Water-related sustainability reporting practices amongst South African mining and non-mining corporations
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Received September 9, 2021;Accepted December 8, 2021;Published December 15, 2021
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DOIhttp://dx.doi.org/10.21511/ee.12(1).2021.10
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Article InfoVolume 12 2021, Issue #1, pp. 112-123
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Cited by5 articlesJournal title: South African Journal of Business ManagementArticle title: Components of integrated thinking: Evidence from South African listed companiesDOI: 10.4102/sajbm.v55i1.4080Volume: 55 / Issue: 1 / First page: / Year: 2024Contributors: Dusan EcimJournal title: Sustainable EnvironmentArticle title: What drives corporate water disclosure? The role of board composition in Brazil and IndiaDOI: 10.1080/27658511.2024.2426836Volume: 10 / Issue: 1 / First page: / Year: 2024Contributors: Alan Bandeira Pinheiro, Nágela Bianca Do Prado, Gustavo Hermínio Salati Marcondes de MoraesJournal title: Groundwater for Sustainable DevelopmentArticle title: Water neutrality: Concept, challenges, policies, and recommendationsDOI: 10.1016/j.gsd.2024.101306Volume: 26 / Issue: / First page: 101306 / Year: 2024Contributors: Rajneesh Kumar, Avinash Mishra, Manish Kumar GoyalJournal title: Revista Catarinense da Ciência ContábilArticle title: Water AccountingDOI: 10.16930/2237-766220243469Volume: 23 / Issue: / First page: e3469 / Year: 2024Contributors: Sara Meurer, Hans Michael van BellenJournal title: Meditari Accountancy ResearchArticle title: Bioaccounting measurement of environmental assets: beyond environmental accountingDOI: 10.1108/MEDAR-09-2022-1796Volume: 32 / Issue: 6 / First page: 2001 / Year: 2024Contributors: Angelica Farfan-Lievano, Olga Ines Ceballos, Eutimio Mejia Soto
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Globally, water resource management has emerged as an important research area and is acknowledged as a crucial factor in achieving sustainable development goals. Despite its significance, water-related sustainability disclosures regarding water and water-related risks among companies are alarmingly weak. Many companies are not effectively measuring, managing, and disclosing their water-related risks. Hence, this paper aims to analyze water-related reporting and disclosure requirements of a sample of ten South African mining and non-mining companies with a high water profile, listed on the JSE Socially Responsible Investment Index. The companies’ level of compliance on water disclosure was assessed based on their reporting in the integrated and or annual reports. The findings revealed that sampled five mining companies performed poorly in terms of disclosure across the frameworks of awareness, disclosure, management, and leadership. On the other hand, the selection of five non-mining companies grasped the severe effect of the water crisis on their businesses and performed better in all the framework categories. The average score for the selection of mining companies was 65% compared to the 93% for the non-mining companies. Stakeholders need to focus on water governance processes that require improvement to enable the stakeholders to make better decisions on water management; subsequently, this is an area that needs to be addressed in future research.
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JEL Classification (Paper profile tab)Q01, Q25, P47
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References27
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Tables1
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- Table 1. Water disclosure framework
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Conceptualization
Nadia Latiff
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Data curation
Nadia Latiff
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Formal Analysis
Nadia Latiff
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Funding acquisition
Nadia Latiff
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Investigation
Nadia Latiff
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Methodology
Nadia Latiff
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Project administration
Nadia Latiff, Ferina Marimuthu
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Visualization
Nadia Latiff, Ferina Marimuthu
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Writing – original draft
Nadia Latiff, Ferina Marimuthu
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Validation
Ferina Marimuthu
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Writing – review & editing
Ferina Marimuthu
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Conceptualization
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Does board composition have an impact on CSR reporting?
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Financial sustainability management of the insurance company: case of Ukraine
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Corporate governance and financial performance: an empirical analysis of selected multinational firms in Nigeria
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