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Report to Congressional Requesters: 

July 2004: 

ENVIRONMENTAL DISCLOSURE: 

SEC Should Explore Ways to Improve Tracking and Transparency of 
Information: 

[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-04-808]: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-04-808, a report to congressional requesters 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

To help investors make informed decisions, the Securities and Exchange 
Commission (SEC) enforces federal securities laws requiring companies 
to disclose all information that would be considered important or 
“material” to a reasonable investor, including information on 
environmental risks and liabilities, in reports filed with SEC. To 
monitor companies’ disclosures, SEC reviews their filings and issues 
comment letters requesting revisions or additional information, if 
needed. This report addresses (1) key stakeholders’ views on how well 
SEC has defined the requirements for environmental disclosure, (2) the 
extent to which companies are disclosing such information in their SEC 
filings, (3) the adequacy of SEC’s efforts to monitor and enforce 
compliance with disclosure requirements, and (4) experts’ suggestions 
for increasing and improving environmental disclosure.

What GAO Found: 

Key stakeholders disagree about how well SEC has defined the disclosure 
requirements for environmental information. Some stakeholders who use 
companies’ filings, such as investor organizations and researchers, 
maintained that the requirements allow too much flexibility and are too 
narrow in scope to capture important environmental information. Other 
stakeholders, primarily those who prepare or file reports with SEC, 
said that the scope of the current requirements and guidance is 
adequate and that companies need flexibility to accommodate their 
individual circumstances.

Little is known about the extent to which companies are disclosing 
environmental information in their filings with SEC. Determining what 
companies should be disclosing is extremely challenging without access 
to company records, considering the flexibility in the disclosure 
requirements. Despite strong methodological limitations, some studies 
provide tentative insights about the amount of environmental 
information companies are disclosing and the variation in disclosure 
among companies. However, the problem in evaluating the adequacy of 
disclosure is that one cannot determine whether a low level of 
disclosure means that a company does not have existing or potential 
environmental liabilities, has determined that such liabilities are not 
material, or is not adequately complying with disclosure requirements. 

The adequacy of SEC’s efforts to monitor and enforce compliance with 
environmental disclosure requirements cannot be determined without 
better information on the extent of environmental disclosure. In 
addition, SEC does not systematically track the issues raised in its 
reviews of companies’ filings and thus, does not have the information 
it needs to analyze the frequency of problems involving environmental 
disclosure, compared with other types of disclosure problems; identify 
trends over time or within particular industries; or identify areas in 
which additional guidance may be warranted. Over the years, SEC and 
EPA have made sporadic efforts to coordinate on improving 
environmental disclosure; currently, EPA periodically shares limited 
information on specific, environment-related legal proceedings, such as 
those involving monetary sanctions.

Using a Web-based survey of 30 experts that use disclosure information, 
including investor organizations and financial analysts among others, 
GAO obtained suggestions for increasing and improving environmental 
disclosure in three broad categories: modifying disclosure requirements 
and guidance, increasing oversight and enforcement, and adopting 
nonregulatory approaches to improving disclosure. Some of the experts 
offered comments about why particular proposals are unnecessary or 
unworkable. GAO also sought the views of representatives of companies 
that file reports with SEC, who questioned the value and feasibility 
of some suggestions.

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO is recommending that SEC take steps to improve the tracking and 
transparency of information related to its reviews of companies’ 
filings, and to work with the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to 
explore ways to take better advantage of EPA data relevant to 
environmental disclosure. SEC agrees with GAO’s recommendations and is 
taking action by, for example, making comment letters and company 
responses available on its Web site, beginning with August 2004 
filings.

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-04-808.

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
the link above. For more information, contact John B. Stephenson at 
(202) 512-3841 or stephensonj@gao.gov.

[End of section]

Contents: 

Letter: 

Results in Brief: 

Background: 

Stakeholders Disagree on How Well SEC Has Defined Environmental 
Disclosure Requirements: 

Little Is Known about the Extent to Which Companies Are Disclosing 
Environmental Information in SEC Filings: 

Adequacy of SEC's Efforts to Monitor and Enforce Compliance with 
Environmental Disclosure Requirements Cannot Be Determined: 

Experts Suggest Changes to Requirements and Guidance, Increased 
Oversight, and Nonregulatory Actions to Increase and Improve 
Environmental Disclosure: 

Conclusions: 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

Agency Comments: 

Appendixes: 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

Appendix II: Principal Requirements and Guidance Applicable to the 
Disclosure of Environmental Information in SEC Filings: 

Appendix III: Summary of Disclosure Studies Included in Our Analysis: 

Appendix IV: Experts Who Participated in GAO Survey: 

Appendix V: Survey Questions and Results: 

Appendix VI: Comments from the Securities and Exchange Commission: 

Appendix VII: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contacts: 

Staff Acknowledgments: 

Tables: 

Table 1: Disclosures Related to Potential Impacts of Current or 
Proposed Requirements to Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions: 

Table 2: SEC's Reviews of Companies' Annual 10-K Filings, Fiscal Years 
1999 through 2003: 

Abbreviations: 

AICPA: American Institute of Certified Public Accountants: 

EPA: Environmental Protection Agency: 

GAO: Government Accountability Office: 

SEC: Securities and Exchange Commission: 

Letter July 14, 2004: 

The Honorable James M. Jeffords: 
Ranking Minority Member: 
Committee on Environment and Public Works: 
United States Senate: 

The Honorable Jon S. Corzine: 
United States Senate: 

The Honorable Joseph I. Lieberman: 
United States Senate: 

Recent scandals in the business world have shaken investors' confidence 
in corporate financial reporting and the underlying accounting and 
auditing practices, and have highlighted the importance of disclosing 
key information to potential investors. Environmental risks and 
liabilities are among the conditions that, if undisclosed, could impair 
the public's ability to make sound investment decisions. For example, 
the discovery of extensive hazardous waste contamination at company-
owned facilities could expose a company to hundreds of millions of 
dollars in cleanup costs, while impending environmental regulations 
could affect a company's future financial position if the company were 
required to shut down plants or invest in expensive new technology. 
While not the primary impetus, concern about environmental liabilities 
has also contributed to the growth of "socially responsible" investor 
groups and mutual funds that invest only in companies with a strong 
record in environmental compliance, worker protection, and other social 
issues. Congress passed the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 to protect 
investors by improving the accuracy and reliability of corporate 
disclosures, which could lead to improved reporting of environmental 
liabilities.

The Securities and Exchange Commission's (SEC) primary mission is to 
protect investors and the integrity of securities markets. Among other 
things, SEC regulations require companies to disclose information that 
would be considered "material" by a reasonable investor. A matter is 
material if there is a substantial likelihood that a reasonable person 
would consider it important. The omission or misstatement of an item in 
a financial report is material if, in light of surrounding 
circumstances, the magnitude of the item is such that the judgment of a 
reasonable person would probably have been changed or influenced by the 
inclusion or correction of the item. Information that might be 
considered material can include, for example, significant changes in 
accounting practices or potential risks or liabilities, such as the 
cost of a major environmental cleanup, that could affect future 
earnings. SEC's Division of Corporation Finance monitors compliance 
with the disclosure requirements by periodically reviewing companies' 
filings and issuing comment letters to the companies, if necessary, to 
request any additional information that might be required. In addition, 
SEC's Division of Enforcement may seek a monetary penalty or take some 
other enforcement action when a company's failure to comply with 
disclosure requirements is particularly egregious. While the 
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) does not have a direct role in 
monitoring environmental disclosures, the agency encourages the 
disclosure of environmental legal proceedings by notifying companies of 
potential disclosure obligations and periodically shares relevant 
information with SEC.

