Abstract

There is a general tendency in reporting nowadays, represented by the institutionalization of the environmental reporting in an increasing number of companies. The novelty of our work resides in the fact that this is the first study which analyses the consistency and comparability of the information included in integrated reports. The objective of this research is to determine to what extent the reporting of the environmental performance indicators, including energy, prescribed by the Global Reporting Initiative’s guidelines is in line with the consistency and comparability principle. We analysed the reports published by the European organisations included in the Pilot Programme of the International Integrated Reporting Council. We used the following methodology. First, we compared the environmental reporting of 2016 from one company to another, splitting the sample in accordance with the industries. Second, we analysed the reporting practices of the environmentally-sensitive companies, including energy, in 2010, 2013 and 2016, in order to analyse the consistency of the information published. The results of the research show that the environmentally-sensitive companies, including energy, publish more information. Also, the score of information consistency is above average. The best consistency level is registered in the Basic Materials industry, followed by Oil & Gas and Industrials. Emissions and energy indicators are the most disclosed. This research is useful to understand how companies apply the consistency and comparability principle in practice. The importance of this article is given by the fact that consistency and comparability improve the quality of the sustainability reporting. Without consistency and comparability the information’s relevance is very low.

Highlights

  • Measuring the environmental performance is a difficult attempt

  • The objective of our research is to analyse the consistency and comparability of environmental performance indicators (EPIs), especially the ones related with energy and emissions issues, published by the European companies included in the International Integrated Reporting

  • We present the descriptive results concerning the comparability of EPIs, and the energy and emissions indicators, for the entire sample for the year 2016

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Summary

Introduction

Comparing the environmental performance from one company to another is even harder [1,2]. At present the environmental reporting is an important concern for most of the companies, being often a distinction factor for competing entities. Recent studies have shown the benefits of the environmental reporting: better reputation [3,4,5,6], meeting the expectations of employees [6,7], improved access to capital [6,8,9], increased efficiency [3,6], waste reduction [6,10] and competitive advantages [11,12]. Even if the environmental reporting is voluntary in most of the world’s countries, the number of companies reporting non-financial information related to the environment has significantly increased in the last years.

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