According to www.sdcexec.com, 83% of business leaders report cross-border operations are more complex now than a year ago — driven by tariffs, VAT shifts, fragmented customs rules, and rapidly scaling sustainability mandates.
Sustainability Now Embedded in Trade Compliance
Environmental regulation is no longer peripheral to global trade — it is now directly embedded in customs procedures and import/export workflows. The European Union’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM), for example, requires detailed upstream emissions reporting for goods entering the EU, effectively making decarbonization a prerequisite for market access. As Avalara, Inc. notes in its analysis, compliance failures under such frameworks can trigger shipment delays, unexpected duties, financial penalties, and reputational exposure. These risks extend beyond legal departments: 49% of organizations surveyed cite regulatory change *after* market entry as their top cross-border risk.
Operational and Financial Stakes Are Rising
Compliance has shifted from a back-office function to a strategic lever influencing expansion strategy, customer experience, and margin protection. Organizations that neglect sustainability integration in supply chain operations face tangible downstream consequences — including product rerouting, heightened waste, and increased Scope 3 emissions. According to the report, businesses on average spend 11% of their cross-border revenue on customs, taxes, and regulatory management. This cost burden reflects not only administrative overhead but also inefficiencies stemming from siloed processes — such as paper-based documentation, disjointed spreadsheets, and fragmented supplier reporting — all of which are increasingly inadequate amid granular ESG disclosure requirements.
Technology Is No Longer Optional
To manage volatility and maintain continuity, organizations are turning to integrated technology solutions. 87% of businesses are already using AI in cross-border operations, leveraging tools for real-time regulatory monitoring, automated customs documentation, centralized data platforms, and integrated sustainability reporting. These capabilities support traceability across supplier ecosystems — a necessity as jurisdictions impose divergent carbon accounting standards, documentation formats, and enforcement timelines. For instance, CBAM implementation timelines vary by sector and phase-in year, demanding dynamic adaptation rather than static policy adherence.
Foundational Steps Toward Resilience
The source outlines three foundational actions for building sustainable global supply chains: first, breaking down functional silos between tax, trade, procurement, sustainability, and logistics teams; second, investing in centralized compliance infrastructure to improve consistency and visibility; and third, proactively factoring evolving sustainability trade rules into forward planning. As Craig Reed, author of the piece and contributor to Avalara, Inc., states:
“Sustainability-related trade requirements will continue to expand across global markets and trade policies. To avoid falling behind, organizations must prioritize modern trade compliance operations before scaling internationally.”
This imperative applies globally — particularly in the EU, where CBAM enforcement is accelerating, and across multiple jurisdictions adopting ESG-driven transparency mandates.
Competitive Advantage Through Compliance
In today’s regulatory landscape, compliance is becoming a differentiator. A missed CBAM reporting obligation can trigger audit exposure; a sudden tariff adjustment can force overnight sourcing model revisions. The businesses best positioned to win globally are those embedding sustainability compliance into core operational decisions — from how goods move across borders to how suppliers are qualified and duties are calculated. As the report emphasizes, this shift demands alignment across functions and investment in interoperable systems — not incremental upgrades. With 2026 marking key CBAM implementation milestones and new ESG reporting deadlines rolling out across EU member states, timing is critical. Failure to act now carries escalating operational, financial, and environmental costs.
Source: sdcexec.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










