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A master's thesis from Aalborg University
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How a company can identify the relevant non-financial material issues within their industry?

Author

Term

4. term

Publication year

2020

Submitted on

Abstract

Dette speciale undersøger, hvordan en virksomhed i byggematerialeindustrien kan identificere de mest relevante ikke-finansielle, væsentlige emner. Baggrunden er stigende forventninger til bæredygtighedsrapportering og variationer i gennemsigtighed på tværs af brancher, hvor byggesektoren både er en stor udleder og blandt de mindre transparente. Studiet anvender GRI-rammeværket og en væsentlighedsanalyse som centrale værktøjer. Metodisk bygger det på et kvantitativt design med en spørgeskemaundersøgelse blandt interessenter til en casevirksomhed samt en sekundær analyse af bæredygtighedsrapporter fra internationale virksomheder i byggematerialer for at krydstjekke og kontekstualisere de prioriterede emner. Resultaterne peger på arbejdsmiljø og sikkerhed, miljøaftryk og kundevelfærd som de vigtigste temaer for branchen. Undervejs fremhæves desuden betydningen af risikostyring for prioritering, ledelsens rolle for transparens og udviklingen i fremtidens rapportering. Specialet tilbyder en praktisk fremgangsmåde til at strukturere interessentinput, sammenholde det med branchepraksis og udpege de ikke-finansielle emner, der er mest væsentlige for virksomheders drift i byggematerialesektoren.

This thesis examines how a company in the construction materials industry can identify the most relevant non-financial, material issues. It is motivated by growing expectations for sustainability reporting and uneven transparency across industries, with construction both a major emitter and relatively less transparent. The study applies the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) framework and a materiality analysis as core tools. Using a quantitative design, it combines a stakeholder survey at a case company with a secondary review of sustainability reports from international construction materials firms to validate and contextualize the topics prioritized in the survey. The findings highlight occupational health and safety, environmental footprint, and customer welfare as the top material topics for the industry. The research also reflects on the role of risk management in prioritization, the importance of managerial commitment for transparency, and the future of reporting. The thesis offers a practical approach for companies to structure stakeholder input, cross-check it against industry disclosures, and identify the non-financial issues most material to their operations in the construction materials sector.

[This summary has been generated with the help of AI directly from the project (PDF)]