31 results on '"Mária, Csutora"'
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2. A FENNTARTHATÓSÁGOT SZOLGÁLÓ ÜZLETI GYAKORLATOK FOGYASZTÓI ELFOGADÁSA A COVID IDEJÉN – EGY EGYETEMISTA MINTA TAPASZTALATAI.
- Author
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MÁRIA, CSUTORA, CECÍLIA, SZIGETI, and GÁBOR, HARANGOZÓ
- Subjects
- *
CORPORATE sustainability , *SUSTAINABLE consumption , *BUSINESS models , *SUSTAINABILITY - Abstract
The restrictions and lockdowns resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic had a significant impact on the rise of sustainabilityfocused business practices. The aim of this study was twofold: to explore how consumer adoption of sustainable business practices changed during the pandemic, and to examine whether a rebound effect was to be expected once the pandemic was over. The authors used descriptive statistics, as well as factor and cluster analysis on a sample of 622 recipients to investigate the above areas. The results showed that consumers’ openness to the practices studied increased overall, apart from sharing solutions (accommodation, transport). However, there also seemed to be a rebound expected in the adoption of sustainable business practices after the pandemic, already partly observed, for example in terms of material consumption and missed trips. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. A fosszilis inputok és outputok teljes költsége az ágazati kapcsolatok mérlege alapján – Kína példája.
- Author
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Mária, Csutora and Zsófia, Vetőné Mózner
- Subjects
- *
CARBON emissions , *GOVERNMENT policy on climate change , *CARBON , *COST - Abstract
Carbon costs impact both the input side of economic sectors, as fossil inputs are used as raw materials, and the output side, as CO2 emissions are paid for in the form of emission allowances. The effectiveness of climate policies depends heavily on the total cost of fossil inputs and emissions, but the input side has typically been ignored so far. The aim of this paper is to present a model that quantifies the total private costs associated with the carbon use of economic sectors. The model presented in this paper is based on an environmentally extended input-output analysis. Total private carbon costs include costs associated with fossil inputs, including both energy and non-energy use, as well as costs associated with carbon emissions. China provides an instructive example, as its economy is heavily dependent on fossil energy sources. The results of the presented model highlight the problem of conflicting energy and climate policies. Reductions in input-side costs may offset the rising costs of carbon emission costs enforced by the climate policy. This article represents a stride in that direction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Crises as incubators of sustainable mobility patterns? Evidence from two shock events
- Author
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Mária Csutora and Ágnes Zsóka
- Subjects
Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,Development - Published
- 2023
5. Designing lifestyle-specific food policies based on nutritional requirements and ecological footprints
- Author
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Mária Csutora and Zsófia Vetőné Mózner
- Subjects
food consumption ,diets ,nutrition ,environmental impact ,health policy ,occupational health ,Social sciences (General) ,H1-99 - Abstract
Expanded understanding of the trends and determinants of food consumption is needed to reduce the ecological impacts of the contemporary agro-food system while also being attentive to broader issues pertaining to health and the environment. Incorporating these additional aspects and formulating meaningful dietary recommendations is a major challenge. This article seeks to highlight differences in ecological footprint (EF) by activity level for various social groups to meet suggested physiological requirements by nutritionists versus actual food consumption. The study is based on a combination of healthy diet requirements (as expressed by national guidelines) and a survey of a representative sample of 1,013 Hungarian adults using a bottom-up approach for calculating EFs. Students and women with small children have a higher than average food-related EF due to their higher nutritional needs. At the same time, the elderly are characterized by lower footprints. Perhaps most interesting is our finding that people with sedentary forms of employment have higher food footprints than those with jobs that require physical labor. We offer recommendations for food-policy planning based on encouraging dietary changes for individuals, differentiated by the nature of their work. The research suggests that dietary policy that improves health often has environmental benefits.