You asked us to determine (1) key stakeholders' views on how well SEC 
has defined the requirements for environmental disclosure, (2) the 
extent to which companies are disclosing environmental information in 
their filings with SEC, (3) the adequacy of SEC's efforts to monitor 
and enforce compliance with the disclosure requirements, and (4) what 
actions experts suggest for increasing and improving environmental 
disclosure. To obtain views on environmental disclosure requirements, 
we reviewed SEC's disclosure regulations along with relevant standards 
and guidance from SEC, the Financial Accounting Standards Board, and 
the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA). We also 
interviewed representatives of groups with a stakeholder interest in 
environmental disclosure, including investor organizations, financial 
services institutions, environmental groups and consultants, business 
associations, credit rating agencies, and public accounting firms. For 
information on the extent to which companies are disclosing 
environmental information in their filings with SEC, we reviewed 27 
studies conducted from 1995 to 2003 and assessed their methodologies. 
After eliminating 12 studies that either had severe methodological 
limitations or did not address aspects of environmental disclosure 
relevant to our objectives, we summarized the findings of the remaining 
15 studies. At the committee's request, we supplemented our analysis of 
existing studies with a limited examination of disclosures related to 
potential future risks, focusing on the impacts of potential controls 
on greenhouse gas emissions at 20 U.S. electric utilities with 
relatively high emissions of carbon dioxide.

For information on SEC's monitoring and enforcement of environmental 
disclosure requirements, we reviewed SEC's policies and procedures, 
obtained agency statistics on relevant activities, and interviewed 
officials within SEC and EPA. To obtain suggestions for increasing and 
improving environmental disclosure, we conducted a Web-based survey of 
30 experts that use disclosure information, including representatives 
of the accounting and auditing profession, environmental consultants 
and attorneys, investment and financial services, the insurance 
industry, environmental interest groups, public employee pension funds, 
and credit rating agencies, among others. Some of the experts were also 
among the stakeholders consulted about the disclosure requirements. To 
ensure balance, we sought the views of representatives of reporting 
companies regarding the experts' suggestions. We conducted our work 
between February 2003 and June 2004 in accordance with generally 
accepted government auditing standards. (See app. I for a detailed 
description of our scope and methodology.)

Results in Brief: 

Key stakeholders disagree on how well SEC has defined the requirements 
for environmental disclosure, with some saying that certain aspects of 
the requirements provide too much flexibility and are too narrowly 
scoped, while others maintain that the flexibility is warranted and the 
scope adequate. The stakeholders who cited concerns generally included 
groups with an interest in environmental protection or socially 
responsible investing. These stakeholders said, for example, that 
companies may not be disclosing some potential environmental 
liabilities or may be minimizing the amounts reported because SEC's 
guidance is not specific enough in certain areas, such as (1) 
disclosing liabilities when their occurrence or amount is uncertain, 
(2) assessing the materiality of liabilities and potential risks, and 
(3) disclosing potentially significant environmental problems or 
regulatory initiatives that could pose future financial risks. In 
contrast, stakeholders who viewed the existing requirements for 
environmental disclosure as sufficiently well defined generally 
represented entities responsible for reporting information to SEC and 
groups with general investment interests. Among other things, these 
stakeholders commented that the flexibility in the requirements is 
necessary to accommodate the variability in companies' circumstances 
and that developing more specific guidance would not be feasible. For 
some of these stakeholders, the problems with inadequate disclosure--to 
the extent such problems exist--are linked to inadequate oversight and 
enforcement rather than to the nature of the requirements. However, 
this view was not shared by representatives of businesses responsible 
for filing SEC reports, who believe that SEC's oversight is adequate.

Little is known about the extent to which companies are disclosing 
environmental information in their filings with SEC, despite many 
efforts to study environmental disclosure over the past 10 years. The 
primary impediments to conducting such studies lie in determining for 
specific companies (1) what environmental information is potentially 
subject to disclosure and (2) whether the information should be 
considered material--thus meeting the reporting threshold--given the 
companies' particular circumstances. While disclosure studies can 
summarize the information included in companies' SEC filings, 
determining what should have been reported may be impossible without 
direct access to company records. The studies included in our review 
had other serious limitations as well, including small sample sizes and 
narrow focus. While the results of these studies are very limited and 
not generalizable, some indicate that the extent of environmental 
disclosure has increased over time and that, within a particular 
industry, it can vary considerably in terms of the amount and type of 
information provided. Our own analysis of a limited number of 
disclosures related to the future risks posed by potential controls 
over greenhouse gas emissions similarly revealed substantial variation 
in the information that companies are reporting to investors. However, 
because of the flexibility in some aspects of the requirements, it is 
impossible to determine whether differences in the level of disclosure 
reflect differences in the risks companies face or differences in the 
extent to which companies are disclosing these risks.

The adequacy of SEC's efforts to monitor and enforce compliance with 
environmental disclosure requirements cannot be determined without more 
definitive information on the extent of environmental disclosure and 
the results of SEC's oversight process. SEC's primary means of 
overseeing disclosure are reviewing companies' filings and issuing 
comment letters to request revisions or additional information. In each 
of the past 5 years, SEC's Division of Corporation Finance reviewed 
about 8 to 20 percent of companies' annual filings. SEC does not, 
however, track the nature of the division's comments on filings to 
identify the most common problems, analyze trends, or determine where 
additional guidance may be warranted. Agency officials said that based 
on their experience, the adequacy of companies' environmental 
disclosure rarely prompts comments, partly because of the nature of the 
businesses involved, although such comments are more prevalent in 
industries such as manufacturing and oil and gas. In keeping with this 
observation, an SEC review of annual filings from Fortune 500 companies 
in 2002 found relatively few problems with environmental disclosure 
overall, compared with other types of disclosure. Despite sporadic 
efforts to coordinate on improving environmental disclosure, SEC and 
EPA do not have a formal agreement to share relevant information. At 
one time, EPA was providing enforcement-related data to SEC's Division 
of Corporation Finance on a quarterly basis, but SEC questioned the 
usefulness of the data because they were facility-specific and SEC 
could not readily identify the parent company responsible for filing 
reports with SEC. Currently, information sharing occurs less frequently 
and is focused on specific legal proceedings, such as those involving 
monetary sanctions for environmental violations.

