EY Value of Sustainability Reporting
EY Value of Sustainability Reporting
EY Value of Sustainability Reporting
reporting
A study by EY and Boston College
Center for Corporate Citizenship
Table of contents
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Executive summary
Sustainability reporting has
emerged as a common practice of
21st-century business.
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two-thirds
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Sustainability reports:
yesterday and today
2009
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Source: Boston College Center for Corporate Citizenship and EY 2013 survey
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Germany
Mexico
Australia
Greece
Netherlands
Austria
Hungary
Norway
Brazil
India
Saudi Arabia
Canada
Indonesia
Singapore
China
Ireland
South Africa
Denmark
Italy
Spain
Ecuador
Japan
Sweden
Egypt
Korea
Turkey
Finland
Luxembourg
United Kingdom
France
Malaysia
United States
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offers a number of
nancial and social
advantages that make it
more than worth its costs.
Financial performance
Supporters of reporting and the GRI have long contended that disclosure offers
reporting companies a wide spectrum of intangible benets, such as employee
loyalty and consumer reputation. But new research suggests that the value of
disclosure also extends to the rms balance sheet. This is consistent with the
survey responses for this report, where by a majority reported realizing business
value as a result of their companies reporting efforts.
A 2009 analysis of the results of more than 200 independent empirical studies
examining the relationship of corporate social and environmental performance
to corporate nancial performance suggested that companies might benet
from increased communication of their good deeds.31 The studies in the sample
specically covering transparency and reporting indicated positive market
reactions to sustainability reporting.32 A 2012 nance study indicated that a
large institutional shareholders successful interventions in corporate social
responsibility increased share price by an average of 4.4% a year.33
The rigor of the reporting process matters a great deal in terms of the value that
can be realized. Recent research found that environmental disclosure quality
and rm value have a positive relationship. Even after implementing a control
for environmental performance, the most transparent companies in the study
tended to have higher cash ows.34 Furthermore, an analysis of rms from
1994 to 2007 found that higher levels of transparency correlate with better
rm liquidity, decreased bid-offer spreads and a higher Tobins Q.35
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Access to capital
Research indicates that reporting may well open the door to
new and less costly sources of capital. By reporting on their
sustainability initiatives, companies may be able to convince
potential sources of equity that they are competitive and
lower-risk investments.36 A recent paper suggests that investors
increasingly prefer to invest in transparent enterprises due
to higher stakeholder-manager trust, more accurate analyst
forecasting and lower information asymmetry.37
A study of ve industries with signicant environmental impacts
(utilities, metals and mining, oil and gas, pulp and paper, and
chemicals) determined that voluntary sustainability disclosure by
rms in these industries allows investors more information than
government-regulated transparency alone and that disclosure
was positively correlated with return on assets and cash ow
from operations.38
Innovate processes
Reduce waste
Gain insight into possible growth areas
Reporting can offer rms insight into potential changes in
process and business. Innovative rms can employ social and
environmental initiatives as opportunities for learning.41
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Risk management
Reporting rms may be better able to predict and manage risks
emanating from sustainability-related dimensions of business.
Engaging in sustainability reporting may allow rms to:
Social benets
Many rms that produce sustainability reports have found
that doing well and doing good are not mutually exclusive
propositions. By releasing their reports, they engage with
stakeholders outside the company, integrate with local and
global communities, and participate in inclusive discourse
that can lead to investments that benet the company and its
operating environment.
In an especially competitive or saturated market, disclosing
information on a rms sustainability commitments leads
to positive differentiation of the company and better rm
performance. A study of corporate social responsibility in
highly competitive markets concluded that companies engaging
in sustainability initiatives can simultaneously increase rm
success, reduce negative social inuence and benet society
at large.53
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The future of
sustainability
reporting
The way
forward
Some advocates of
sustainability believe that
integrated reporting is the
way forward.
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Appendix A:
harmonization of
reporting frameworks
Reporting framework: G3.1 is the GRIs set of sustainability reporting guidelines, and
Type/description
www.globalreporting.org
Members/regions represented
4,981 organizations from every region around the world have created GRI reports.
Industries
Core subjects
Website
Organizational governance
Human rights
Labor practices
The environment
Fair operating practices
Consumer issues
Community involvement and development
The Global Reporting Initiative
www.globalreporting.org
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Type/description
www.accountability.org/standards/aa1000aps.html
www.accountability.org/standards/aa1000as/index.html
www.accountability.org/standards/aa1000ses/index.html
Members/regions represented
Members in North America, European Union, Latin America, Middle East, Southern Africa,
and other developing countries
Industries
Core subjects
Website
Organizational governance
Human rights
Labor practices
The environment
Fair operating practices
Consumer issues
Community involvement and development
www.accountability.org
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Tool: CDP Questionnaire the CDP provides an online questionnaire for rms looking to
report their environmental impacts.
