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08 Mar 2016
Aries Widiarto Sutantoputra, September 2012
Monash University
Abstract
The link between environmental performance and environmental disclosure is not clear, and previous studies in the U.S. and Canada have found mixed relationships. This study researched the disclosure behaviour of 53 Australian listed companies. Quantitative and qualitative research approaches were employed to provide explanations of the relationship between environmental performance and disclosure as the disclosure of environmental information still remains largely voluntary in Australia. Firms have the discretion to disclose additional information, which also gives them flexibility to determine the breadth and depth of their environmental reporting in the non-regulated sections of their annual report, and in other mediums such as environmental reports, sustainability reports and their websites.
The findings from the quantitative study revealed that environmental performance, measured by emissions divided by sales and Corporate Monitor environmental ratings, has no statistically significant association with environmental disclosure. In addition, the study also found that levels of environmental disclosure were generally low, and there was greater reliance on the use of un-verifiable types of environmental disclosure than on verifiable information. However, industry classifications, company size and capital intensity were found to affect the level of environmental disclosure. Firms may disclose environmental information if they belong to high polluting industries, are large and have outlayed considerable capital expenditure, as has been suggested by voluntary disclosure theory. However, disclosing firms were not found to receive perceived financial benefits such as lower cost of capital (equity), increased share price. Environmental disclosure may thus be limited as firms see the perceived costs as higher than the perceived financial benefits.
Further, the findings from the qualitative study highlighted the different drivers of environmental disclosure across four groups, based on perceptual mapping of environmental performance and environmental disclosure. The study found that the high level of environmental disclosure for Greenwashing (poor performance and high disclosure) and Green Companies (good performance and high disclosure) was influenced by the demand of financial markets. In addition, for Green Companies, customers appear to have also demanded more transparency over firms’ environmental practices. The low level of environmental disclosure for the Silent Con-panies (poor performance and low disclosure) and Silent Achiever (good performance and low disclosure) groups may have been caused by low demand from their stakeholder base. Stakeholder theory is able to explain the environmental disclosure phenomena in Australia where firms tend to react to stakeholder groups’ demands for environmental information. Disclosure can then be seen as a function of stakeholders’ demands or pressures, and in the absence of such demand firms may disclose little or stay silent.
The low level of environmental disclosure across the sample companies shows that Australian businesses do not appear to believe there is a strong business case to disclose environmental information. The study also revealed that the previous, largely voluntary, requirements for environmental disclosure enabled Australian businesses to disclose environmental information selectively, and this may not necessarily reflect their actual environmental performance. As a consequence, the users of these firms’ environmental information may need to interpret the information carefully. The findings of this study also suggest regulators may need to endorse the development of an environmental reporting standard and mandatory audited environmental disclosure for Australian listed firms.
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