Experts' suggestions on ways to increase and improve environmental 
disclosure fell primarily into three broad categories: (1) modifying 
the disclosure requirements and improving guidance for reporting 
entities (2) stepping up SEC's monitoring and enforcement of existing 
requirements, and (3) adopting nonregulatory approaches to improving 
disclosure. In the first category, some experts that we surveyed 
suggested additional guidance to clarify specific requirements and 
terminology and to rein in flexibility. For example, some experts 
suggested that SEC clarify its requirements for when environmental 
liabilities must be disclosed and require either the use of a specific 
cost-estimation method or, at a minimum, disclosure of more information 
about the method used and related assumptions. In the second category, 
some experts suggested that SEC put more emphasis on corporate 
compliance with environmental disclosure requirements by, for example, 
reviewing more filings in relevant industries, and improve coordination 
between SEC and EPA on environmental matters. Some experts also 
advocated that when the opportunity exists, SEC initiate a few high-
profile enforcement cases to emphasize the seriousness of not 
disclosing material environmental information and to establish legal 
precedents for interpreting current requirements and guidance. In the 
third category, suggestions included pressure from investor groups and 
financial institutions for better disclosure of environmental 
information through shareholder petitions and voluntary environmental 
reporting initiatives. Some experts offered comments on why particular 
proposals are unnecessary or unworkable. Representatives of reporting 
companies also believe that some of the suggestions would not improve 
disclosure of environmental information, but agreed that nonregulatory 
approaches can be effective in making company management aware of 
public interest in environmental disclosure.

We are making recommendations to increase the amount of information 
available to SEC and the public on the results of SEC's filing reviews 
and to improve the level of coordination between SEC and EPA. In 
commenting on a draft of this report, SEC agreed with our 
recommendations and, in particular, said that the agency is taking 
steps to increase the tracking and transparency of key information. EPA 
generally agreed with the information presented in the report.

Background: 

SEC seeks to (1) promote full and fair disclosure; (2) prevent and 
suppress fraud; (3) supervise and regulate the securities markets; and 
(4) regulate and oversee investment companies, investment advisors, and 
public utility holding companies. To ensure that all investors have 
access to basic relevant information prior to trading, federal 
securities laws require certain companies to register with SEC and make 
public particular information. Among other things, these companies are 
required to file reports with SEC about their financial condition and 
business practices when stock is initially sold and on a continuing and 
periodic basis afterwards to help investors make informed decisions. 
Each year, companies generally must file, at a minimum, one annual 
report, called a 10-K, and three quarterly reports, known as 10-Qs.

SEC promulgates regulations and issues guidance on what information 
public companies must disclose in their filings. Beginning in 1982, SEC 
integrated all of the required disclosures into one omnibus regulation, 
regulation S-K. According to SEC, three sections of regulation S-K are 
most likely to elicit environmental disclosures, either because of 
specific environment-related requirements or common practice: 

* Under S-K item 101, companies must disclose the material effects of 
compliance with federal, state, and local environmental provisions on 
their capital expenditures, earnings, and competitive position;

* Under S-K item 103, companies must describe certain administrative or 
judicial legal proceedings arising from federal, state, or local 
environmental provisions; and: 

* Under S-K item 303, companies must discuss their liquidity, capital 
resources, and results of operations. For example, companies must 
identify any known trends, demands, commitments, events, or 
uncertainties that may result in a material change in the company's 
liquidity. In this part of the filing, known as Management's Discussion 
and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations, SEC 
expects to see information on any environmental matters that could 
materially affect company operations or finances.

In addition to its own disclosure requirements, SEC relies on the 
standards and guidance issued by the Financial Accounting Standards 
Board and the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board to help ensure 
that companies are properly accounting for and reporting on their 
financial operations, including any environmental losses resulting from 
liabilities or from permanent reductions in the value of company 
assets.[Footnote 1] For example, SEC presumes that financial statements 
in company filings that are not prepared in accordance with generally 
accepted accounting principles, promulgated by the Financial Accounting 
Standards Board, are misleading or inaccurate. Moreover, SEC 
regulations require companies to submit audited financial statements 
with their annual filings. The audits are performed by independent 
auditors, who are subject to professional auditing standards, which 
until recently were promulgated by the AICPA. Under the Sarbanes-Oxley 
Act of 2002, the new Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, 
appointed and overseen by SEC, is now responsible for issuing standards 
related to the preparation of audit reports for publicly held 
companies.[Footnote 2]

To monitor compliance with disclosure requirements, SEC's Division of 
Corporation Finance periodically reviews companies' filings and issues 
comment letters to the companies, if necessary, to request additional 
information, amendments of prior filings, or specific disclosures in 
future filings. While Corporation Finance does not have direct 
authority to compel companies to respond to its comment letters, 
companies know that failure to do so could delay approval of filings 
that they need in order to raise capital. In egregious cases, 
Corporation Finance can refer companies to SEC's Division of 
Enforcement. The Division of Enforcement can seek sanctions against 
companies for the misrepresentation or omission of important 
information about securities in civil or administrative proceedings. 
Among the sanctions available to SEC are obtaining a permanent 
injunction against an officer of the company; levying monetary 
penalties; requiring the return of illegal profits, known as 
disgorgement; and barring an individual from serving as an officer or 
director in a public company. EPA encourages companies to disclose 
environmental legal proceedings by notifying companies of potential 
disclosure obligations and sharing relevant information with SEC.

Congress passed the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 to improve the accuracy 
and reliability of corporate disclosures. While the act does not 
contain provisions that specifically address environmental disclosure, 
some of them could lead to improved reporting of environmental 
liabilities. These provisions include requirements for SEC to more 
frequently review company filings; for companies to make real-time 
disclosures of material changes in their financial conditions; and for 
company officials to annually assess the effectiveness of internal 
controls and procedures for financial reporting and to certify that 
their SEC filings fairly present, in all material respects, the 
company's financial condition and results of operations. In addition, 
the act authorizes an increase in SEC's funding for, among other 
things, additional professional support staff necessary to strengthen 
SEC's disclosure and fraud prevention programs.[Footnote 3]

The term "socially responsible investor" refers to individuals who 
screen their investments based on companies' environmental, labor, or 
community practices. Beginning in the late 1960s, some investors 
consciously avoided the securities of companies they perceived as 
polluting the environment, engaging in unfair labor practices, or 
otherwise exhibiting poor corporate governance, and sought out 
investments in companies perceived to have better records on various 
social issues. Although initially a marginal segment of the investing 
community, the dollar amount of assets in socially screened accounts 
has increased significantly in recent years. The Social Investment 
Forum, an organization of over 500 social investment practitioners and 
institutions, estimated that in 2003, the total assets invested in such 
accounts were about $2 trillion in the United States, or about 11 
percent of the $19.2 trillion in assets under professional 
management.[Footnote 4]

Stakeholders Disagree on How Well SEC Has Defined Environmental 
Disclosure Requirements: 

While most of the disclosure requirements are designed for broad 
application--and apply to the disclosure of all types of information, 
including environmental matters--some of the regulations and related 
guidance provide criteria specifically for determining whether and how 
to disclose environmental information. (See app. II for a list of the 
principal requirements and guidance applicable to environmental 
disclosure.) Key stakeholders disagree about whether the flexibility 
and scope of existing disclosure requirements for environmental 
information are appropriate. Some stakeholders who use companies' 
filings, such as investors and researchers, believe that the existing 
environmental disclosure requirements allow too much flexibility and 
are too narrow in scope to capture important environmental information. 
Other stakeholders, primarily those who prepare or file reports with 
SEC, hold the opposite view, and said that the scope of the current 
requirements and guidance is adequate and that companies need 
flexibility to accommodate their individual circumstances.

