4.6 Article

Green, blue or black, but washing-What company characteristics determine greenwashing?

Journal

ENVIRONMENT DEVELOPMENT AND SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 24, Issue 3, Pages 4024-4045

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10668-021-01602-x

Keywords

Greenwashing; Sustainability; Reporting; ESG scores; Stakeholder; GRI

Funding

  1. ECOBAS (Economic and Business Administration for Society)
  2. Conselleria de Educacion, Universidade e Formacion Profesional [ED431E 2018/02]
  3. Xunta de Galicia

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The study examines the determinants of greenwashing by analyzing sustainability disclosures from the S&P top 100 companies. Results show that companies in environmentally sensitive industries and those following GRI guidelines engage in less greenwashing. Companies that issue a sustainability report and assure it also exhibit lower levels of greenwashing.
The purpose of this paper is to study what are the characteristics that make firms less or more prone to greenwashing. We collect data from sustainability disclosures of the S&P top 100 companies, to investigate the determinants of greenwashing. We use content analysis to measure the level of reporting of the companies. We define the greenwashing variable as the difference between what the company says it does in terms of commitment to sustainability, and what the company actually does as evaluated by external parties (Bloomberg ESG scores). Our results show that companies in environmentally sensitive industries greenwash less than their counterparts in other industries, as well as companies following the GRI guidelines. Companies that issue a sustainability report and assure it greenwash less than those that do not do it. Contrary to our intuition, companies in industries with close proximity and high visibility greenwash more than their counterparts. A limitation of the paper is the inclusion in the sample of data from one country. Our findings have implications for policy-makers, particularly in Europe, where some European states have already regulated on green issues reporting and lately on blue issues. It might be interesting to consider both the industry effect and the relevance of reporting mechanisms when developing regulation and policies in order to improve the quality of sustainability reporting. We contribute to literature by proposing a new quantitative measure to assess greenwashing practices, to better understand the effect of industry and reporting mechanisms on greenwashing.

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