- Published
- 2013
6. Fenntarthatósági konfliktusok és konfliktuscsökkentés a megosztáson alapuló gazdaságban • Sustainability Conflicts and Conflict Prevention in the Sharing Economy
- Author
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Mária Csutora
- Published
- 2022
7. A zöld ellátásilánc-menedzsment fejlődése – múlt, jelen és jövő
- Author
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Mária Csutora, Gábor Harangozó, Tünde Tátrai, and Gyöngyi Vörösmarty
- Subjects
Supply chain management ,Sustainable supply chain ,Business administration ,Supply chain ,Economic agents ,Business - Abstract
A globalizalodo es halozatosodo vilagban az ellatasi lancok iranyitasa es a gazdasagi tevekenysegek kornyezetvedelmi, illetve fenntarthatosagi szempontu ertekelese es menedzsmentje egyre inkabb osszekapcsolodik. A tanulmany attekintest nyujt a ket terulet metszeteben letrejovő zold ellatasilanc-menedzsment koncepcio kialakulasarol es fejlődeseről az elmult 20-25 ev tavlataban, ertekeli a jelenlegi kihivasokat es a varhato jovőbeli tendenciakat. Fokuszaba kerulnek a zold ellatasilanc-menedzsment kialakulasaban szerepet jatszo tendenciak, kiemelve az erintettek es a meres szerepet. A terulet kialakulasaban tobb egymassal parhuzamosan fejlődő tendencia is megfigyelhető, ilyen peldaul a kockazati es a lehetőseg fokusz. Hasonlokeppen, a tevekenyseg alapu megkozelites az ellatasi lanc resztvevőinek kornyezeti teljesitmenyjavitasara fokuszal, mig a termekalapu megkozelites a vegtermek – teljes eletciklusara ertelmezett – zolditesere osszpontosit. Ugyan a tanulmany az ellatasilanc-menedzsment kornyezetvedelmi vonatkozasaira koncentral, kitekintő jelleggel bemutatja az előbbinel joval kesőbb megjelenő tarsadalmi fokuszt, illetve az ezek integralasat celzo fenntarthato ellatasilanc-menedzsment koncepciot. Barmennyi kihivassal kuszkodik is a zold ellatasilanc-menedzsment, egy olyan vilagban, amelyet mar nem vallalatok, hanem vallalati halozatok alkotnak, a kornyezetvedelmi elvarasokat is csak ezen a szinten erdemes definialni, ha el akarjuk kerulni, hogy a gazdasagi szereplők a tevekenysegek kiszervezesevel kornyezetvedelmi buborekokat hozzanak letre, mashova tolva at a problemakat. ----- In a globalizing and networking world, supply chain management is increasingly linked with the environmental and sustainability assessment and management of economic activities. This study provides an overview of the evolution and development of Green Supply Chain Management concept in the intersection of the two areas over the last 20-25 years, evaluating current challenges and expected future trends. It focuses on trends in Green Supply Chain Management, highlighting the role of stakeholders and measurement. There are several parallel trends in the development of the area, such as risk focus and opportunity focus. Similarly, the activity-based approach focuses on improving the environmental performance of the participants along the supply chain, while the product-based approach focuses on the greening of the final product throughout its life cycle. While the study focuses on the environmental aspects of supply chain management, the social focus that emerged much later and the concept of sustainable supply chain management aimed at integrating them, are also outlined. No matter how challenging Green Supply Chain Management is, in a world that is no longer based on single businesses but on corporate networks, environmental expectations should be defined at this level, if we are to prevent economic agents from outsourcing environmental impacts, pushing the problems somewhere else.
- Published
- 2019
8. Széndioxid-elszámolás a hálózati gazdaságban
- Author
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Mária Csutora and Gábor Harangozó
- Subjects
Carbon accounting ,Scope (project management) ,Climate impact ,Accounting practices ,Business administration ,Entire life cycle ,Business ,Network economy ,Indirect emissions ,Environmental accounting - Abstract
A globalis klimavaltozassal kapcsolatos aggodalmakkal es a kapcsolodo nemzetkozi szakpolitikaval parhuzamosan alakult ki a vallalati szintű uveghazhatasu gaz, illetve ezen belul a szendioxid-elszamolas. A halozati gazdasag koraban a globalis ellatasi lancok szendioxid-elszamolasa jelentősen tulmutat a kornyezetvedelmen mind gazdasagi, mind tarsadalmi szempontbol kiemelt fontossagu. A tanulmany egyreszt rendszerező jellegű attekintest ad a vallalati szendioxid-elszamolas kialakulasarol, fejlődesi fazisairol es kihivasairol, kulonos tekintettel a vallalatok fizikai hatarain tulnyulo, az ellatasi lancok es a termekek teljes eletciklusanak szendioxid-merlegere vonatkozoan; masreszt megvizsgalja a vallalatokon tulnyulo kibocsatasok elszamolasat a magyarorszagi vallalatok gyakorlataban A szendioxid-elszamolas koncepcionalis hatterenek kialakulasat es fejlődeset a cikkben negy egymasra epulő szakaszra (kornyezeti szamvitel fokusz, kozvetlen szendioxid-kibocsatas fokusz, kozvetlen es kozvetett szendioxid-kibocsatas fokusz, klimahatas-fokusz) bontva tekintik at es ertekelik a szerzők. Ezek alapjan az latszik, hogy a vallalati szendioxid-elszamolasokban egyre nagyobb szerepet kap a kozvetett, a vallalatokon ativelő kibocsatasok nyomon kovetese, amelyet tamogat a tanulmanyban bemutatott, kulonosen a kozvetett kibocsatasok elszamolasanak ternyerese ota egyre komplexebbe valo modszertani eszkoztar is. A magyarorszagi vallalatok elszamolasi gyakorlatanak elemzese alapjan elmondhato, hogy a legnagyobb vallalatok mar komoly figyelmet forditanak a szendioxid-elszamolasra, a kozvetlen (Scope 1) es a vasarolt energiahoz kapcsolodo (Scope 2) kibocsatasaikat nagyreszt szamszerűsitik, mig az ellatasi lanc tovabbi reszeinel megjelenő (Scope 3) kibocsatasok elszamolasa ugyanakkor meg gyerekcipőben jar. ------- Concerns about global climate change and related international policies have led to the development of enterprise-level carbon accounting. In the age of the network economy, carbon accounting for global supply chains goes far beyond environmental protection and is of major economic and social importance. On one hand, the study provides a systematic overview of the evolution, stages and challenges of corporate carbon accounting, with particular reference to the carbon balance of supply chains and the entire life cycle of products; on the other hand, it examines the current practices of Hungarian companies in the field. The article examines and assesses the evolution and development of the conceptual background of carbon accounting in four stages (environmental accounting focus, direct carbon dioxide focus, direct and indirect greenhouse gas emission focus, climate impact focus). Based on these, it appears that the monitoring of indirect emissions is playing an increasingly important role in corporate carbon accounting, supported by the methodological toolkit presented in the study, especially as the accounting of indirect emissions has become more widespread. Based on an analysis of Hungarian companies' accounting practices, the largest companies are already paying close attention to carbon accounting, quantifying their direct (Scope 1) and purchased energy (Scope 2) emissions, while the accounting of their emissions related to the other parts of the supply chain (Scope 3), however, are still in their infancy.