Disclosure Requirements Are Typically Defined in Broad Terms, but They 
Also Include Specific Guidance for Environmental Information: 

In determining whether to disclose environmental information, public 
companies generally must apply the same standards and guidance as they 
apply to other information that is potentially subject to disclosure. 
SEC, the Financial Accounting Standards Board, and the AICPA have 
issued broadly applicable regulations, standards, and guidance related 
to determining the likelihood and amount of potential liabilities; the 
materiality of information relevant to the company, its results of 
operations, or its financial condition; and the extent to which future 
risks must be disclosed.

Generally accepted accounting principles require companies to report 
liabilities, including environmental liabilities, in their financial 
statements if the liabilities' occurrence is "probable" and their 
amounts are "reasonably estimable." A liability is reasonably estimable 
if company management can develop a point estimate or determine that 
the amount falls within a particular dollar range. According to 
generally accepted accounting principles, companies should always 
accrue (and disclose) their best estimate for a liability in their 
financial statements, given the range of possible costs. If no one 
estimate is better than the others, the applicable accounting standard 
specifies that companies should accrue the lowest estimate in the range 
in their financial statements, although they must still disclose the 
potential for additional liability in the footnotes to the 
statements.[Footnote 5] If the liability does not meet one or both of 
the criteria for accruing in the financial statements, it must 
nonetheless be disclosed in the footnotes if it is "reasonably 
possible." The term "reasonably possible" represents a range of 
possible outcomes that have a greater than remote chance of occurring.

SEC regulations generally require disclosure of information only if it 
is "material." According to SEC officials, in determining whether 
information is material, the agency relies on the Supreme Court's 
statement that "an omitted fact is material if there is a substantial 
likelihood that a reasonable shareholder would consider it important in 
deciding how to vote."[Footnote 6] Guidance issued by the Financial 
Accounting Standards Board states that the omission of an item in a 
financial report is material, if, in light of surrounding 
circumstances, the magnitude of the item is such that it is probable 
that the judgment of a reasonable person relying on the report would 
have changed or been influenced by the inclusion or correction of the 
item. In general, SEC and other standard-setting bodies recognize that 
only those who have all the facts can properly make materiality 
judgments. The Financial Accounting Standards Board believes that no 
general standards of materiality could be formulated to take into 
account all the considerations that enter into an experienced human 
judgment.

Concerning the disclosure of future risks, including risks related to 
environmental matters, SEC regulation S-K item 303 requires company 
management to discuss the company's liquidity, capital resources, and 
results of operations. For example, a company must identify any known 
trends, demands, commitments, events, or uncertainties that may result 
in a material change in the company's liquidity. In addition, under 
item 303 companies are "encouraged" to include in their filings 
forward-looking information, which SEC guidance defines as anticipating 
a future trend or event, or anticipating a less predictable impact of a 
known event, trend, or uncertainty.[Footnote 7] In a 1989 interpretive 
release, SEC explained when companies are obligated to disclose future 
risks. The guidance says that "a disclosure duty exists where a trend, 
demand, commitment, event or uncertainty is both presently known to 
management and reasonably likely to have material effects on the 
registrant's financial condition or results of operation."[Footnote 8]

Some reporting standards and guidance relate specifically to the 
disclosure of environmental information or contain specific 
environmental benchmarks. For example, the AICPA has issued 
comprehensive supplemental guidance on the disclosure of environmental 
liabilities.[Footnote 9] For determining whether environmental 
liabilities should be disclosed, this guidance uses the terms 
"probable," "reasonably possible," or "remote," as benchmarks for 
determining the likelihood that a liability will occur and includes 
some representative situations in which disclosure is warranted. By way 
of illustration, the guidance suggests that companies use notification 
by EPA that they are a potentially responsible party at a hazardous 
waste site as an indication that a liability is probable and subject to 
disclosure if material. The supplemental accounting guidance also 
contains a chapter on measuring the amount of environmental 
liabilities, given the uncertainties inherent in environmental sites. 
It identifies the cost elements that should be included when estimating 
the dollar amount of a liability--including litigation, risk assessment 
and planning, cleanup, and monitoring--and it requires companies to use 
whatever information is available.

Disclosure of environmental information is also specifically addressed 
in SEC regulation S-K item 103. Although SEC's regulations and guidance 
generally do not establish numeric thresholds for determining 
materiality, item 103 contains two exceptions related to environment-
related legal matters: Companies must disclose as material 
administrative or judicial proceedings that involve (1) federal, state, 
or local environmental laws, if the potential amount of the losses 
exceeds 10 percent of the company's current assets and (2) potential 
monetary sanctions of $100,000 or more, if a governmental authority is 
a party to the proceedings. In each case, these amounts are calculated 
exclusive of interest and costs. Companies must report potential 
monetary sanctions of $100,000 or more whether or not the amount would 
otherwise be considered material, unless the company reasonably 
believes that the proceeding will result in no monetary sanction or in 
sanctions of less than $100,000.

Some Users of Disclosure Information Said Existing Environmental 
Disclosure Requirements Are Too Flexible and Too Narrowly Scoped: 

Some users of company filings--including environmental interest groups, 
investment analysts with an interest in socially responsible investing, 
researchers, and others--said that existing requirements allow too much 
flexibility and are too narrowly scoped to provide adequate disclosure 
of environmental information. These stakeholders maintained that the 
existing regulations give companies too much leeway in determining what 
environmental information to disclose and limit the extent of 
disclosure by defining environmental information narrowly. As a result, 
they believe, companies' disclosure of environmental information is 
inadequate, hindering investors' ability to assess companies' overall 
financial condition and the risks they face.

These stakeholders said that the relevant regulations and guidance are 
too flexible in several areas. Regarding the point at which companies 
should disclose a liability, stakeholders said that the current 
standards and guidance are unclear; for example, opinions vary on 
whether a disclosure obligation exists at the time the environmental 
contamination occurs or the point at which a regulatory agency (or some 
other third party) has taken action against a company to force a 
cleanup. In addition, some stakeholders said that companies can use the 
apparent flexibility in judging the likelihood of a liability to 
postpone or avoid disclosure.

Stakeholders also said that applicable regulations and guidance make it 
too easy for companies to conclude that they have nothing to disclose 
or cannot calculate an estimate, or to default to a known minimum 
amount rather than develop a best estimate. Estimating the amount of 
environmental liabilities involves several uncertainties, among them 
the extent of contamination and required cleanup, the stringency of 
applicable cleanup standards, the state of the art of available cleanup 
technology, and the extent to which cleanup costs might be shared with 
other responsible parties or offset by insurance recoveries. However, 
stakeholders believe that companies have developed methods to account 
for such uncertainties that yield better estimates than the known 
minimum, and they believe that companies should be required to share 
this information with investors.

