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Pipeline accidents and incidents, environmental consciousness, and financial performance in the canadian energy industry
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Publication Year
2019-01-01
Publisher
MDPI
Citation
Sustainability (Switzerland), Vol.11
Keyword
Environmental consciousnessFinancial performancePipeline accidents and incidents
All Science Classification Codes (ASJC)
Computer Science (miscellaneous)Geography, Planning and DevelopmentRenewable Energy, Sustainability and the EnvironmentBuilding and ConstructionEnvironmental Science (miscellaneous)Energy Engineering and Power TechnologyHardware and ArchitectureComputer Networks and CommunicationsManagement, Monitoring, Policy and Law
Abstract
This study employs a balanced panel of data which consists of 1281 firm-year pipeline accidents and incidents at a disaggregate level and 190 firm-year pipeline events at an aggregate level for 19 firms during the observation period between 2007 and 2016. This study examines the relationships among environmental accidents and incidents, environmental consciousness, and financial performance. Given that environmental consciousness acts as an overarching environmental context on the relationship between the accidents, incidents, and financial performance and could be relevant to shareholders to identify the weight of these accidents and incidents, this study carefully investigates how environmental consciousness moderates the relationship between pipeline accidents, incidents, and financial performance. This study applies the theoretical assumption of both corporate social responsibility (CSR) and corporate social irresponsibility, both of which explain the relationship between financial performance and the events that positively or negatively affect stakeholders. This study employs nested regression analyses with the fixed effects model to test the time-series panel data. The results show that environmental consciousness has an expected significant negative effect on financial performance, whereas pipeline accidents and incidents have no expected negative effect on financial performance. One surprising finding is that pipeline accidents and incidents weighted with environmental consciousness present a significant positive relationship with financial performance, suggesting that potential contextual factors should be considered to explain such an unexpected finding.
ISSN
2071-1050
Language
eng
URI
https://dspace.ajou.ac.kr/dev/handle/2018.oak/30830
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/su10023275
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Article
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Kim, kyungho  Image
Kim, kyungho 김경호
Department of Business Administration
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