- Published
- 2019
9. Twenty years of carbon accounting and auditing – a review and outlook
- Author
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Gábor Harangozó and Mária Csutora
- Subjects
Sustainable development ,Public Administration ,Sociology and Political Science ,Carbon accounting ,business.industry ,020209 energy ,Strategy and Management ,Supply chain ,Accounting ,02 engineering and technology ,Audit ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Business economics ,Greenhouse gas ,Industrial relations ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Industry ,National Policy ,Kyoto Protocol ,Business ,Business and International Management ,General Economics, Econometrics and Finance ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
This paper aims to provide an overview of the key themes in the development of carbon accounting and auditing over the past twenty years. The evolution of the field since the Kyoto Agreement of 1997 has been divided into four stages. The need to account for and disclosure of greenhouse gas-related emissions of industrial organizations has emerged parallel to growing concerns about climate change, and international and national policy developments in the field have followed. Carbon accounting is an emerging field of business economics and covers a wide range of activities, including the measurement, calculation, monitoring, reporting and auditing of greenhouse gas emissions at organizational, process, product or supply chain levels. Various initiatives (such as the Greenhouse Gas Protocol or the Carbon Disclosure Project) motivate and assist industrial organizations in accounting for and reporting their achievements in the field. Different methodologies of carbon accounting (bottom-up, top-down and hybrid) enable industrial organizations to quantify their emissions; however, some trade-offs emerge when choosing among these approaches. Carbon accounting should not be an isolated task for businesses. On the contrary, there is a strong need to integrate carbon accounting issues into different functional fields in order to achieve both corporate and climate policy goals.
- Published
- 2017
10. The Grounded Survey – An integrative mixed method for scrutinizing household energy behavior
- Author
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Ágnes Zsóka, Mária Csutora, and Gábor Harangozó
- Subjects
Sustainable development ,Economics and Econometrics ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Management science ,Causal loop diagram ,Energy consumption ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Focus group ,Survey methodology ,Psychology ,Energy behavior ,Energy economics ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,General Environmental Science ,Qualitative research - Abstract
Sustainable energy policy and tackling climate-change-related issues require exploring energy consumption patterns. This paper proposes an integrative methodological approach called grounded survey for understanding behavioral factors behind household energy consumption. The study aims to overcome the restrictions of both quantitative and qualitative studies by combining participatory-systems-mapping (PSM) based focus group research with a quantitative survey. Focus groups were used to highlight common patterns, which helped formulate survey questions specifically into understudied areas of energy-related behavior. The survey helped validate these qualitatively grounded questions, while generating generalizable quantitative results based on a representative sample. Finally, a comparative assessment contrasted the comprehensive qualitative analysis with the survey findings. Two causal loop diagrams of common patterns are employed to illustrate the methodological model. This integrative approach deepens understanding of behavioral factors behind energy consumption and provides policy recommendations to strengthen the relationship between heating-related behavior and heating costs. The grounded survey method can be utilized in studying wicked or paradox problems in which the relationship between behavioral and technical factors are complex and possibilities for intervention are limited. The application of the model is suggested in areas where development can only be achieved through behavioral change.
- Published
- 2021
11. Környezetgazdaságtan példatár
- Author
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Zsuzsanna Marjainé Szerényi, József Bisztriczky, Mária Csutora, and Tamás Kocsis
- Published
- 2018
12. How big is big enough? Toward a sustainable future by examining alternatives to the conventional economic growth paradigm
- Author
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Tamás Kocsis, Gábor Harangozó, and Mária Csutora
- Subjects
Sustainable development ,Civil society ,Economic development ,Ecology ,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,020209 energy ,Resistance (psychoanalysis) ,02 engineering and technology ,010501 environmental sciences ,Development ,Private sector ,01 natural sciences ,Market forces ,Economic policy ,Paradigm shift ,Sustainability ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Economics ,Economic system ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
This study addresses how the sustainability crisis may be overcome by using alternatives to the conventional economic growth paradigm. Based on a literature review, the paper identifies and discusses three alternatives, namely negative, zero and positive economic growth. These alternatives are compared from a feasibility and policy perspective in relation to the transition toward sustainable development. The three alternatives are associated with very far‐reaching sets of policies that have different focal points with regard to how the paradigm shift from the conventional growth paradigm can be realized. All these alternatives, however, challenge the effectiveness of market forces. The shortcomings of the alternatives (resistance to voluntary transition with negative or zero growth, no proper consideration of the rebound effect for positive growth) hinder the transition and must be further addressed by policy‐makers in public and private sectors, as well as by civil society.