Rankings: CDLI (Climate Disclosure Leadership Index) and CPLI (Climate Performance
Leadership Index) top-scoring companies out of a group, based on market
capitalization, can qualify to be part of the indexes.
Type/description
https://www.cdproject.net/en-US/Respond/Pages/overview.aspx
https://www.cdproject.net/en-US/Results/Pages/leadership-index.aspx
https://www.cdproject.net/en-US/OurNetwork/Pages/special-projects.aspx#cdsb
Members/regions represented
Industries
Core subjects
The environment
Website
www.cdproject.net
Reporting framework: the rst iteration of the International framework for integrated
Type/description
reporting will be available in December 2013. One of the main objectives of integrated
reporting is to communicate a more comprehensive picture of an organizations value by
considering the environmental, social and governance dimensions along with nancial
performance. The framework would provide a consistent and comparable way for
companies to develop integrated reports.
http://www.theiirc.org/about/the-work-plan/
http://www.theiirc.org/about/making-happen/
Members/regions represented
Industries
Core subjects
Organizational governance
Human rights
Labor practices
The environment
Fair operating practices
Consumer issues
Community involvement and development
Website
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http://www.theiirc.org
Type/description
socially responsible way. Helps organizations to put principles into actions and shares
best practices. ISO 26000 was launched in 2010.
www.iso.org/iso/home/standards/management-standards/iso26000.htm
Members/regions represented
Industries
Core subjects
Organizational governance
Human rights
Labor practices
The environment
Fair operating practices
Consumer issues
Community involvement and development
Website
www.iso.org/iso
Tool: the OECD Risk Awareness Tool for Multinational Enterprises in Weak Governance
Type/description
Zones focuses on the risks and ethical issues that corporations doing business in such
areas might encounter. These include a higher level of care when managing investments
and speaking out regarding wrongdoings.
www.oecd.org/daf/inv/corporateresponsibility/weakgovernancezones-riskawarenesstoolf
ormultinationalenterprises-oecd.htm
Members/regions represented
Industries
Core subjects
Organizational governance
Human rights
Labor practices
Fair operating practices
Community involvement and development
Website
www.oecd.org
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Standards: the SASB has classied companies into ten sectors covering 89 industries
Type/description
that incorporate their degrees of resource use and potential for sustainability
innovation. The SASB will produce materiality maps by industry and develop standards
for each industry that will account for differences across types. Sustainability accounting
standards will consist of performance metrics and management disclosures and will be
classied under impacts or opportunities for innovation.
http://www.sasb.org/sics/
http://www.sasb.org/approach/produce/
http://www.sasb.org/sustainability-standards
Standards for all ten sectors will be available in the second quarter of 2015 at
http://www.sasb.org/sustainability-standards/timeline/.
Members/regions represented
Industries
Core subjects
Website
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Organizational governance
Human rights
Labor practices
The environment
Fair operating practices
Consumer issues
Community involvement and development
www.sasb.org
Type/description
www.unglobalcompact.org/AboutTheGC/index.html
http://www.unglobalcompact.org/AboutTheGC/tools_resources/index.html
Members/regions represented
More than 10,000 corporate participants and other stakeholders in over 130 countries
Industries
Any company, business association, labor or civil society, government organization, NGO
or academic institution
Core subjects
Labor practices
The environment
Consumer issues
Community involvement and development
Website
www.unglobalcompact.org
Type/description
www.ghgprotocol.org/about-ghgp
http://www.ghgprotocol.org/standards
Members/regions represented
Industries
Core subjects
The environment
Website
www.ghgprotocol.org
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Figure 16: Company operations area domestic (US only) vs. global
Percent of
respondents
Manufacturing
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Information
Other
Retail trade
Construction
Transportation and
warehousing
Educational services
Real estate
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References
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Capital: The Initiation of Corporate Social Responsibility Reporting, The Accounting Review, Vol. 86,
No.1, 2011, pp. 59-100.
3 D.S. Dhaliwal, S. Radhakrishnan, A.
pp. 38-46.
7 BSR/GlobeScan, State of Sustainable Business Poll 2011, BSR, 2011.
8 EY; GreenBiz Group, Six Growing Trends in Corporate
9 B. Cheng, I. Ioannou and G. Serafeim, Corporate
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10
Black Sun Plc, Understanding Transformation: Building the Business Case For Integrated Reporting,
Black Sun Plc, 2012.
11
12
EY, Climate change and sustainability: How sustainability has expanded the CFOs role, EY, 2011.
13
14
GRI, Materiality in the Context of the GRI Reporting Framework (online). Available: https://www.
globalreporting.org/reporting/guidelines-online/TechnicalProtocol/Pages/MaterialityInTheContextOf
TheGRIReportingFramework.aspx (accessed 20 March 2013).
