Abstract

Despite the apparent commitment of large Spanish corporations to the SDGs, information about their documented contribution to the 2030 Agenda is still scarce. This article aims to explore this gap by investigating the extent to which Spanish listed companies have been reporting on the SDGs since the approval of the 2030 Agenda. The paper contributes to the country-level analysis of SDG reporting by performing a longitudinal analysis over the 4-year period encompassing 2016 to 2019. It contributes to management science by assessing Corporate Sustainability performance through adherence to the SDGs and testing what the facilitators of SDG reporting have been during the first 4 years since the adoption of the 2030 Agenda. Findings reveal a low commitment of Spanish listed companies to sustainability reporting. Nevertheless, they also uncover how those companies that publish non-financial reports are increasingly reporting on the SDGs. Additionally, there is also a growing tendency among CEOs to mention the SDGs in their letters to stakeholders. Furthermore, a positive link is established between the adoption of GRI reporting standards or being a signatory of the UN Global Compact and SDG reporting. Similarly, those companies that publish Integrated Reports are more likely to consider the SDGs in their disclosures than those that publish Standalone Reports or Annual Reports. Nonetheless, there is a growing tendency to gravitate from producing Integrated Reports to producing Annual Reports. Owing to the breadth of these results and their relevance to academics and practitioners alike, this study can help build future evidence-based accountability literature and policy on the SDGs at the Spanish and European levels.

Highlights

  • The United Nations resolution of September 2015 “Transforming our world: the 2030Agenda for Sustainable Development” establishes the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), which seek, with the motto “no one left behind”, to eradicate poverty, reduce inequality and care for the environment [1]

  • This paper portrays a longitudinal analysis of the SDG reporting practices of Spanish listed companies from the approval of the 2030 Agenda until 2020

  • While the research takes a rather descriptive perspective to approach the performance on SDG reporting of Spanish listed companies, it does so in an attempt to test some of the latest hypotheses in the nascent academic field of SDG reporting

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Summary

Introduction

The United Nations resolution of September 2015 “Transforming our world: the 2030Agenda for Sustainable Development” establishes the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), which seek, with the motto “no one left behind”, to eradicate poverty, reduce inequality and care for the environment [1]. In contrast to previous state-centred, negatively framed sustainability agreements aimed at “developing countries” such as the Millennium Goals [2], this global agenda stands for a global co-responsibility model which is neither based upon the “NorthSouth” divide nor on the “Central-Peripheral” dichotomy [1]. Some authors have seen the 2030 Agenda as a model of global governance by goal-setting [3]. In this context, business organizations are called to play a critical role for sustainable development [4]. The call for businesses is based on two premises: The economic opportunity the SDGs represent [5,6,7,8] and the co-responsibility of companies in becoming development agents

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