- Published
- 2018
13. Consumer income and its relation to sustainable food consumption – obstacle or opportunity?
- Author
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Zsófia Vetőné Mózner and Mária Csutora
- Subjects
Decile ,Consumption (economics) ,Economic growth ,Ecological footprint ,Obstacle ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Sustainable agriculture ,Food consumption ,Economics ,Scenario analysis ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Agricultural economics - Abstract
The consumption of food is associated with significant environmental impacts, and the disposable incomes of individuals and households play an important role in what food is consumed. It may be assumed that the higher the income, the more food consumed. However, it may also be supposed that people with higher incomes are more likely to lead healthier lifestyles and therefore consume more moderately.This analysis is based on food consumption data from the Household budget and living conditions survey of the Hungarian Central Statistical Office, combined with the latest database from the Global Footprint Network. Results show that a higher level of consumption is able to offset a healthier consumption structure. For the upper three income deciles ecological footprints for food consumption are not notably higher, as the individuals in these groups use their higher incomes to purchase and consume more fruit and vegetables. A scenario analysis is carried out along the income deciles to illustrate the changes n...
- Published
- 2014
14. Proposing a beneficiary-based shared responsibility approach for calculating national carbon accounts during the post-Kyoto era
- Author
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Mária Csutora and Zsófia Vetőné Mózner
- Subjects
Atmospheric Science ,Global and Planetary Change ,Accounting method ,Economic policy ,business.industry ,Environmental Science (miscellaneous) ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Profit (economics) ,Throughput accounting ,Economy ,United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change ,Manufacturing ,Greenhouse gas ,Economics ,Kyoto Protocol ,business ,Emerging markets - Abstract
Considerable progress has been made in Europe towards cutting GHG emissions during the last decade, but this achievement is partly due to the delocalization of manufacturing industries to emerging countries. Under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, the current emission accounting method is production-based and cannot fully capture this effect. The use of such a method is clearly unfavourable for emerging countries and could lead to difficulties in engaging them in climate policy negotiations. The consumption-based approach represents the other extreme in apportioning emission responsibilities. This article proposes the beneficiary-based shared responsibility approach, which outperforms previous methods in terms of scientific justification and political acceptability. Consumer countries benefit from enjoying the product itself, while producing countries benefit from the production process, which provides them with employment, government income, and company profit. Thus, emissions re...
- Published
- 2014
15. A ZÖLD ELLÁTÁSILÁNC-MENEDZSMENT FEJLŐDÉSE - MÚLT, JELEN ÉS JÖVŐ.
- Author
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GÁBOR, HARANGOZÓ, MÁRIA, CSUTORA, TÜNDE, TÁTRAI, and GYÖNGYI, VÖRÖSMARTY
- Subjects
- *
SUPPLY chain management , *PRODUCT life cycle , *SUSTAINABLE development , *ECONOMIC activity , *SUSTAINABILITY - Abstract
In a globalizing and networking world, supply chain management is increasingly linked with the environmental and sustainability assessment and management of economic activities. This study provides an overview of the evolution and development of Green Supply Chain Management concept in the intersection of the two areas over the last 20-25 years, evaluating current challenges and expected future trends. It focuses on trends in Green Supply Chain Management, highlighting the role of stakeholders and measurement. There are several parallel trends in the development of the area, such as risk focus and opportunity focus. Similarly, the activity-based approach focuses on improving the environmental performance of the participants along the supply chain, while the product-based approach focuses on the greening of the final product throughout its life cycle. While the study focuses on the environmental aspects of supply chain management, the social focus that emerged much later and the concept of sustainable supply chain management aimed at integrating them, are also outlined. No matter how challenging Green Supply Chain Management is, in a world that is no longer based on single businesses but on corporate networks, environmental expectations should be defined at this level, if we are to prevent economic agents from outsourcing environmental impacts, pushing the problems somewhere else. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Corporate Carbon and Climate Accounting
- Author
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Stefan Schaltegger, Dimitar Zvezdov, Igor Alvarez Etxeberria, Maria Csutora, Edeltraud Günther, Stefan Schaltegger, Dimitar Zvezdov, Igor Alvarez Etxeberria, Maria Csutora, and Edeltraud Günther
- Subjects
- Climatic changes--Economic aspects
- Abstract
This volume is devoted to management accounting approaches for analyzing business benefits and costs of climate change. It discusses future directions on carbon accounting, performance measurement and reporting as well as links between climate accounting and business processes, product and service development, supply chain innovation, economic successes and stakeholder relations.Companies are increasingly called on to contribute to combatting climate change and also face the challenges presented by climate-change related costs, risks and benefits. Risks can result from unpredictable weather conditions and government regulations, such as the EU emission trading system and new building codes. Climate change also offers numerous opportunities, such as energy efficiency innovations and carbon neutral products and production.Good management requires that carbon emissions are tracked and climate-related costs, risks and benefits are identified, measured and assessed. As such, research addressing corporate accounting frameworks and tools is of increasing importance when it comes to managing these carbon and climate-related issues.