On assessing materiality, stakeholders expressed concern that the 
existing regulations and guidance largely rely on the discretion of 
company management and that the requirements generally do not establish 
minimum thresholds for disclosure. Some stakeholders also said that the 
materiality standard does not sufficiently emphasize the need to 
disclose intangible, nonquantifiable factors, such as the impact of 
environmental contamination on a company's reputation.

Regarding disclosure of future risks, stakeholders said that SEC 
regulations and guidance do not clearly distinguish between "known 
information" that could cause reported financial information to not be 
indicative of future results and "forward-looking information," which 
may be less certain but could have a greater potential impact. As a 
result, companies have more flexibility in determining which risks can 
be characterized as forward-looking and thus avoid disclosing the 
information.

In addition to concerns about the degree of flexibility allowed in the 
regulations and guidance, users of company filings also said that the 
disclosure requirements are too narrowly scoped in some areas to ensure 
that companies are making available all of the important environmental 
information needed by investors. Stakeholders expressed the following 
concerns, among others: 

* SEC's definition of monetary sanctions does not include certain costs 
related to the sanctions. Specifically, in determining when the 
$100,000 disclosure threshold has been met, SEC regulations and 
guidance exclude costs associated with (1) environmental remediation 
and (2) supplemental environmental projects conducted in lieu of paying 
sanctions.[Footnote 10]

* SEC's regulations do not require companies to aggregate the estimated 
costs of similar potential liabilities, such as multiple hazardous 
waste sites, when assessing materiality.

* Companies are not required to disclose information about their 
environmental assets or environmental performance.[Footnote 11] A 
growing body of socially responsible investors believes that such 
information could be material to many investors or indicative of 
effective corporate management.

* SEC regulations do not require companies to disclose quantitative 
information on the total number of environmental remediation sites, 
related claims, or the associated liabilities. As a result, investors 
cannot determine whether companies have enough reserves to cover 
current and future liabilities.

Reporting Companies and Other Stakeholders Said That the Flexibility 
within Existing Disclosure Requirements Is Necessary and the Scope 
Adequate: 

Reporting companies and other stakeholders did not share concerns about 
the flexibility and scope of the disclosure requirements; they said 
that the flexibility is warranted and the scope adequate. In general, 
stakeholders representing industry, independent auditors, financial 
analysts with general investment interests, and others told us that the 
existing requirements are sufficient to provide for the disclosure of 
material environmental information and that requiring additional 
information would not improve investors' ability to make sound 
investment decisions.

In commenting on the inherent flexibility of existing disclosure 
requirements, these stakeholders emphasized that reporting companies 
need to have a framework that can accommodate a variety of 
circumstances and that developing more specific guidance would not be 
feasible. In particular, these stakeholders opposed requiring more 
disclosure of future risks, such as the estimated costs associated with 
potential environmental regulations, because of the degree of 
uncertainty about the impact on companies' financial condition and 
operations. In addition, they pointed out that while the requirements 
allow some flexibility in interpretation, there are clear benchmarks 
for those who report or prepare filings.

Both reporting companies and financial analysts said that the scope of 
the existing disclosure requirements is adequate to ensure that 
material environmental information is reported, for several reasons: 

* Companies typically disclose nonfinancial information, including 
information on corporate environmental performance, in other public 
documents, such as press releases and separate environmental reports. 
Including such information in SEC filings is generally not appropriate.

* According to financial analysts with general investment interests, 
environmental information is less important than other types of 
information, such as executive compensation or the percentage of stock 
owned by the Board of Directors, in assessing a company's condition and 
its desirability as a potential investment.

* Asking companies to disclose more information in their filings, 
without any assurance that such information is material to the 
company's overall financial condition, would not add value and might 
burden readers of the filings with irrelevant data.

* Environmental regulations and market forces--not SEC disclosure 
requirements--drive companies to comply with environmental laws and 
assess their environmental performance.

* Requiring companies to aggregate similar types of environmental 
liabilities would not necessarily be useful to investors because 
rolling up the potential costs of individual sites--along with the 
uncertainties associated with each of them--might distort the actual 
risks a company faces.

Some stakeholders who believe the requirements are sufficient linked 
problems with inadequate disclosure--to the extent such problems exist-
-to inadequate oversight and enforcement. For example, while they did 
not see a need to change the current standards and guidance, the 
stakeholders said that SEC could improve companies' environmental 
disclosure with more thorough reviews of environmental information in 
companies' filings. Company representatives and auditors we contacted 
do not share this concern, but rather they believe that SEC efforts are 
adequate, given the relative importance of environmental information to 
most companies' financial condition.

Little Is Known about the Extent to Which Companies Are Disclosing 
Environmental Information in SEC Filings: 

Determining what companies should be disclosing in SEC filings is 
extremely challenging without having access to company records and 
considering the flexibility in the disclosure requirements. Existing 
studies of environmental disclosure all have strong-to-severe 
methodological limitations. Some of the studies provide tentative 
insights about the amount of environmental information companies are 
disclosing but not the adequacy. Our limited review of disclosures 
related to potential controls over greenhouse gas emissions shows a 
wide variation in company filings and also illustrates some of the 
challenges facing researchers.

Several Factors Make It Difficult to Determine Whether Companies Are 
Fully Disclosing Material Environmental Information: 

Assessing companies' disclosure of environmental information is 
difficult, primarily because researchers have no way of knowing what 
environmental information is (1) potentially subject to disclosure and 
(2) material in the context of a company's specific circumstances, and 
therefore required to be reported. Because company records are 
generally not publicly available, it is virtually impossible for an 
external party to know what information companies should be disclosing. 
In the case of existing environmental contamination, for example, 
evaluating the adequacy of companies' disclosure may require 
information on the number of sites, the nature of the contamination, 
projected cleanup costs, and the extent to which the companies' 
liability may be shared by others or mitigated by insurance, among 
other things. Evaluating companies' disclosures regarding potential 
future risks, such as the impact of potential changes in environmental 
regulations, poses similar problems.

Another obstacle to assessing companies' disclosure is the flexibility 
inherent in certain reporting requirements and related guidance. A 
number of key requirements use terms that are general enough to 
accommodate a range of situations and allow company management to 
exercise judgment regarding the amount and type of information they 
disclose. For example, in determining whether an existing or potential 
environmental liability should be reported in financial statements, 
company officials must determine if the occurrence of such liabilities 
is "reasonably possible" and the amounts are "reasonably estimable." 
SEC, the Financial Accounting Standards Board, and the AICPA have all 
issued standards and guidance to assist companies and their independent 
auditors in making these determinations, but inevitably, some 
subjective judgments remain. Similarly, in assessing the materiality of 
environmental information, SEC's guidance says that companies should 
consider information that a "reasonable person" would need to make an 
investment decision. Generally, SEC's regulations and guidance do not 
establish any minimum thresholds for materiality. Finally, in the case 
of disclosing future risks, companies have some flexibility in deciding 
what qualifies as "known material trends, events, and uncertainties" 
that would cause the companies' reported financial information to not 
be indicative of future operating results or financial condition.

