A Cross-country Study of Stakeholder Pressure on Oil and Gas companies’ Environmental Performance and Disclosures
Abstract
The oil and gas industry is a vital aspect of the global economy and is considered the main
economic resource in many countries. However, this industry is responsible for numerous
environmental issues, such as global warming, air pollution, hazardous discharges and
catastrophic environmental events. These environmental issues have put pressure on oil and
gas companies to be more environmentally responsible.
The aim of this study is to investigate the impact of stakeholder pressure on voluntary
environmental disclosures (VEDs) and environmental performance (EP) in oil and gas
companies. It will employ stakeholder theory and the new institutional perspective of
institutional theory to do the analysis.
The research is a cross-country study in two phases. The first phase is a quantitative content
analysis to investigate the impact of governmental environmental policies, board size, company
size, and company leverage on the VEDs of 189 companies for 2019-2020 from 14 of the top
oil producing countries in. Multiple regression was used in this stage to investigate the impact
of independent variables on VEDs.
The second phase is a questionnaire survey. Primary data is collected to investigate the impact
of pressure from governments, customers, NGOs, shareholders, employees, and the pandemic
on EP. The participants of the survey are managers and high-level employees linked to
environmental practices of oil and gas companies. Structural equation modelling (SEM) was
used to link the factors with the dependent variable (EP).
The findings of the study will reveal that company size and board size have a significant
positive impact on VEDs. Also, there has been a significant increase in oil and gas company
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VEDs in 2020 compared to 2019. However, it would appear that governmental environmental
policies, leverage, and profitability have a statistically insignificant influence on VEDs. On the
other hand, governmental pressure, customer pressure and employee pressure have a significant
positive effect on the EP of oil and gas companies. Pressure from NGOs, shareholders and the
pandemic is statistically insignificant.
This research contributes knowledge about voluntary environmental disclosures and
environmental performance, specifically in the global oil and gas industry. Also, it contributes
to a better understanding of the role of stakeholder group pressure and their impact on
environmental practices and disclosure in this industry.
This study also investigates the impact of the pandemic on environmental practices in the oil
and gas industry. This study is one of the first academic studies to consider the pandemic's
impact on the oil and gas industry’s VEDs and EP.
Lastly, it provides an example of combining stakeholder theory and institutional theory to
investigate the impact of stakeholders on a firm’s environmental performance and disclosure.
Description
Keywords
Environmental Performance, Voluntary Environmental disclosures, Oil and Gas Companies, Stakeholders' Pressure, Stakeholder Theory, Institutional Theory