- Published
- 2016
17. Modifying the yield factor based on more efficient use of fertilizer—The environmental impacts of intensive and extensive agricultural practices
- Author
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Andrea Tabi, Mária Csutora, and Zsófia Vetőné Mózner
- Subjects
Ecological footprint ,Ecology ,Intensive farming ,business.industry ,Yield (finance) ,General Decision Sciences ,Environmental impact of agriculture ,Agricultural engineering ,Agricultural economics ,Agriculture ,Extensive farming ,Environmental science ,Biocapacity ,Agricultural productivity ,business ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The aim of this article is to draw attention to calculations on the environmental effects of agriculture and to the definition of marginal agricultural yield. When calculating the environmental impacts of agricultural activities, the real environmental load generated by agriculture is not revealed properly through ecological footprint indicators, as the type of agricultural farming (thus the nature of the pollution it creates) is not incorporated in the calculation. It is commonly known that extensive farming uses relatively small amounts of labor and capital. It produces a lower yield per unit of land and thus requires more land than intensive farming practices to produce similar yields, so it has a larger crop and grazing footprint. However, intensive farms, to achieve higher yields, apply fertilizers, insecticides, herbicides, etc., and cultivation and harvesting are often mechanized. In this study, the focus is on highlighting the differences in the environmental impacts of extensive and intensive farming practices through a statistical analysis of the factors determining agricultural yield. A marginal function is constructed for the relation between chemical fertilizer use and yield per unit fertilizer input. Furthermore, a proposal is presented for how calculation of the yield factor could possibly be improved. The yield factor used in the calculation of biocapacity is not the marginal yield for a given area, but is calculated from the real and actual yields, and this way biocapacity and the ecological footprint for cropland are equivalent. Calculations for cropland biocapacity do not show the area needed for sustainable production, but rather the actual land area used for agricultural production. The proposal the authors present is a modification of the yield factor and also the changed biocapacity is calculated. The results of statistical analyses reveal the need for a clarification of the methodology for calculating marginal yield, which could clearly contribute to assessing the real environmental impacts of agriculture.
- Published
- 2012
18. REPRESENTING THE FOREST MANAGEMENT DILEMMAS IN THE ECOLOGICAL FOOTPRINT INDICATOR
- Author
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Andrea Tabi and Mária Csutora
- Subjects
Ecological footprint ,business.industry ,Ecology ,Environmental resource management ,Forest management ,Global hectare ,Biodiversity ,Biology ,Forest restoration ,Forest ecology ,Biocapacity ,business ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Intact forest landscape ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Over the last decade the ecological footprint (EF) methodology has become widely used for estimating the biocapacity and the impact of human consumption in terms of global hectares. Although it represents a very impressive method for calculating the EF and biocapacity of an area, problems can arise regarding the incorporation of ecological factors into the calculation process. In this study we point out some problematic issues with use of the current EF methodology from an ecological point of view, taking as our focus forest biocapacity in Hungary. The EF concept ignores the differences in productivity of different species and forest types and their associated ecological values as well. We argue that the ecological ‘quality' of different kinds of forests and tree species should be reflected in EF calculations in order to obtain a more accurate estimation of biocapacity. The presence of invasive and non-local species may reduce biodiversity and crowd out native tree species. As a result we distinguish between three main forest types (natural, cultural and energy forests) and additionally suggest the introduction of an additional parameter which refers to the ‘naturalness' of the specified forest types. Results show a 15% increase in forest biocapacity when incorporating the naturalness factor.
- Published
- 2012
19. Corporate Carbon and Climate Change Accounting: Application, Developments and Issues
- Author
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Igor Álvarez, Dimitar Zvezdov, Stefan Schaltegger, Mária Csutora, Edeltraud Günther, Schaltegger, Stefan, Zvezdov, Dimitar, Alvarez Etxeberria, Igor, and Günther, Edeltraud
- Subjects
Sustainable development ,Management accounting ,decision support ,Carbon accounting ,Mitigation ,Political economy of climate change ,business.industry ,Climate change ,Accounting ,Context (language use) ,Organisation climate ,Carbon Accounting ,Sustainability ,Implemantation ,Sustainability sciences, Management & Economics ,adaption ,Environmental science ,Climate change accounting ,business - Abstract
While climate change policies and negotiations are developing and scientist are urging for more action, in most countries progress remains on a low level and the macro figures indicate that climate change becomes even more critical. As a reaction to this, some advanced business leaders have initiated various actions and projects with their companies, and various regulations have been introduced by governments with varying levels of effectiveness. In this context of a mix of international initiatives, media attention, customer irritation, diverse regulatory changes and partial political lethargy, ever more companies are challenged to identify and reduce their exposure to climate change issues. Whereas the reduction of climate change emissions is an important topic, it has also become obvious that climate change is not just a future risk but is already happening. This invokes adaptation activities in addition to mitigation strategies and measures. A basic requirement to design the corporate climate strategy is the knowledge about the company’s exposure as well as about options, effects and costs of emission reductions and adaptation measures. This is where climate change accounting as a specific kind of environmental management accounting comes into play. This introductory section outlines core questions and approaches.
