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Mandatory environmental reporting has been seen as a way of increasing accountability of organizations, regarding environmental issues. This paper is concerned with one standard, which requires all the Spanish companies to include environmental disclosures in their financial statements. From the survey of the rationale of the disclosure requirements we suggest that more sound environmental initiatives are obscured by an end-of-pipe emphasis. Additionally, from the research of the reporting activity of a sample of companies a low compliance level results, with roughly 80% of companies not providing any environmental information. In addition, those companies who are reporting some environmental information neglect those aspects of the regulation that are not in their interests to report. The interpretation of these findings, using the theoretical distinction between administrative and institutional reforms, leads us to conclude that the Spanish standard on environmental disclosure is insufficient to enable new accountability relationships and to empower stakeholders.
Larrínaga et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
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