map all the way to individual farms in order to prove deforestation-free sourcing.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is supply chain mapping?

Supply chain mapping is the process of documenting every tier in a company's physical supply chain including all raw material extraction/production, all refining and manufacturing sites, and all logistics waypoints involved in bringing goods to market. EU and US regulations require supply chain mapping to be performed by collecting supplier-attested data and validating it using third-party data and/or assurance. Sourcemap introduced the first software for large-scale supply chain mapping based on supplier-attested data in 2011.

What is supply chain traceability?

Supply chain traceability is the process of documenting every transaction in a company's physical supply chain from raw materials to finished goods. US and Canadian authorities require supply chain traceability as part of importer guidance, and both EU and US authorities require supply chain traceability for content claims such as '100% recycled'. In order for companies to trace transactions at every tier of their supply chain they must collect evidence of transactions at every tier. Sourcemap introduced the first software for large-scale raw material-to-finished goods traceability to comply with US forced labor regulation in 2021.


What is supply chain transparency?

Supply chain transparency is the process of disclosing the physical flow of goods behind products in a way that can be readily understood by customers, consumers and/or regulators. Supply chain transparency is becoming commonplace in industries including apparel and food, and may be required by forthcoming regulations in North America and Europe. Supply chain transparency can only be achieved based on validated supplier-attested data since it necessitates the consent of all upstream suppliers. Sourcemap introduced the first platform for supply chain transparency on a global scale in 2008.


How are customs compliance and supply chain transparency related?

The US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and the EU all require some degree of supply chain mapping to comply with trade regulation. The US, Canada, Australia and New Zealand all require companies to import products free of forced labor, which is based on accounting for all of the suppliers in the supply chain from raw material to import. The EU requires companies to identify upstream suppliers at high risk of social or environmental non-compliance, and to map all the way to individual farms in order to prove deforestation-free sourcing.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is supply chain mapping?

Supply chain mapping is the process of documenting every tier in a company's physical supply chain including all raw material extraction/production, all refining and manufacturing sites, and all logistics waypoints involved in bringing goods to market. EU and US regulations require supply chain mapping to be performed by collecting supplier-attested data and validating it using third-party data and/or assurance. Sourcemap introduced the first software for large-scale supply chain mapping based on supplier-attested data in 2011.

What is supply chain traceability?

Supply chain traceability is the process of documenting every transaction in a company's physical supply chain from raw materials to finished goods. US and Canadian authorities require supply chain traceability as part of importer guidance, and both EU and US authorities require supply chain traceability for content claims such as '100% recycled'. In order for companies to trace transactions at every tier of their supply chain they must collect evidence of transactions at every tier. Sourcemap introduced the first software for large-scale raw material-to-finished goods traceability to comply with US forced labor regulation in 2021.


What is supply chain transparency?

Supply chain transparency is the process of disclosing the physical flow of goods behind products in a way that can be readily understood by customers, consumers and/or regulators. Supply chain transparency is becoming commonplace in industries including apparel and food, and may be required by forthcoming regulations in North America and Europe. Supply chain transparency can only be achieved based on validated supplier-attested data since it necessitates the consent of all upstream suppliers. Sourcemap introduced the first platform for supply chain transparency on a global scale in 2008.


How are customs compliance and supply chain transparency related?

The US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and the EU all require some degree of supply chain mapping to comply with trade regulation. The US, Canada, Australia and New Zealand all require companies to import products free of forced labor, which is based on accounting for all of the suppliers in the supply chain from raw material to import. The EU requires companies to identify upstream suppliers at high risk of social or environmental non-compliance, and to map all the way to individual farms in order to prove deforestation-free sourcing.

Abstract 3d connect global world

Let Us Show You How to Map Your Supply Chain to Tier n Accurately and Completely

Abstract 3d connect global world

Let Us Show You How to Map Your Supply Chain to Tier n Accurately and Completely

Abstract 3d connect global world

Let Us Show You How to Map Your Supply Chain to Tier n Accurately and Completely