- Published
- 2015
20. Corporate Carbon and Climate Accounting
- Author
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Edeltraud Günther, Stefan Schaltegger, Igor Álvarez-Etxeberria, Dimitar Zvezdov, Mária Csutora, Schaltegger, Stefan, Zvezdov, Dimitar, Álvarez-Etxeberria, Igor, Csutora, Maria, and Günther, Edeltraud
- Subjects
Management accounting ,Mitigation and adaption ,business.industry ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Accounting ,Sustainability sciences, Management & Economics ,Environmental economics ,Carbon and climate change accounting ,chemistry ,Environmental management accounting ,business ,Climate change and carbon management ,Carbon - Abstract
This volume is devoted to management accounting approaches for analyzing business benefits and costs of climate change. It discusses future directions on carbon accounting, performance measurement and reporting as well as links between climate accounting and business processes, product and service development, supply chain innovation, economic successes and stakeholder relations.Companies are increasingly called on to contribute to combatting climate change and also face the challenges presented by climate-change related costs, risks and benefits. Risks can result from unpredictable weather conditions and government regulations, such as the EU emission trading system and new building codes. Climate change also offers numerous opportunities, such as energy efficiency innovations and carbon neutral products and production.Good management requires that carbon emissions are tracked and climate-related costs, risks and benefits are identified, measured and assessed. As such, research addressing corporate accounting frameworks and tools is of increasing importance when it comes to managing these carbon and climate-related issues.
- Published
- 2015
21. Climate costs and benefits: new challenges for corporate accounting and management
- Author
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Stefan Schaltegger, Mária Csutora, and Donald Huisingh
- Subjects
Cost–benefit analysis ,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,Strategy and Management ,Cost accounting ,Climate change ,Environmental economics ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,Environmental full-cost accounting ,Scientific consensus ,Business ,Emissions trading ,General Environmental Science ,Efficient energy use ,Front (military) - Abstract
0959-6526/$ e see front matter doi:10.1016/j.jclepro.2010.12.016 Given the growing evidence and scientific consensus about globalwarming, companies are challenged byamultitude of climate change related costs, risks, benefits, and opportunities which require measures and assessments. Climate change-related risks such as uninsurable risks fromunpredictableweather conditions, as well as newgovernmental regulations, like the EU Emission Trading System, carbon taxes, new building codes and energy efficiency standards can substantially influence competitiveness. Climate
- Published
- 2011
22. Sustainability Management in Hungary
- Author
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Andrea Tabi, Sándor Kerekes, and Mária Csutora
- Subjects
Commerce ,Corporate sustainability ,Multinational corporation ,Sustainability ,Social sustainability ,Corporate social responsibility ,Employee motivation ,Business ,Sustainability organizations ,Marketing ,Stakeholder management - Abstract
In Hungary the culture for sustainability management is quite diverse. Even large companies are usually subsidiaries or suppliers to large multinational companies and the influence of buyers and owners is substantial. As a result there are a number of different traditions in sustainability management in the country and correspondingly relatively few typical cultural attributes. The impacts of investors and shareholders are given high scores in the survey, while consumers are given a low score in motivating companies to pursue sustainability management. Community also has little influence because community involvement in sustainability management does not have a long tradition in Hungary. Thus two-way communication and participative methods of stakeholder management are less common. The responses show that Hungarian companies manage most environmental issues, especially emissions, more closely than the international average. Sustainability management tools are broadly known and applied in the country, and the general satisfaction with the number and level of tools indicates that there is no need for further development here. Basically, Hungarian companies are more sceptical towards the benefits of the implementation of corporate sustainability. This is especially true with regard to the prospective positive impacts on cost reduction, innovation, employee motivation as well as enhancing and safeguarding corporate reputation. In sum, Hungarian companies have already demonstrated expertise in most fields of sustainability management, but the development of a more participative collaboration with both internal and external stakeholders in sustainability management is still needed.
- Published
- 2014
23. Environmental Management Accounting and Supply Chain Management
- Author
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Roger L. Burritt, Stefan Schaltegger, Martin Bennett, Tuula Pohjola, Maria Csutora, Roger L. Burritt, Stefan Schaltegger, Martin Bennett, Tuula Pohjola, and Maria Csutora
- Subjects
- Business logistics, Environmental policy
- Abstract
This volume's focus on the environmental accounting of supply chain processes is of particular relevance because these processes supply data about the environmental impact of relationships between business organisations, an area where the boundary separating internal and external accounting is ill-defined. Here, contributors advocate what they term ‘accounting for cooperation'as a more environmentally positive complement to the paradigmatic practice of ‘accounting for competition'.
