Global EHS Compliance 2026: Fragmented Rules, Rising Enforcement
Manage changing regulations, protect operations and reduce risk
- Rising regulatory pressure: what 2026 means for multi-country EHS compliance (e.g. IED II, EED III, ISO 14001:2026)
- Where EHS compliance breaks: Common failure points
- The real cost of gaps: fines, shutdowns, failed audits, and reputational damage
- Proven practices: locally validated regulatory content, structured ownership, access to local experts
- Live in action: denxpert's global compliance platform and Inogen Alliance network

Beyond documentation: building compliance you can actually prove
Global EHS compliance is no longer just about having the right policies in place, regulators, auditors, and boards expect evidence. Evidence of who is responsible for what, which legal requirements apply in each country, and whether those obligations are being met in practice.
Generic, centralized legal content rarely holds up in this context. What works is locally validated regulatory content, combined with direct access to experts who understand the nuances of specific jurisdictions. Learn how the Inogen Alliance addresses exactly this, a network of local sustainability experts covering over 150 countries, providing the on-the-ground regulatory knowledge that generic global content can't.
In this session, EHS and compliance experts from denxpert and Antea Group USA – members of the Inogen Alliance, walk through the most common failure points in multinational EHS programs and show how companies are solving them.
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You'll see a live demo of how denxpert LEGAL:
- Connects legal content, responsibilities, and workflows in one system
- Moves beyond data tracking to process-driven compliance management
- Delivers structured, traceable compliance, not just documentation
Whether you're managing 5 sites or 500, across 3 countries or 50, this webinar gives you a practical framework and a live look at how it works in practice.
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