15
16
Accounting for Sustainability; GRI; Radley Yeldar, The value of extra-nancial disclosure: What investors
and analysts said, Accounting for Sustainability; GRI; Radley Yeldar, 2011.
17
18
19
20
Standard & Poors, Corporate Responsibility & Sustainability, December 2012 (online).
Available: http://ratings.standardandpoors.com/about/who-we-are/Our-Approach-to-Corporate-SocialResponsibility.html (accessed 26 March 2013).
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GRI, Starting Points: GRI Sustainability Reporting: How valuable is the journey?
GRI, Amsterdam, 2011.
22
23
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As You Sow; Sustainable Investment Institute; Proxy Impact, Proxy Preview 2013, As You Sow, 2013.
25
The Hauser Center for Nonprot Organizations; Initiative for Responsible Investment,
Current Corporate Social Responsibility Disclosure Efforts by National Governments and Stock
Exchanges, Initiative for Responsible Investment, 2012.
26
P. Koenvenski, Three Drivers Shaping the Future Integration of ESG Into Mainstream Reporting
(DevelopmentCrossing.com), 24 November 2012 (online). Available: http://www.developmentcrossing.
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(accessed 14 February 2013).
27
R.G. Eccles, M. P. Krzus and G. Serafeim, Market Interest in Nonnancial Information, Journal of
Applied Corporate Finance, 2011.
28
The Hauser Center for Nonprot Organizations; Initiative for Responsible Investment,
Current Corporate Social Responsibility Disclosure Efforts by National Governments and Stock
Exchanges, 2012.
29
Ibid.
30
European Commission, Communication from the Commission to the European Parliament, the Council,
the European Economic and Social Committee and the Committee of the Regions: A renewed EU
strategy 2011-14 for Corporate Social Responsibility, European Commission, Brussels, 2011.
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31
J.D. Margolis, H. A. Elfenbein and J. P. Walsh, Does It Pay To Be GoodAnd Does It Matter?
A Meta-Analysis of the Relationship between Corporate Social and Financial Performance, Social
Science Research Network, 2009.
32
Ibid.
33
E. Dimson, O. Karakas and X. Li, Active Ownership, Social Science Research Network, 2012.
34
M. Plumlee, D. Brown, R. M. Hayes and R. S. Marshall, Voluntary Environmental Disclosure Quality and
Firm Value: Further Evidence, Social Science Research Network, 2010.
35
M. Lang, K. V. Lins and M. Maffett, Transparency, Liquidity, and Valuation: International Evidence on
When Transparency Matters Most, Journal of Accounting Research, Vol. 50, No. 3, 2012, pp. 729774.
36
37
38
Ibid.
39
D. Fernndez-Kranz and J. Santal, When Necessity Becomes a Virtue: The Effect of Product Market
Competition on Corporate Social Responsibility, Journal of Economics & Management Strategy, Vol. 19,
Issue 2, 2010, pp. 453487.
40
Ibid.
41
C. E. Hull and S. Rothenberg, Firm Performance: The Interactions of Corporate Social Performance
with Innovation and Industry Differentiation, Strategic Management Journal, Volume 29, Issue 7,
2008, pp. 781789.
42
GRI, Small, Smart and Sustainable Experiences of SME Reporting in Global Supply Chains,
GRI, Amsterdam, 2008.
43
M. P. Sharfman and C. S. Fernando, Environmental Risk Management and the Cost of Capital,
Strategic Management Journal, 2008, pp. 569592.
44
45
Ibid.
46
Edelman Berland, 2013 Edelman Trust Barometer Executive Summary, Edelman Berland, 2013.
47
Prophet, Reputation Winners and Losers: Highlights from Prophets First Annual U.S. Reputation
Study, Prophet, 2009.
48
EY, The top 10 risks for business: a sector-wide view of the risks facing businesses across the globe,
EY Business Risk Report, 2010.
49
BSR/GlobeScan, 2011.
50
51
52
53
54
GRI, Global Action, Local Change Moving towards Sustainable Supply Chains,
GRI, Amsterdam, 2011.
55
56
GRI, GRI and IIRC deepen cooperation to shape the future of corporate reporting, 1 March 2013
(online). Available: https://www.globalreporting.org/information/news-and-press-center/Pages/GRI-andIIRC-deepen-cooperation-to-shape-the-future-of-corporate-reporting.aspx (accessed 1 March 2013).
57
P. J. Coram, G.S. Monroe and D. R. Woodliff, The Value of Assurance on Voluntary Nonnancial
Disclosure: An Experimental Evaluation, Auditing: A Journal of Practice & Theory, Vol. 28, No. 1, 2009,
pp. 137-151.
58
59
CorporateRegister.com, Assure View. The CSR Assurance Statement Report, July 2008 (online).
Available: http://www.corporateregister.com/pdf/AssureView.pdf (accessed 18 April 2013).
60
61
Ibid.
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