- Published
- 2011
24. Carbon Accounting for Sustainability and Management:Status Quo and Challenges
- Author
-
Stefan Schaltegger and Mária Csutora
- Subjects
Project accounting ,Carbon accounting ,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,business.industry ,carbon accounting ,Strategy and Management ,Accounting management ,Cost accounting ,Greenhouse gas accounting ,Accounting ,Sustainability sciences, Management & Economics ,Environmental economics ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,climate change ,Environmental full-cost accounting ,Management Accounting ,Sustainable development ,Accounting information system ,Management accounting ,sustainability management ,Business ,Environmental management accounting ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
This paper provides an overview of carbon accounting as a rapidly developing area of sustainability management and this special issue. The global nature of greenhouse gas emissions as well as increasing climate change impacts is a context that demands new, more holistic approaches to preventing and reducing the negative impacts of climate change. This requires improved ways to anticipate and to fulfil new information requirements and to provide guidance on how to use the evolving accounting approaches for transparency, accountability and decision-making in governments, companies, academia and in non-profit organizations. Different types of carbon accounts – scientific, political, economic and corporate, are evolving. They are related but are not properly interlinked in policy or strategic. On the corporate level, carbon accounting can support carbon management with two basic approaches, carbon accounts for un-sustainability and carbon accounting for sustainability improvements. Both approaches play an increasing role for corporate functions such as production, distribution, procurement, supply chain management, innovation, communication, and marketing. Carbon management accounting can support all organizational levels in decision-making, regardless of whether a department is particularly challenged to comply with regulations, to better organize energy and material flows for substantial reduction effects, or is motivated to increase eco-efficiency, product innovation or legitimacy. This paper distinguishes different company-internal areas of application and methods of carbon accounting. To support corporate decision-makers environmental management accounting framework provides a structured overview of methods distinguishing physical and monetary approaches to carbon accounting. With the expanding scope of carbon accounting practices to include supply chains and product life-cycles, researchers are challenged to develop new methods, such as input–output assisted hybrid accounting.
- Published
- 2012
25. Effective Choice of Consumer-Oriented Environmental Policy Tools for Reducing GHG Emissions
- Author
-
Mária Csutora and Ágnes Zsóka
- Subjects
Consumption (economics) ,Stern ,Order (exchange) ,Greenhouse gas ,Social cost ,Sustainability ,Business ,Environmental economics ,Discount points ,Environmental planning ,Consumer behaviour - Abstract
Due to the perceived and expected environmental impacts of climate change there is an urgent need to reduce Greenhouse Gasses (GHG) at each and every point of emission (see World Research Institute, 2010). The ongoing efforts of governments to establish and implement policies include investigating changes in consumer behaviour and attitudes towards sustainability. The often very high costs of measures makes economic analysis necessary in order to find out which technologically feasible abatement options are capable of realizing the largest emission reductions at least social cost (Csutora and Zilahy 1998, Urge-Vorsatz and Fule 1999, Creyts et al. 2007, Stern 2008). According to recent studies there is even space for “win-win” solutions as a number of options exist which can result in huge GHG reductions at a “negative cost”, meaning that those solutions are both beneficial from environmental and economic points of view. However, organisations often ask for external governmental support in order to implement those measures (Zilahy 2004) and individuals also regularly seem slow and inconsistent in transforming their positive environmental attitudes into environmentally aware consumption habits and reducing their levels of consumption (Rubik et al., 2009, Thogersen and Crompton, 2009, Nemcsicsne Zsoka, 2005).
- Published
- 2012
26. One More Awareness Gap? The Behaviour–Impact Gap Problem
- Author
-
Mária Csutora
- Subjects
Consumption (economics) ,Marketing ,Economics and Econometrics ,Ecological footprint ,business.industry ,Environmental economics ,Environmental resource management ,Commercial law ,Voluntary action ,Order (exchange) ,Carbon footprint ,Economics ,Business, Management and Accounting (miscellaneous) ,Sustainable consumption ,business ,Energy economy ,Energy economics - Abstract
Preceding research has made hardly any attempt to measure the ecological impacts of pro-environmental behaviour in an objective way. Those impacts were rather supposed or calculated. The research described herein scrutinized the ecological impact reductions achieved through pro-environmental behaviour and raised the question how much of a reduction in carbon footprint can be achieved through voluntary action without actually affecting the socio-economic determinants of life. A survey was carried out in order to measure the difference between the ecological footprint of “green” and “brown” consumers. No significant difference was found between the ecological footprints of the two groups—suggesting that individual pro-environmental attitudes and behaviour do not always reduce the environmental impacts of consumption. This finding resulted in the formulation of a new proposition called the BIG (behaviour–impact gap) problem, which is an interesting addition to research in the field of environmental awareness gaps.
- Published
- 2012
27. Maximizing the Efficiency of Greenhouse Gas Related Consumer Policy
- Author
-
Mária Csutora and Ágnes Zsóka
- Subjects
Mass market ,Marketing ,Economics and Econometrics ,Public economics ,Environmental economics ,Social cost ,Public administration ,Commercial law ,Greenhouse gas ,Return on investment ,Economics ,Business, Management and Accounting (miscellaneous) ,Profiling (information science) ,Cost curve ,Energy economy ,Energy economics - Abstract
Consumer policy approaches regarding green products and solutions can be differentiated by their main focus. “Green positioning” is basically targeted at environmentally aware consumers, while “efficiency-focused positioning” concentrates on the efficiency gain of the product or solution, targeting the whole society, regardless of consumers' environmental awareness. The paper argues that the scope and total environmental benefit can be increased if green products or solutions are promoted in different ways, not only as “green” but also based on other arguments (like cost-efficiency, return on investment, etc.). The paper suggests a model for improving the efficiency of greenhouse gas (GHG)-related consumer policy. Based on the marginal social cost curve and the marginal private cost curve, different (green, yellow, and red) zones of action are identified. GHG mitigation options chosen from those zones are then evaluated with the help of profiling method, addressing the barriers to implementation. Profiling may help design an implementation strategy for the selected options and make consumer policy more effective and acceptable for mass market. Case study results show three different ways of positioning of GHG-related consumer policy in Hungary from 2000 and give practical examples of profiling, based on the latest marginal social cost curve and the contemporary energy saving policy of the state regarding the residential sector.
