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As the Australian Government seeks to strengthen the transparency and effectiveness of the Modern Slavery Act (the Act), a series of reviews and responses have been conducted. In May 2023, conclusions from the first statutory review of the Act, conducted by Professor John McMillan AO were published. The review highlighted the impact the legislation had in instilling awareness and mitigation of modern slavery risk across businesses in Australia. However, there was opportunity to expand and clarify the requirements of the Act, with 30 recommendations for reform put forward.
1.1 Responding to the Statutory Review of the Modern Slavery Act
The Australian Government published its response to the proposed recommendations in December 2024. It agreed, either in part or full, with 25 of the 30 recommendations and proposed a phased approach to implementation, namely to engage in public consultation, progress legislative reforms, and to prepare updated guidance and administrative changes to the Act.
A Consultation Paper released on 22 July 2025 addresses 6 of the 30 McMillan review recommendations and seeks comments on proposed changes to the current legislation.
The 6 recommendations addressed in the consultation paper area:
2.1 Amending the Mandatory Reporting Criteria
The first proposed amendment involves expansion of the reporting criteria under section 16 (1) of the Act.
Currently, section 16 (1) of the Act specifies the mandatory criteria that must be covered in Modern Slavery Statements (the Statement) by reporting entities. It notes that the Statement must identify the reporting entity, the structure, operations and supply chains of the reporting entity, the risks of modern slavery practices in the operations and supply chains, and entities that the reporting entity owns or controls, and more.
The proposed changes for the reporting criteria seek to expand these requirements by:
2.2 Compliance and Enforcement Powers of the Regulator
The second proposed change relates to section 16A of the Act. Currently, the section provides that the Minister may request an explanation for an entity’s failure to comply with the reporting requirements and/or request that the entity undertake specified remedial action. The Minister may also publish information about the failure of entity to comply with the requirement, if reasonably satisfied that the entity has failed to comply with a request
The proposed change seeks to expand the existing regulatory powers of the regulator to penalise entities for non-compliance. This could include:
2.3 Penalties for Entities that Fail to Comply with the Modern Slavery Act
There are currently no penalties that apply for reporting entities that fail to comply with the reporting requirements under the Act.
The Consultation Paper proposes the introduction of civil penalties which would be applied for entities that:
2.4 Clarity Around Joint Modern Slavery Statements
Currently, section 14 (1) of the Act enables a reporting entity to draft a Statement that encompasses one or more reporting entities.
A proposed change is that joint reporting procedures could be replaced with corporate group reporting. This proposal appears to contemplate that a parent entity would publish a consolidated Modern Slavery Statement on behalf of a corporate group. There would be optionality for entities to apply for an exemption, which would enable a nominated reporting entity to report on their behalf or enabling an entity to report individually.
2.5 Voluntary Disclosure of Modern Slavery Statements
Under section 6 (a) of the Act, an entity may voluntarily disclose a Modern Slavery Statement. Under section 6 (3), an entity may revoke its notice by giving notice to the Minister prior to the start of the reporting period.
A proposed change to this section would enable entities to revoke their voluntary reporting status at any time, through the provision of notice to the Minister.
2.6 Ceasing of Modern Slavery Statements
Within the current legislation, there is no existing requirement for reporting entities to notify the regulator when they are no longer publishing a Modern Slavery Statement. This may be the case where an entity is not within the reporting threshold for the following financial year and is no longer required to report.
It is proposed that a requirement be introduced to ensure reporting entities provide notification and explanation to the regulator where they are no longer required to disclose a Statement.
This paper is part of the first stream of the consultation. The second phase, Stream B, will be conducted through targeted consultations with relevant specialists in Government, business and the non-government sectors.
The targeted consultations will focus on two of the more complex recommendations, including the introduction of obligations for a due diligence system (recommendation 11), and written declarations of high-risk matters (recommendation 27).
These consultations will seek to illicit further insights or responses from specialised government stakeholders, including the Australian Anti-Slavery Commissioner, to understand the complexities or implications involved in the recommendations.
The purpose of the Consultation Paper is to comment on the proposed options for change to the legislation. Interested parties, including businesses, are encouraged to respond to the Consultation Paper through completion or a survey or through provision of a written submission before 1 September 2025.
We will be monitoring the consultation closely and will provide further updates.
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The contents of this publication are for reference purposes only and may not be current as at the date of accessing this publication. They do not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Specific legal advice about your specific circumstances should always be sought separately before taking any action based on this publication.
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