Environmental Accounting
Environmental Accounting
Environmental Accounting
An exploratory study on
Environmental Accounting
DECLARATION
I hereby declare that the work presented in the term project Environmental
Accounting in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the award of the degree
of Master of Business Administration, submitted in the department of University
School of Management Studies, Guru Gobind Singh Indraprastha University, New
Delhi, is an authentic record of my work.
CERTIFICATE
This is to certify that the term project entitled, Environmental accounting,
which is submitted by Mr. in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the award
of the degree of MBA, University School of Management Studies affiliated to
Guru Gobind Singh Indraprastha University, New Delhi is authentic record of
candidate work carried out by him under my guidance. The matter embodied is
original and has not been submitted for the award of any other degree.
______________________
Mr. Gagandip
Contents
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Topics
Defining environmental
accounting
The phases of development of
environmental accounting
Significance Of Environmental
Accounting
Methods to implement
environmental accounting
Defining environmental costs
The role of the management
accountant
Tools And Techniques Of
Environmental Accounting
costing analysis
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quantification
and
monetization
of
externalities
investment analysis
performance evaluation
corporate & strategic business units
individual incentives;
environmental multipliers;
internal waste and environmental
taxes; and
balanced scorecard measures.
Conclusion
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ENVIRONMENTAL
ACCOUNTING
Evolvement :
Increasing awareness of social accounting began in the
1960s (Gray, 2002; Dillard et al., 2005), first evolving in the
areas of corporate ethics, social responsibility and ecological
issues (Loew et al., 2004).
In the beginning:
Interest in the topic increased (in the 1970s), but there is
still a certain decline expressed in terms of questioning the
role of accounting and the merits of publishing information
about environmental activity.
Maturation phase:
In the 1990s, the awareness of environmental accounting
within social accounting increases and becomes a key topic
of research, gaining recognition within accounting research.
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Methods
Businesses use three generally accepted methods to implement
environment accounting:
Financial Accounting
Managerial Accounting
National Income Accounting.
Financial accounting is the process of preparing financial reports,
such as earning statements, for presentation to investors,
lenders, governing bodies and other members of the public. In
this instance, environmental accounting estimates are presented
as part of the financial accounting reports.
Managerial accounting is used solely for internal decision making.
In this capacity, department heads use environmental accounting
to collect data used by senior management to make businesscritical decisions, such as those surrounding procurement.
Alternatively, environmental accounting is used by government
agencies to calculate the nations gross domestic product and
how business decisions affect the countrys economic wellbeing.
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TOOLS AND
TECHNIQUES OF
ENVIRONMENTAL
ACCOUNTING
This guideline focuses on three such management decisionmaking processes: costing analysis, investment analysis and
performance evaluation.
Costing Analysis
Effective corporate environmental management is impossible
without an adequate system to identify and measure
environmental costs. Some of the tools and techniques that can
help companies define the activities, processes and products that
cause environmental costs are:
allocation of environmental costs;
life-cycle assessment;
hierarchical cost analysis;
activity-based costing; and
quantification and monetization of externalities and full
environmental cost accounting.
1)
2) Life-Cycle Assessment
The momentum toward responsible management of global energy
and environmental resources is unmistakable and irreversible.
Customers are demanding products that are functional, energy
efficient and environmentally responsible. For example, new
German washing machines contain computer microchips that
sense the weight of a load and dispense soap and water
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4) Activity-Based Costing
When organizations incur environmental costs, not all processes
and products are equally responsible for cost generation. Even in
modestsized manufacturing firms with two or three production
lines, environmental costs are not driven equally by each
production line. Various lines may contain more hazardous
materials, generate more emissions per unit of output, require
more frequent intensive inspection and monitoring, and generate
greater quantities of waste requiring off-site disposal.
Similarly, particular processes or products may cause a
disproportionate share of costs associ ated with training and
reporting to government agencies, or lead to risks that may
increase insurance costs.
Given the current costs associated with environmental concerns
and the expected increases in these costs, companies should
know the principal factors that determine the environmental costs
incurred. Companies should also assign environmental costs to
products properly.
Traditional accounting systems usually fail to provide accurate
environmental cost information, for two main reasons: they often
allocate environmental costs to overhead costs; and they often
combine environmental costs into cost pools with
nonenvironmental costs. For example, many companies assign
environmental compliance costs (costs directly imposed by
regulations, including pollution-control equipment costs, disposal
fees, etc.) and oversight costs (costs that arise indirectly from
satisfying various compliance requirements) to general overhead
rather than trace them to particular products or manufacturing
processes.
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Multi-Criteria Assessment
Another technique that offers improvements to traditional
investment analysis and appraisal is multi-criteria assessment
(MCA).MCA is designed to help companies systematically evaluate
options according to multiple criteria that are sometimes
measured on different and/or non-commensurable scales. This
evaluation tool enables organizations to consider and trade off all
relevant criteria in decision-making.
The main objectives of MCA are to:
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Performance Evaluation
In Stage 3, companies are committed to fully integrating
environmental considerations into corporate life and recognize
the importance of integrating environmental measurements into
their performance evaluation systems. This ensures that
statements of environmental responsibility articulated by the CEO
and in corporate mission statements are properly implemented.
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ORGANIZATIONAL AND
MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING
CHALLENGES
Managers need information to make decisions on product costing,
product pricing, capital investments and performance evaluations
for the corporation, its business units and its employees. In order
to make better decisions and minimize environmental impacts
and their related costs, managers need to coordinate employees
from accounting, finance, legal, engineering, operations and
EH&S departments in gathering information and providing inputs.
The management accountant can play a critical role by applying
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CONCLUSION
Few would dispute the argument that the emerging
green debate in boardrooms represents a pressing issue
for the 1990s. The stakes are already high, and are rising
daily, not only in the legal context but in terms of
becoming a good corporate citizen, running a leaner,
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