One of the consequences of disclosure requirements that are subject to 
interpretation--and of not having direct access to company records--is 
the difficulty of determining with any certainty whether a low level of 
disclosure indicates that the company does not have existing or 
potential environmental liabilities, has determined that such 
liabilities are not material, or is not adequately complying with 
disclosure requirements. The varying formats used for disclosure pose 
another problem for researchers. Much of the environmental information 
that is subject to disclosure can be reported in a number of different 
sections of the 10-K filing, including the financial statements, 
related footnotes, and various narrative sections of the report. In 
addition, the information may be stated in general or specific terms 
and companies often use different terminology to describe similar 
issues.

While Limited and Not Generalizable, Existing Studies Indicate That the 
Extent of Disclosure Has Increased Over Time and Can Vary Substantially 
within Industries: 

We identified 27 studies and papers that (1) were published, presented 
at conferences, or provided by the authors from 1995 to 2003 and (2) 
contained original research on companies' environmental 
disclosures.[Footnote 12] We eliminated 12 studies that either had 
severe methodological limitations or did not address aspects of 
environmental disclosure relevant to our objectives. (App. III contains 
abbreviated descriptions of the studies we identified, excluding those 
with severe limitations and those that were outside our 
focus.)[Footnote 13] While the remaining 15 studies all contain strong 
limitations, they provide tentative insights about the amount and type 
of information being disclosed. For example, as several of these 
studies acknowledged, the small sample sizes and focus on particular 
industries prevent the study results from being generalizable beyond 
the specific companies reviewed.In addition, while the 15 studies shed 
some light on the amount and type of information disclosed by selected 
companies--and how it varied among them or changed over time--in some 
instances, the researchers drew conclusions beyond what was supported 
by their analysis.

Eleven of the studies found variations in the amount of information 
specific companies were disclosing in their filings with SEC. Some of 
these studies focused on the disclosure of existing environmental 
liabilities while others examined disclosures related to future 
potential risks, ranging from impending regulations to larger issues 
such as global climate change. For example, a 1998 study on disclosure 
of Superfund remediation liabilities by 140 companies found that the 
amount of information they disclosed about the number and location of 
the sites, the materiality of the liabilities, and the estimated 
amounts varied substantially.[Footnote 14] Some of the companies did 
not disclose any information and others did not provide enough 
information to allow a meaningful assessment of the companies' risks, 
according to the authors. Six of the 11 studies found that variations 
among companies within the same industry can be substantial. For 
example, a 2003 study that looked at how 38 coal-fired electric 
utilities reported on the impact of the Clean Air Act Amendments of 
1990 found wide variation in the types of disclosures by these 
companies. Among other things, the study found that in their filings 
for 1990, 22 of the utilities disclosed their estimated compliance 
costs while 16 did not provide an estimate.[Footnote 15]

Five studies, including three from the previous group, indicated that 
the amount and type of information specific companies were disclosing 
increased over time. In two instances, researchers linked the increased 
disclosure to the issuance of guidance that assisted companies in 
determining what information should be reported. For example, a study 
of nearly 200 companies that had been identified as potentially 
responsible parties at multiple hazardous waste sites indicated that 
the number of companies reporting environmental liabilities increased 
following the issuance of SEC's Staff Accounting Bulletin 92, which 
provided examples of the types of information SEC expected to see 
regarding such sites.[Footnote 16]In the other case, a 1995 study of 
environmental disclosures by 234 companies found that the amount of 
information reported in 10-Ks and the companies' annual reports to 
shareholders increased following the issuance of guidance from SEC and 
the Financial Accounting Standards Board.[Footnote 17]

Nine of the 15 studies attempted to address the extent or adequacy of 
companies' environmental disclosure in terms of meeting SEC's reporting 
requirements.[Footnote 18] In most of these cases, the studies 
concluded that environmental disclosures were inadequate. However, 
because the criteria used to assess the disclosures may not have been 
appropriate, it is impossible to validate the studies' conclusions 
about how well or poorly companies are meeting SEC reporting 
requirements. All of these studies used criteria that either included 
items not required by SEC or reflected the researchers' interpretations 
of SEC reporting requirements and related guidance. In several 
instances, the researchers acknowledged that their interpretation of 
the requirements would not necessarily be consistent with others' 
views.

A Limited Review of Disclosures Related to Potential Controls Over 
Greenhouse Gas Emissions Shows Wide Variation in Company Filings: 

To supplement our analysis of existing studies, we reviewed disclosures 
by 20 U.S. electric utility companies that were among the largest 
emitters of carbon dioxide, a major component of greenhouse gas 
emissions.[Footnote 19] While various investor organizations, pension 
fund managers, and environmental interest groups have called on 
companies to make more information available on this subject, 
disclosures about the impact of potential greenhouse gas controls are 
not necessarily required at this time, according to officials at SEC's 
Division of Corporation Finance, because controls do not appear 
imminent at the federal level through ratification of the Kyoto 
Protocol or legislation.[Footnote 20] At the same time, the officials 
did not rule out such disclosures, commenting that there may be 
circumstances in which a company can identify a material impact and 
must disclose it in the filing.

Some companies have opted to include information regarding potential 
controls over greenhouse gas emissions in their SEC filings, partly in 
response to public interest. To the extent that companies make 
disclosures regarding controls over greenhouse gas emissions or other 
potential future risks, investors may find the information useful in 
deciding whether to buy or sell individual securities. However, because 
disclosure of such information is not necessarily required, investors 
cannot draw conclusions about the lack of such information in a 
company's SEC filing or compare companies within an industry.

For each utility company, we reviewed the annual and quarterly SEC 
filings for 2003 to determine whether and how the companies discussed 
the impact of potential controls over greenhouse gas emissions and 
found that the amount and type of information disclosed varied widely. 
Of the 20 electric utility companies included in our review, we found 
that 1 made no disclosures regarding greenhouse gas controls in its 
filings. The filings for 18 of the remaining 19 companies described one 
or more potential controls, including the Kyoto Protocol and other 
international requirements; proposals for federal legislation 
requiring reductions in greenhouse gas emissions; and current and 
proposed state requirements. In addition, while all 19 companies 
referred to the potential impact of controls, the level of detail 
varied among the companies. Moreover, while none of the 19 companies 
attempted to estimate the dollar value of the impact, citing 
uncertainty over the specific nature of the requirements that might 
take effect, they generally indicated that the impact could be 
material.[Footnote 21] Table 1 summarizes the types of information the 
electric utility companies disclosed about the impact of potential 
controls over greenhouse gas emissions.

Table 1: Disclosures Related to Potential Impacts of Current or 
Proposed Requirements to Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions: 

Number of utility companies reporting potential impact: 8; 
Impacts related to Kyoto Protocol: Description of potential impact: 
U.S. operations only: Compliance costs could require significant 
capital, operating, or other expenditures and/or have materially 
adverse impacts on generating facilities or future financial position, 
results of operations, or liquidity, if associated costs cannot be 
recovered from customers.

