Corporate Social Responsibility or Government Regulation? Evidence on Oil Spill Prevention

Major oil spills normally occur from oil pipelines and oil tankers that are under operational control of companies, namely, oil companies and tanker owners. There are two generic responses for changing the behavior of companies with regard to oil spill prevention: mandatory government regulation or...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jedrzej G. Frynas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2012-12-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol17/iss4/art4/
_version_ 1819140370197381120
author Jedrzej G. Frynas
author_facet Jedrzej G. Frynas
author_sort Jedrzej G. Frynas
collection DOAJ
description Major oil spills normally occur from oil pipelines and oil tankers that are under operational control of companies, namely, oil companies and tanker owners. There are two generic responses for changing the behavior of companies with regard to oil spill prevention: mandatory government regulation or voluntary initiatives often pursued under the banner of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR). Here we investigate to what extent voluntary CSR initiatives can be effective in oil spill prevention. A global perspective on voluntary mechanisms is taken by looking at the progress of 20 oil and gas firms from around the world toward oil spill prevention, using the companies' 2010 sustainability reports for self-reported oil spill information. The analysis includes ten oil companies from OECD countries (including Exxon and Shell, among others) and 10 oil companies from non-OECD countries (including Brazil's Petrobras and Indian Oil, among others). The study finds that oil spill prevention has generally improved over recent decades. Government regulation played a significant part in these improvements whereas it is less clear to what extent CSR played a significant part in these improvements. Some of CSR's key limitations are highlighted. It is not suggested that CSR should be abandoned; however, new hybrid forms of regulation that combine voluntary and mandatory elements are advocated.
first_indexed 2024-12-22T11:37:28Z
format Article
id doaj.art-a7e4722601b8442aac50fb432fa01549
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1708-3087
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-22T11:37:28Z
publishDate 2012-12-01
publisher Resilience Alliance
record_format Article
series Ecology and Society
spelling doaj.art-a7e4722601b8442aac50fb432fa015492022-12-21T18:27:24ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872012-12-01174410.5751/ES-05073-1704045073Corporate Social Responsibility or Government Regulation? Evidence on Oil Spill PreventionJedrzej G. Frynas0Middlesex University Business SchoolMajor oil spills normally occur from oil pipelines and oil tankers that are under operational control of companies, namely, oil companies and tanker owners. There are two generic responses for changing the behavior of companies with regard to oil spill prevention: mandatory government regulation or voluntary initiatives often pursued under the banner of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR). Here we investigate to what extent voluntary CSR initiatives can be effective in oil spill prevention. A global perspective on voluntary mechanisms is taken by looking at the progress of 20 oil and gas firms from around the world toward oil spill prevention, using the companies' 2010 sustainability reports for self-reported oil spill information. The analysis includes ten oil companies from OECD countries (including Exxon and Shell, among others) and 10 oil companies from non-OECD countries (including Brazil's Petrobras and Indian Oil, among others). The study finds that oil spill prevention has generally improved over recent decades. Government regulation played a significant part in these improvements whereas it is less clear to what extent CSR played a significant part in these improvements. Some of CSR's key limitations are highlighted. It is not suggested that CSR should be abandoned; however, new hybrid forms of regulation that combine voluntary and mandatory elements are advocated.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol17/iss4/art4/Corporate Social Responsibilityoil spill preventionoil spillspetroleumregulationvoluntary regulation
spellingShingle Jedrzej G. Frynas
Corporate Social Responsibility or Government Regulation? Evidence on Oil Spill Prevention
Ecology and Society
Corporate Social Responsibility
oil spill prevention
oil spills
petroleum
regulation
voluntary regulation
title Corporate Social Responsibility or Government Regulation? Evidence on Oil Spill Prevention
title_full Corporate Social Responsibility or Government Regulation? Evidence on Oil Spill Prevention
title_fullStr Corporate Social Responsibility or Government Regulation? Evidence on Oil Spill Prevention
title_full_unstemmed Corporate Social Responsibility or Government Regulation? Evidence on Oil Spill Prevention
title_short Corporate Social Responsibility or Government Regulation? Evidence on Oil Spill Prevention
title_sort corporate social responsibility or government regulation evidence on oil spill prevention
topic Corporate Social Responsibility
oil spill prevention
oil spills
petroleum
regulation
voluntary regulation
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol17/iss4/art4/
work_keys_str_mv AT jedrzejgfrynas corporatesocialresponsibilityorgovernmentregulationevidenceonoilspillprevention