- Published
- 2011
28. Sustainable Supply Chain Management and Environmental Management Accounting
- Author
-
Roger Burritt, Stefan Schaltegger, Martin Bennett, Mária Csutora, and Tuula Pohjola
- Subjects
Information management ,Supply chain risk management ,Supply chain management ,Environmental full-cost accounting ,business.industry ,Supply chain ,Environmental resource management ,Management accounting ,Sustainability ,Cost accounting ,Accounting ,Business - Abstract
Interests in and understanding of supply chain management are growing, along with a number of catalysts which include: reduction in trade barriers; development of logistics structures as a counterforce to globalisation; and reduced geographical spread in business. This raises a set of challenges for sustainable supply chain information management which is explored here, including: confidentiality and business records; cost-management and eco-efficiency; socio-cultural distance; complexity; and the need for rapid responses to the situation when a crisis occurs. These challenges lead to a critique of conventional cost management and the need to make sure credible information is provided in the supply chain relationship. A comprehensive Environmental Management Accounting (EMA) framework reveals that the links between sustainability management accounting and different decision settings are not clear in the supply chain relationship. The papers presented in this book provide a guide towards improved knowledge of EMA and supply chain accounting interrelationships, challenges and potential successes.
- Published
- 2011
29. Using EMA to Benchmark Environmental Costs—Theory and Experience from Four Countries Through the UNIDO TEST Project
- Author
-
Mária Csutora and Roberta de Palma
- Subjects
Engineering ,Scope (project management) ,business.industry ,Benchmark (surveying) ,Environmental resource management ,Information system ,Production (economics) ,Cleaner production ,Plan (drawing) ,Best available technology ,Environmental economics ,business ,Test (assessment) - Abstract
The paper reports the results of the UNIDO TEST project (De Palma and Dobes 2003) as a consequence of simultaneously introducing environmental management accounting (EMA), cleaner production assessment (CPA). and environmental management systems (EMS) in four countries of the Danube river basin. The implementation of CPA was instrumental in identifying non-product output costs. The analysis of materials and energy flows provided the basis for assessing and comparing the performance of the production processes against the standards defined by the technical specifications of the existing technology and against the standards of best available technology (BAT) or theoretical standards. This categorization showed which part of the non-product output costs could be controlled in the short-term, medium-term, and long-term. On the basis of this analysis, companies were enabled to make strategic decisions such as to phase out products and plan new investments in environmental technologies through a step-by-step approach. Broadening the scope of EMA and developing the necessary information system within the framework of the EMS were immediate results of the project.
- Published
- 2008
30. May spirituality lead to reduced ecological footprint? Conceptual framework and empirical analysis
- Author
-
Ágnes Zsóka and Mária Csutora
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,Ecological footprint ,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Life satisfaction ,Environmental ethics ,Spiritualism (philosophy) ,Conceptual framework ,Spirituality ,Happiness ,Sociology ,Business and International Management ,Materialism ,Socioeconomics ,Environmental degradation ,media_common - Abstract
Living a happy and satisfied life while staying within ecological limits of Earth is a challenge humanity must face during this century. As spirituality impacts our lives in both material and non-material ways, we may reasonably suppose that spiritual beliefs also have an impact on how one thinks about environmental degradation, how likely individuals will behave in a pro-environmental way and how it impacts one’s ecological footprint. This article explores the links between a value-driven life and ecological impact, both theoretically and empirically. Our results suggest that traditional religious thinking, in-my-way spiritualism and green value-driven atheism are associated with an increased level of subjective wellbeing, while religious people also seem to be featured by a reduced level of ecological footprint. Materialism is supposed to be associated with a high level of ecological footprint and a low level of subjective wellbeing.
- Published
- 2014
31. The Mismanagement of Environmental Conflicts
- Author
-
Mária Csutora
- Subjects
Economic growth ,Communist state ,Sociology and Political Science ,Environmental economics ,Political economy ,Conflict resolution ,Facilitation ,General Social Sciences ,Face (sociological concept) ,Sociology ,Conflict theories - Abstract
During the Communist regime, companies' conflicts with the public were hidden. The public did not have the right to express their objection. Recent Hungarian law, however, supports people's right to influence decisions that have an impact on their lives, but attitudes change slowly. In this article, I show the typical methods of companies' mismanagement of environmental conflicts. The first part of the article concentrates on strategic issues, and the second one emphasizes mistakes in communication with local communities. There are signs that Hungarian companies have already started to learn their lesson, but they also need help to face the new situation of the post-Communist era. Conflict theory and conflict resolution techniques may help them to deal with communication problems and to reach win-win solutions. Although not unknown, facilitation is not a common technique in Hungary yet. This means that there is potential for its development.
- Published
- 1997
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