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Greenhouse Gas Reporting and Management in Top Emitting Countries and Companies

aUniversity of Southampton, UK
bVictoria University of Wellington, New Zealand

Green House Gas Emissions Reporting and Management in Global Top Emitting Countries and Companies

ISBN: 978-1-80262-884-5, eISBN: 978-1-80262-883-8

Publication date: 11 July 2023

Abstract

This chapter outlines the need for global actions on mitigating greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and introduces the six chapters contained in this issue. The impact of GHG emissions on the environment undoubtedly exacerbates the consequence of climate change and is not constrained within the borders of the emitting countries and companies. Emitting countries (and companies) export much of the harm created by GHG emissions given that the earth's atmosphere intermixes globally. GHG top emitters are not necessarily the victims of its consequences, since the extent to which each country is affected by adverse weather such as floods depends on the distribution of climate vulnerability rather than jurisdictional emission. Hence, global collective actions are required to find plausible solutions to reduce GHG emissions. This issue consists of one literature review and five empirical chapters. The insight from the literature review highlights the dearth of studies addressing GHG emissions reporting and management in Africa and the Middle East. The first three empirical chapters examine the efficacy of corporate governance in facilitating GHG disclosures and performance in China, the United States and India. The fifth chapter examines the effect of the Paris Agreement on climate change disclosures in South Africa. There is mixed evidence as to how corporate governance affects GHG disclosure, but it is clear that the Paris Agreement had a positive impact on climate change disclosures in South Africa. The sixth chapter examines the social determinants of GHG in top 100 emitting countries and documents evidence that energy use determines the extent of GHG emissions in both developed and developing countries. However, the results show that other social determinants such as urbanisation, literacy and corruption contribute in varying ways to GHG emissions in developing countries. Taken together, the collection of chapters in this issue provides incremental understanding to the effect of GHG emissions and necessary actions that can help in mitigating them.

Keywords

Citation

Tauringana, V. and Moses, O. (2023), "Greenhouse Gas Reporting and Management in Top Emitting Countries and Companies", Tauringana, V. and Moses, O. (Ed.) Green House Gas Emissions Reporting and Management in Global Top Emitting Countries and Companies (Advances in Environmental Accounting & Management, Vol. 11), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 1-9. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1479-359820230000011001

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023 Venancio Tauringana and Olayinka Moses. Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited