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Topic 4 - Environmental Cost Management

This document discusses environmental management accounting. It defines sustainability and how businesses are increasingly adopting sustainability practices and reporting. It then defines environmental management accounting as providing environmental performance information for decision making. It outlines various techniques for environmental management accounting, including identifying environmental costs and revenues, setting environmental targets and indicators, and accounting for impacts on the natural environment. The document notes challenges in recognizing and measuring all economic, environmental and social impacts of organizations.

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Nisa Zati Jamal
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
544 views

Topic 4 - Environmental Cost Management

This document discusses environmental management accounting. It defines sustainability and how businesses are increasingly adopting sustainability practices and reporting. It then defines environmental management accounting as providing environmental performance information for decision making. It outlines various techniques for environmental management accounting, including identifying environmental costs and revenues, setting environmental targets and indicators, and accounting for impacts on the natural environment. The document notes challenges in recognizing and measuring all economic, environmental and social impacts of organizations.

Uploaded by

Nisa Zati Jamal
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 39

Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

TOPIC 4

ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
ACCOUNTING

1
Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Outline
• Sustainability for businesses
• Sustainability and management accounting
• Environmental management accounting
• Difficulties in recognising and measuring economic,
environmental and social impacts
• Environmental costs
• Improving supply chain management through measuring
environmental and social impacts
• Strategic performance measurement and sustainability
• Environmental outcomes: capital expenditure analysis
• Climate change and management accounting

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Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Sustainability for businesses


• Sustainable development ‘meets the needs of the
present without compromising the ability of future
generations to meet their own needs’ (UN, 1987)
• Focuses on achieving a sustainable economy, a
sustainable environment and sustainable society
• Corporate social responsibility (CSR) involves
organisations taking into account the social and
environmental impact of corporate activity when
making decisions
(cont.)

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Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Sustainability for businesses (cont.)


• Growing awareness of sustainability and reporting
• By 2008 ,37% of top Australian companies produced stand-
alone sustainability reports, up from 23% in 2005, and a
further 8% integrated sustainability reports within their
annual reports
• In 2010, more than 1000 Australian firms submitted
sustainability reports under the Global Reporting Initiative
(GRI), an increase of 60% over 2009
• Reasons for adopting a sustainability approach
• See Exhibit 17.1
• Stakeholders may influence the adoption of
sustainability practices and reporting (cont.)
• See Exhibit 17.2
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Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Sustainability for businesses (cont.)

Source: KPMG International (2008, p. 23)

(cont.)

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Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Sustainability for businesses (cont.)

6
Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Sustainability and management accounting


• Sustainability accounting – information
management and accounting methods that
support a corporation in its movement towards
sustainability
• Identifying, collecting, analysing and reporting
information about the economic, environmental
and social aspects of an organisation’s activities
• Goes beyond the boundaries of financial
accounting and management accounting

7
Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

What is Environmental Management Accounting (EMA)

• the provision of environmental performance-


related information to stakeholders both within
and outside the organisation
• is a subset of environmental accounting
• provides information about environmental costs
& performance for decision making within the
organisation

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Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Environmental management accounting (EMA)

• Consists of environmentally-related management


accounting systems and practices
• Examples :
• Life cycle costing – identify costs of recycling wastes &
product disposal
• environmental cost accounting,
• environmental performance measures,
• assessment of environmental benefits,
• strategic planning for environmental management
• EMA techniques
• Financially-oriented EMA
• Physically-oriented EMA
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Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Financially-oriented EMA
• Environmental costs
• Costs incurred to prevent, monitor and report
environmental impacts and the costs of non-compliance
with environmental regulations
• Cost of waste management systems, environmental
training, legal activities and fines, record keeping and
reporting, cost of remediation of environmental impacts
• Environmental product costing
• Involves tracing direct and indirect environmental costs
to products
• The cost of waste management, permits and fees,
(cont.)
recycling
10
Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Financially-oriented EMA (cont.)