Number of utility companies reporting potential impact: 3; 
Impacts related to Kyoto Protocol: Description of potential impact: 
U.S. and international operations: Compliance costs could be material 
and/or there could be far-reaching and significant impacts on 
operations.

Number of utility companies reporting potential impact: 2; 
Impacts related to Kyoto Protocol: Description of potential impact: 
International operations only: Significant compliance costs may affect 
operations.

Number of utility companies reporting potential impact: 1; 
Impacts related to Kyoto Protocol: Description of potential impact: 
U.S. operations only: Specific impacts on operations could not be 
identified because of uncertainties.

Number of utility companies reporting potential impact: 6; 
Impacts related to Kyoto Protocol: Description of potential impact: 
None.

Number of utility companies reporting potential impact: 5; 
Impacts related to current administration policy on voluntary 
reductions: Description of potential impact: The company stated it was 
unable to determine the potential impact.

Number of utility companies reporting potential impact: 4; 
Impacts related to current administration policy on voluntary 
reductions: Description of potential impact: Compliance costs could be 
significant or material, and/or possible impacts on operations.

Number of utility companies reporting potential impact: 11; 
Impacts related to current administration policy on voluntary 
reductions: Description of potential impact: None.

Number of utility companies reporting potential impact: 5; 
Impacts related to other current or proposed federal, state, or 
international requirements: Description of potential impact: Federal 
requirements only: Compliance costs could have a significant or 
material impact (either positive or negative) on the company's 
generating facilities and/or future financial position, results of 
operations, liquidity, or cash flows, if the costs are not recoverable 
from customers.

Number of utility companies reporting potential impact: 5; 
Impacts related to other current or proposed federal, state, or 
international requirements: Description of potential impact: Federal 
and state requirements: Compliance costs could have a significantly or 
materially adverse affect on the company's operations, consolidated 
financial position, results of operations, cash flow, or profitability, 
if associated costs cannot be recovered from customers.

Number of utility companies reporting potential impact: 3; 
Impacts related to other current or proposed federal, state, or 
international requirements: Description of potential impact: Federal, 
state, and international requirements: There are substantial or 
material implications for the company's costs; 
plants; global business operations; or future consolidated results of 
operations, cash flows, or financial position.

Number of utility companies reporting potential impact: 1; 
Impacts related to other current or proposed federal, state, or 
international requirements: Description of potential impact: General 
statement only: The company may incur liabilities because of its 
emission of gases that may contribute to global warming.

Number of utility companies reporting potential impact: 1; 
Impacts related to other current or proposed federal, state, or 
international requirements: Description of potential impact: Federal 
requirements only: The company stated it was unable to determine the 
potential future impacts on its financial condition and operations.

Number of utility companies reporting potential impact: 1; 
Impacts related to other current or proposed federal, state, or 
international requirements: Description of potential impact: Federal, 
state, and international requirements: The company stated it was unable 
to determine the potential future impacts on its financial condition 
and operations.

Number of utility companies reporting potential impact: 4; 
Impacts related to other current or proposed federal, state, or 
international requirements: Description of potential impact: None. 

Source: GAO analysis.

[End of table]

In addition to differences in the level of detail companies provided, 
we found considerable variation in where the disclosures were located 
within the filings, posing a challenge for researchers trying to find 
information on particular topics. Of the 19 companies that provided 
information on the impact of potential controls over greenhouse gas 
emissions,

* 7 disclosed such information only in the S-K item 101, "Description 
of Business" section of the company's 10-K or 10-Q reports;

* 2 disclosed information only in S-K items 301 and 302, "Selected 
Financial Data" and "Supplementary Financial Information" sections of 
the company's 10-K or 10-Q reports;

* 2 disclosed information only in S-K item 303, "Management's 
Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of 
Operations" section of the company's 10-K or 10-Q reports; and: 

* 8 disclosed information in multiple sections of the 10-K, 10-Q, or 
the company's annual report to shareholders.

Ten of the 20 utility companies disclosed planned efforts to 
voluntarily reduce their greenhouse gas emissions--or to avoid 
increasing them--over the next several years. For example, one company 
reported that it had joined the Chicago Climate Exchange, a pilot 
greenhouse gas emission reduction and trading program, and had 
committed to reducing or offsetting 18 million tons of carbon dioxide 
emissions by 2006. Two other companies reported joining EPA's Climate 
Leaders program, in one case committing to an 18 percent reduction of 
greenhouse gas emissions from a 2001 baseline by 2008. Only one of the 
companies estimated its projected spending on voluntary reduction 
efforts: the company reported that it planned to spend $21 million 
between 2004 and 2010 on projects to reduce or offset its greenhouse 
gas emissions.

Adequacy of SEC's Efforts to Monitor and Enforce Compliance with 
Environmental Disclosure Requirements Cannot Be Determined: 

Without better information on the extent of environmental disclosure 
and results of SEC's reviews of companies' filings, the adequacy of 
SEC's efforts to monitor and enforce compliance with environmental 
disclosure requirements cannot be determined. SEC does not maintain a 
database on the substance of its comments and company responses, and 
thus SEC cannot use the information to identify trends or set 
priorities. Over the years, SEC and EPA have made sporadic efforts to 
coordinate on improving environmental disclosure. Currently, EPA 
periodically shares limited information on specific, environment-
related legal proceedings, such as those involving monetary sanctions.

SEC Does Not Systematically Track or Analyze the Results of Its 
Oversight Efforts: 

SEC's primary means to monitor and enforce requirements for the 
disclosure of material information--including environmental matters--
are the review of companies' filings and the issuance of comment 
letters to obtain additional information, as appropriate. According to 
officials from the Division of Corporation Finance, SEC relies on 
reporting companies and their independent auditors to completely and 
accurately disclose material information to investors; SEC's role is to 
help companies ensure that they are making the required disclosures and 
properly interpreting the requirements. Even if SEC's role were 
broader, SEC officials told us that the agency does not have the 
resources to review all company filings or conduct on-site examinations 
to proactively ensure that companies are disclosing all material 
information.

Reviewers in the Division of Corporation Finance do a preliminary 
review of companies' annual 10-K filings to determine which reports 
warrant further scrutiny and at what level.[Footnote 22] Of those 
reports, SEC usually conducts either a full review, which covers all 
aspects of the filing, or a financial review, which focuses primarily 
on the financial statements and related material, such as the section 
including management's discussion and analysis. SEC may also choose to 
conduct a limited review of specific issues that have been identified 
as needing attention. For example, a limited review might focus on a 
company's accounting policy for recognizing revenue in its financial 
records and reports. As table 2 shows, SEC reviewed about 8 to 20 
percent of the annual filings each year from 1999 through 2003.

Table 2: SEC's Reviews of Companies' Annual 10-K Filings, Fiscal Years 
1999 through 2003: 

Annual filings; 
1999: 13,460; 
2000[A]: 14,280; 
2001: 14,060; 
2002: 13,550; 
2003: 12,830.

Annual filings reviewed by SEC; 
1999: 2,345; 
2000[A]: 1,160; 
2001: 2,305; 
2002: 2,695; 
2003: 2,170.

