EU officials say the proposed framework represents a shift toward so-called structural regulatory requirements that are aimed at insulating the bloc’s industrial base from China’s “weaponization of trade” and a surge in heavily subsidized imports from the country. [Structural diversity is building a business so a single shock–either geopolitical or economic–doesn’t threaten the entire operation.]
China isn’t specifically cited in the proposal. But by mandating structural diversification, EU officials say they hope to mitigate Chinese supply concerns affecting both national and economic security: preventing Beijing from being able to leverage strategic chokeholds on goods and resources, or from flooding markets with subsidized products. The proposal addresses long-running U.S. criticism that Europe hasn’t done enough to counter security risks associated with China’s expanding economic presence across the Atlantic.
The trigger
The EU is looking to sidestep traditional strategies used to defend against unfair trade practices that require exhaustive, multi-year investigations under World Trade Organisation (WTO) rules, officials said. To bypass those enforcement bottlenecks, the EU is proposing a law that establishes baseline “structural caps.” Under a draft proposal, businesses can procure only 30-40% of critical components from any single supplier, and the remaining 60-70% of those components must be sourced from at least 3 different suppliers, with an explicit restriction that they cannot all reside within the same country.
The policy is in large part a response to Beijing’s recent export controls on critical materials – such as the rare earth magnet restrictions that paralyzed European automotive production lines last year, officials said. But they noted the framework will also apply to other highly concentrated global resource markets, such as helium and cobalt. The initial phase of the rollout is expected to hit critical industries currently facing markets distorted by a flood of subsidized Chinese imports, notably chemicals and industrial machinery.
Compliance consequences
For compliance officers, the proposed mandate fundamentally expands the scope of traditional Know Your Customer (KYC) and Know Your Supplier (KYS) protocols. Historically, screening focused on identity and association – checking if a third party was owned or controlled by a sanctioned individual or an entity listed on export control watchlists, such as the Common High Priority List (CHPL).
However under the proposed EU rules, compliance must pivot to screening for geographic concentration and provenance tracking. To mitigate the risk of regulatory non-compliance, corporate compliance programs must integrate the following protocols:
- Deeper Multi-Tier Mapping: Standard tier-one vendor screening is no longer sufficient. Companies must conduct exhaustive Enhanced Due Diligence to trace the origin of raw material inputs and sub-components. This is critical to ensure that a third-party intermediary in a “trusted” jurisdiction is not simply repackaging or minimally processing Chinese-origin inputs to bypass the 30-40% ceiling.
- Volume and Sourcing Analytics: Compliance platforms must integrate real-time procurement data to monitor global sourcing percentages. If a supply chain disruption forces a company to temporarily increase orders from a dominant supplier, automated compliance controls must trigger alerts before the legal threshold is breached.
- Geopolitical Risk Vectoring: Screening programs must map corporate networks against concentrated state-directed industrial policies and export control regimes. This ensures that a company’s alternative suppliers are insulated from retaliatory trade blockades or sudden regulatory controls.
Case Study: A Sourcing Illusion
The operational challenge of this proposed mandate is highlighted by an analysis of the global aerospace and industrial machinery supply chains. A surface-level compliance screening of component manufacturers like Aritex Cading, S.A. (Spain) or FACC AG (Austria) would categorize them as domestic European suppliers, seemingly ideal partners to fulfill the EU’s non-China sourcing quotas.
However, deep-ownership data mapping reveals that both entities are structurally controlled by the Aviation Industry Corporation of China (AVIC)—a Chinese state-owned aerospace and defense conglomerate designated as a Chinese military company by the U.S. Department of Defense.
Looking ahead
To be sure, the proposal represents the beginning of a high-stakes legislative tug-of-war that could delay any rollout and water down diversification targets as the European Commission’s blueprint faces challenges by some member states. Debate in the European Parliament hinges on the tradeoff between corporate costs and national and economic security, as member states weigh how to balance diversification quotas against the operational realities of global supply chains.
While policymakers view the framework through the lens of strategic autonomy, initial market analyses and trade economists warn of significant economic costs, including fueling inflation and whittling profit margins.
According to a 2025 Business Confidence Survey published by the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China, 22% of member companies import critical components for which they have no alternative sources, more than a quarter are able to source replacements, but of lower quality, and 7% said diversifying would increase costs.
European policy analysts say that in highly consolidated sectors like advanced chemicals, viable non-Chinese alternative suppliers frequently do not exist at commercial scale, meaning strict quotas could induce the very supply bottlenecks the proposal seeks to prevent. Furthermore, industrial watchdogs warn that smaller and mid-sized enterprises lack the market leverage to secure alternative vendors in tight global markets, raising fears that rigid enforcement will leave European firms disadvantaged against U.S. and Asian competitors who face no such purchasing restrictions.
The European Commission plans to present these measures during a dedicated meeting on May 29, with potential endorsement by EU leaders at a late-June summit. But while the policy is being fast-tracked, that would just greenlight an official legislative proposal: The text would still need to pass through the standard EU Parliament and Council review process before becoming enforceable law. Depending on the political resistance the proposal faces, that process could take 1-2 years.
But as Western policymakers recast industrial dependencies as national security risks, corporations will need to embrace supply chain transparency as core to operational resilience. Legal compliance will require organisations to look past basic country-of-origin paperwork to verify the true geographic origin and corporate ownership of everything they buy.
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