• Environmental performance indicators
• Used to set targets, and monitor environmental
performance, using both financial and physical measures
• Environmentally-induced capital expenditure
• Driven by the desire to improve the organisation’s
environmental impact, or to comply with environmental
regulations
• Environmentally-induced revenues
• Arise from positive environmental actions
• Increased revenue/benefits from the sale of recycled
materials, from higher selling prices for greener products,
increased customer satisfaction, improved employee morale

11
Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Physically-oriented EMA
• Techniques that focus on supplying information to
management that accounts for the organisation’s
impact on the natural environment
• Kilograms of noxious waste emissions, kilowatt hours of
electricity used, decibels of noise
• Used for tactical decisions and capital expenditure
decisions

12
Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Environmental management systems (EMS) and EMA

• EMS – systems that organisations put in place to


manage their environmental performance
• May include recycling systems, systems to monitor and
control levels of liquids, material and atmospheric
discharge and waste
• ISO 14001 is an international standard for EMA
and its audit
• EMS and adoption of ISO 14001 requires that
environmental performance be measured against
policies, objectives and targets

13
Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

The benefits of recognising environmental and social impacts

• Attracting & retaining highly skilled employees


who wish to work for an environmentally-
responsible organisation
• Enhancement of the organisation’s reputation as
a responsible and caring organisation
• Identification of potential cost savings
• Reduction of risk of current and future activities
• More effective management of resources
• Improvements in competitiveness
• Greater attractiveness to customers
• Positive reputation
14
Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Difficulties in recognising and measuring economic, environmental and


social impacts

• Economic and social impacts are difficult to identify and


measure(often hidden or forgotten), even though they
may be substantial
• Future ecological and social impacts are not yet known
• Current work practices may have future environmental and
social consequences which we cannot predict
• Many costs and benefits are external to the organisation
• difficult to detect and assess
• Many costs and benefits are difficult to measure in
financial terms
• They relate to the future, and the size of the impact may be
unknown

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Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Environmental and SOCIAL COSTS: measured or forgotten

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Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Defining Environmental costs


• The costs that an organisation incurs to prevent,
monitor and report environmental impacts
• May extend into the future
• US EPA defines five tiers of environmental costs
• See Exhibit 17.4
• Private costs (tiers 1 to 4) and societal costs

(cont.)

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Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Environmental costs (cont.)

(cont.)

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Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Environmental costs (cont.)


• Environmental costs can be analysed using the
same framework as used to analyse quality costs
• Prevention activities
• Solve environmental problems before they occur, or turn
problems into opportunities
• Costs of these activities are ‘investments’, as they
reduce the future outlays and provide long-term benefits
• Appraisal activities
• Monitor the levels of environmental impact
• Measure damage, inspect processes and products,
audit supplier performance (cont.)

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Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Environmental costs (cont.)


• Internal failure activities
• To correct breakdowns discovered in appraisal activities
• Cost of cleaning the plant after spillage, cost of
occupational health and safety claims by employees
• External failure activities
• Occur when resolution and remediation efforts fall
outside of the organisation’s management
• Cost of cleaning up polluted sites, fines for
environmental damage, lost profits associated with
damage to reputation
(cont.)

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Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Environmental costs (cont.)

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Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Improving supply chain management through measuring environmental


and social impacts

• Suppliers
• An organisation may be willing to pay more where
suppliers have reduced their environmental and social
impact
• Organisations may work with suppliers to adopt more
responsible environmental and societal practices; this
can lead to cost reductions
• Formal supplier evaluation can include an assessment
of a range of environmental and social factors, as well
as financial factors

(cont.)

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Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Improving supply chain management through measuring environmental


and social impacts

• Customers
• An organisation can work with customers to reduce the
adverse environmental and social impact of products
• Recycling and disposal programs
• Substitution of materials
• Cost savings
• Sometimes customers may be willing to pay more for a
more environmentally-friendly product
• Marketing and strategic considerations need to be
considered in such pricing decisions

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Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Sustainability and performance measurement

• Sustainability reporting – formal reporting of


information about corporate sustainability that
describes the economic, environmental and social
impact of the organisation’s activities
• Also called triple bottom line reporting, social reports,
social audits, environmental reports
• Inside-out approach – measures developed within
the business, reflecting its core values, and fed
through to sustainability reports
• Outside-in approach – measures of sustainability
performance driven by external regulations or
guidelines, which drive organisational activities
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Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Sustainability and performance measurement (cont.)

Source: Based on Australian SAM Sustainability Index (AuSSI) (2009) (cont.)

25
Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Sustainability and performance measurement (cont.)

• Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) Guidelines are


regarded as the global standard for sustainability
reporting
• 48 sets of core indicators + 31 additional indicators
• Includes unique indicators for certain industries
• Dow Jones sustainability index (DJSI) compares
the sustainability performance of the world’s
largest companies
• Australian SAM Sustainability Index (AuSSI)
assesses the sustainability performance of
(cont.)
Australian companies
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Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Sustainability and performance measurement (cont.)

