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Voluntary corporate environmental initiatives and shareholder wealth
Authors:Karen Fisher-Vanden  Karin S Thorburn
Institution:aDepartment of Agricultural Economics and Rural Sociology, Pennsylvania State University, 112-E Armsby Building, University Park, PA 16870, USA;bNorwegian School of Economics and Business Administration (NHH), Norway
Abstract:Researchers debate whether environmental investments reduce firm value or actually improve financial performance. We provide some compelling evidence on shareholder wealth effects of membership in voluntary environmental programs (VEPs). Companies announcing membership in EPA's Climate Leaders, a program targeting reductions in greenhouse gas emissions, experience significantly negative abnormal stock returns. The price decline is larger in firms with poor corporate governance structures, and for high market-to-book (i.e., high growth) firms. However, firms joining Ceres, a program involving more general environmental commitments, have insignificant announcement returns, as do portfolios of industry rivals. Overall, corporate commitments to reduce greenhouse gas emissions appear to conflict with firm value maximization. This has important implications for policies that rely on voluntary initiatives to address climate change. Further, we find that firms facing climate-related shareholder resolutions or firms with weak corporate governance standards – giving managers the discretion to make such voluntary environmentally responsible investment decisions – are more likely to join Climate Leaders; decisions that may result in lower firm value.
Keywords:Corporate social responsibility  Environmentally responsible investing  Climate change  Greenhouse gas emissions  Capital expenditures  Shareholder wealth
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