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Greenwashing, carbon emission, and ESG

106
Citations
December 1, 2024
Published Date

Research Abstract & Technology Focus

AbstractRecent decades have seen an increasingly awareness of climate changes, putting a pressure on companies to do more to deal with carbon emission. One of the popular measures used in assessing how well a company commits to sustainable development and reduces carbon emissions is ESG ratings. Given the importance of both ESG ratings and carbon footprints on our society and the target of net zero by 2050, we explore the relation between carbon emission and the Refinitiv ESG scores for the US sample from 2005 to 2018. Our findings indicate that high ESG‐rated or environment‐rated firms do not have lower carbon emissions. It appears that these firms are not incentivized to do more for environment, as they have already been awarded with good publicity for being environmentally friendly. Finally, our findings also support the ‘cheap talk’ concept, greenwashing hypothesis and legitimacy theory. Companies are not genuinely committed to climate action.
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What is the core focus of the research titled 'Greenwashing, carbon emission, and ESG'?

This literature focuses on: AbstractRecent decades have seen an increasingly awareness of climate changes, putting a pressure on companies to do more to deal with carbon emission. One of the popular measures used in assessing how well a company commits to sustainable develop...

What other academic literature is closely related to 'Greenwashing, carbon emission, and ESG'?

Yes, highly correlated activity was mapped. An entry titled 'The effect of ESG on enterprise value under the dual carbon goals: From the perspectives of financing constraints and green innovation' discusses this: No description provided.

Are there commercial applications of 'Greenwashing, carbon emission, and ESG' in market news publications?

Yes, highly correlated activity was mapped. An entry titled 'ESG flux: Do-gooder investors may be shifting to health but mustn’t let climate action trail off' discusses this: Health is drawing ESG money as climate slips down the priority list of US investors. But going green can fight illness too—by curbing pollution, li...

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