• ISO 14031 environmental performance indicators


• Operational performance indicators: measures of waste
levels and energy consumption relative to sales or some
other activity
• Management performance indicators: measure the
efforts of management to improve the environmental
performance of their organisation
• Environmental condition indicators: measure the actual
condition of the environment at a local, national or
global level
• May be reported as absolute measures or as a
percentage relative to a baseline

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Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Strategic performance measurement systems (SPMS) and sustainability

• Adding sustainability to the balanced scorecard


• Sustainability measures may be included within the four
perspectives
• An environmental or social perspective may be added to
the BSC
• A separate sustainable scorecard may be developed
• Strategy maps may be developed to identify
cause and effect relationships between
objectives, strategies and to guide the selection
of performance measures
(cont.)

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Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Strategic performance measurement systems (SPMS) and sustainability


(cont.)

Source: Adapted from Epstein (2008, p. 138)

(cont.)

29
Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Strategic performance measurement systems (SPMS) and sustainability


(cont.)

Source: Adapted from Figge et al.


(2002, p. 282)

30
Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Environmental outcomes: capital expenditure analysis

• Inclusion of environmental costs and benefits


may make financially non-viable projects more
attractive or financially viable projects less
attractive
• Weighting given to environmental factors
depends on the organisation’s values and
preferences
• Some capital expenditure analysis may be driven
by the need to be environmentally responsible
(cont.)

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Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Environmental outcomes: capital expenditure analysis (cont.)

Source: Tellus Institute (2000), cited by the United Nations (2001)

32
Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Climate change and management accounting

• Climate change is the increase in temperature


and changes in other climate characteristics,
which has been observed since the mid-1980s
• Partially caused by the build up of gases
(particularly carbon dioxide) which are trapped in
the Earth’s atmosphere (the ‘greenhouse effect’)
• Actions to reduce greenhouse gas emissions are
called ‘mitigation’, and actions to respond to
climate change are called ‘adaptation’
(cont.)

33
Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Climate change and management accounting (cont.)

• An emissions trading scheme (ETS) is designed


to encourage organisations to reduce emissions,
based on the demand and supply of emissions
permits
• In November 2011, the Australian parliament
passed the Clean Energy Bill which involves the
introduction of a fixed price carbon tax from 2012,
which will eventually lead to a floating price ETS

(cont.)

34
Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Climate change and management accounting (cont.)

• Implications of climate change for business


• With the introduction of the carbon tax, climate change and
sustainability is likely to be on the strategic/operational
agendas of many companies
• Reducing emission may save costs, is an important risk
management issue and may provide new business
opportunities
• However, organisations that respond to the need to manage
carbon emissions may not commit to a broader sustainability
agenda
• Implications for management accounting
• The five-tier cost framework of the US EPA may provide a
(cont.)
useful way to identify, classify and measure costs associated
with climate change
35
Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Climate change and management accounting (cont.)

• Organisations that pay a carbon tax or participate in


an ETS and wish to promote themselves as carbon
neutral need to measure greenhouse gas emissions
• Need to understand their ‘carbon footprint’, and the
quantity of greenhouse gas emissions they produce
• International protocol (WRI/WBCSD) outlines three
levels of measurement
• Scope 1 – direct emissions controlled by the business
• Scope 2 – indirect emissions from purchased electricity
consumed by the business
• Scope 3 – other indirect emissions caused by business
activities, from sources outside of the business

36
Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Climate change and management accounting (cont.)

• Management accountants can play a role by


• Collecting and analysing non-financial information
• Gathering information from across the value chain
• Managing information systems and large data bases
• For example
• Estimate the cost of emissions produced by products,
department and customers
• Identify carbon non-value-added activities
• Understand carbon drivers
• Supplier evaluations may include supplier emissions
• Quantity of emissions produced and causes of
emissions may be measured
37
Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Summary
• Sustainability involves considering the economic,
environmental and social impacts of an
organisation’s activities
• Environmental management accounting (EMA)
consists of environmental-related management
accounting systems and practices
• Environmental and social impacts can be difficult
to recognise and to measure
• Environmental costs can be classified and
managed using a five-tier framework

38
Topic 4: Environmental Management Accounting

Summary (cont.)
• Environmental and social costs can be input into
management decision making, including capital
expenditure analysis
• Performance measurement systems, including
SPMS, can be adapted to include environmental
and social measures
• External frameworks include ISO 14000 series and the
GRI guidelines
• Management accountants are well equipped to
produce a range of information that will help
businesses respond to climate change
39

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