Abstract
In light of the Conference of Parties 26, carbon information reporting has become ever-increasingly important. Prior studies presented much evidence on whether environmental disclosure could reliably reflect environmental performance. However, very limited evidence has been provided on if environmental disclosure could drive firms to improve future environmental performance. Based on the competing theoretical predictions from the legitimacy theory and the “outside-in” management perspectives, this study provides new international insight into if carbon disclosure improvements could motivate future carbon performance improvement based on a change analysis. Particularly, the investigation uses a recently available carbon data set of both developed economies and developing economies from the Carbon Disclosure Project and other publicly available media platforms. We find that an improvement in carbon disclosure indicates a future carbon performance deterioration in developed economies, however, carbon disclosure changes are not related to future carbon performance changes in developing economies when using performance data from the Carbon Disclosure Project. When using performance data from other publicly available media platforms, carbon disclosure changes are not related to future carbon performance changes at all internationally. This indicates that the carbon information disclosed on other public media platforms has been intentionally beautified. Thus, firms' carbon performance changes from these platforms lose track of the prior changes in firms' carbon disclosure.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 108039 |
Number of pages | 12 |
Journal | Energy Economics |
Volume | 141 |
Early online date | 14 Nov 2024 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Jan 2025 |
Keywords
- GHG disclosure
- GHG disclosure environment
- GHG disclosure platform
- GHG disclosure strategy
- GHG information disclosure differences
- GHG performance
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- General Energy
- Economics and Econometrics