4.7 Article

Sustainability reports as a tool for measuring and monitoring the transition towards the circular economy of organisations: Proposal of indicators and metrics

Journal

JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
Volume 320, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2022.115784

Keywords

Sustainability; Circularity; Communication; Corporate reporting; KPI; GRI

Funding

  1. Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovaci ?
  2. [DPI2017-89451-R]

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Sustainability reports can serve as a valuable tool in facilitating the transition towards more circular economy models for organizations. This study aims to determine the feasibility of calculating indicators that measure the level of circularity based on the information currently communicated in Corporate Sustainability Reports (CSRs). The findings suggest that a significant number of indicators can be directly measured using the information provided in CSRs.
Sustainability reports may play an important role as a supporting tool in the transition of organisations towards more circular economy models, since their content can help to measure, monitor and communicate the organisations' transition and to establish goals in the short/medium term. The aim of this study is to determine whether it is possible to calculate indicators capable of measuring the transition of organisations towards circularity from the information that they are currently communicating in their Corporate Sustainability Reports (CSRs), and what information would need to be incorporated in these reports to successfully carry out this procedure. To this end, by applying a three-step methodology, 34 indicators grouped into 10 categories were proposed to measure the level of circularity of organisations. This was completed with a detailed proposal of units/metrics to measure the indicators, based on those that organisations commonly use in their CSRs. For this purpose, information from 8 international programmes/frameworks that measure circularity at the territorial level was combined with circularity information that organisations are currently communicating in their CSRs. Finally, the proposed set of indicators and metrics were applied to a Spanish organisation dedicated to the forestry and paper sector with a CSR based on GRI-Standards. The results demonstrated that 25 of the 34 proposed indicators (74%) can be measured directly using the information included in the CSRs.

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