CSDDD evidence is broader than a single battery file. For lithium, it can include human-rights, environmental, supplier, and remediation records across the value chain. 1
This spoke belongs to the Lithium Provenance Due Diligence pillar at /lithium-provenance-due-diligence/.
Value-chain evidence
Directive (EU) 2024/1760 establishes corporate sustainability due-diligence duties for certain companies and value chains. Lithium Record can store documents that a customer associates with those duties: supplier policies, risk assessments, grievance information, mitigation plans, contractual controls, review summaries, or environmental evidence. The page should make clear that the customer uploaded the file and that the platform is not operating the due-diligence program.
Connection to batteries
Battery teams may need CSDDD-adjacent lithium evidence when procurement, legal, ESG, and product compliance functions converge. A value-chain file can link to origin records, custody documents, OECD evidence, and Battery Regulation pages. That cross-linking helps the team avoid duplicate records and gives reviewers a route through the evidence map.
Limits and attribution
The page should attribute policies and assessments to the issuer. Lithium Record should not say a company has satisfied CSDDD. It can say the vault preserves customer-uploaded documents that may support internal CSDDD due-diligence workflows.