Percentage of filings reviewed; 
1999: 17.4; 
2000[A]: 8.1; 
2001: 16.4; 
2002: 19.9; 
2003: 16.9. 

Source: GAO analysis of SEC data.

[A] SEC's reviews declined in fiscal year 2000 because the high volume 
of filings related to initial public offerings limited the agency's 
ability to review other filings.

[End of table]

To ensure consistency across reviewers, SEC uses guidance that provides 
an organizational structure for each review and the documentation that 
supports it. The guidance identifies, as a reminder for the reviewers, 
various aspects of the filing that should be covered in the review, 
depending on the particular company and the industry it represents; 
among other things, the guidance cites the adequacy of disclosures 
related to environmental liabilities. If a reviewer questions the 
accuracy or completeness of the filing and believes that further 
disclosures may be warranted, SEC issues a comment letter requesting 
additional information.[Footnote 23] SEC officials said that companies 
may sometimes be reluctant to respond to the comment letters, claiming 
that providing the requested information is too difficult or expensive 
or will hurt their competitive position. In the case of time-critical 
transactional filings, companies have an incentive to respond to SEC's 
comment letters because the companies cannot raise additional capital 
by issuing securities until SEC has cleared the filings. Although the 
Division of Corporation Finance does not have a similar "stick" to 
compel companies to respond in the case of the 10-K or 10-Q filings, 
the companies generally comply, according to SEC officials.

When a company's failure to respond is particularly egregious, SEC may 
refer the case to its Division of Enforcement. According to information 
from the Division of Enforcement and other sources, we identified four 
enforcement actions related to inadequate environmental disclosure 
since 1977, none of which were referred by the Division of Corporation 
Finance. Enforcement officials were not aware of any additional cases 
and said that while they track enforcement cases by broad program area, 
such as broker-dealer fraud, insider trading, and issuer financial 
disclosure, they do not track the number of cases in which 
environmental disclosure is the primary issue. According to an official 
in the Division of Enforcement, most enforcement actions are prompted 
by company whistleblowers or news reports of company wrongdoing rather 
than referrals from the Division of Corporation Finance.

SEC officials noted that reviewing company filings is an iterative 
process; a single filing often generates multiple comment letters and 
responses before SEC is satisfied that all matters have been resolved. 
In some instances, SEC raises one or more questions about the 
disclosures in a company's filing and, based on the company's response, 
is either satisfied with the explanation or decides that the matter 
does not warrant additional follow-up.

SEC's Division of Corporation Finance does not systematically track the 
issues raised in comment letters. According to SEC officials, they do 
not have a database on the comment letters that would enable them to 
determine the most frequently identified problem areas, analyze trends 
over time or within particular industries, or assess the need for 
additional guidance in certain areas. SEC officials told us that for 
the most part, they rely on the reviewers' knowledge and experience to 
get a sense of the most common problem areas. While SEC did not have 
any statistics on the frequency with which its comment letters 
questioned companies' environmental disclosures, Division of 
Corporation Finance officials told us that, based on their experience, 
environmental disclosure is rarely among the issues cited if one 
considers all of the filings SEC reviews, partly because of the nature 
of the businesses involved. Within particular industries, however, SEC 
officials said that reviewers regularly and frequently comment on 
environmental disclosure.

In the absence of a formal tracking system, an SEC study of annual 10-
K filings from the Fortune 500 companies for the year 2002 provided 
some information on the most common disclosure issues. To conduct the 
study, SEC screened the companies' filings and then selected a 
substantial number for further review; ultimately, SEC sent comment 
letters to more than 350 companies. According to officials from the 
Division of Corporation Finance, the type and frequency of comments 
identified in the Fortune 500 study were consistent with their 
observations generally.[Footnote 24] SEC's summary report noted that 
environmental disclosure prompted comments more frequently in 
particular industries, such as oil and gas and mining companies and 
certain manufacturing companies. The reviewers questioned companies' 
disclosure of critical accounting policies related to environmental 
liabilities including, among other things, the adequacy of information 
on estimates of potential losses and litigation costs.

Although SEC does not have a database of its comment letters and the 
company responses, officials from the Division of Corporation Finance 
told us that much of the information can be obtained from other 
sources. The officials explained that at least one private company has 
been submitting thousands of requests for the comment letters and 
responses under the Freedom of Information Act and is making the 
information available to the public for a fee. According to the 
officials, responding to these requests has absorbed a considerable 
amount of SEC staff time and other resources.

SEC has taken steps to facilitate its ability to analyze the results of 
its monitoring process. For example, SEC is establishing a new Office 
of Disclosure Standards. Among other things, the office will be 
responsible for ensuring the quality and consistency of reviews across 
reviewers and different industry groups. As part of that effort, in 
March 2004, SEC began to require reviewers to prepare a closing 
memorandum containing a listing of all documents examined by SEC 
reviewers, a summary of the major issues raised during their review, 
and how they were resolved. While these memoranda are being prepared in 
electronic form, the information is currently not coded or organized to 
facilitate analysis across multiple filings. SEC is still determining 
how it might organize and use these data.

SEC and EPA Have Made Limited Efforts to Improve Environmental 
Disclosure through Coordination: 

Over the past 20 years, SEC and EPA have made sporadic efforts to 
improve environmental disclosure through coordination, but the two 
agencies have not formally agreed to share relevant information and the 
extent of information sharing is currently limited. According to EPA, 
information sharing began informally in the mid-1980s, and in February 
1990, SEC and EPA reached an agreement under which EPA would provide 
enforcement-related data to SEC's Division of Corporation Finance on a 
quarterly basis. As a result of the agreement, EPA began providing 
information on recently concluded cases filed under federal 
environmental laws as well as other information related to hazardous 
waste sites and facilities. EPA officials indicated that their staff 
also assisted SEC by (1) commenting on the accuracy of environmental 
disclosures by some companies and (2) training Division of Corporation 
Finance reviewers to understand the environmental statutes administered 
by EPA and interpret the enforcement data from EPA.

Although the 1990 agreement was conceived as the basis for a formal 
memorandum of understanding between the two agencies, agency 
representatives never signed such a memorandum. While there are 
conflicting reports on when the regular transfer of information halted, 
officials from SEC and EPA agree that some problems arose because the 
volume and complexity of the data that EPA was providing were not 
useful to SEC reviewers. For example, SEC questioned the usefulness of 
some data because they were facility-specific, and SEC could not 
readily identify the parent company responsible for reporting to SEC.

Currently, information sharing occurs less frequently and is focused on 
specific legal proceedings, such as those involving monetary sanctions 
for environmental violations. SEC officials said that their reviewers 
use EPA data only to raise "red flags" pointing them to situations in 
which companies may not be disclosing potentially material information. 
Once a reviewer identifies a potential disclosure problem, the next 
step is following up with the individual company to request 
information. EPA officials indicated that they would be willing to work 
with SEC to explore options for improving the usefulness of the data. 
SEC officials said that they were willing to work with EPA, but 
downplayed the need for additional coordination, saying that the 
information in EPA's Enforcement and Compliance History Online database 
is sufficient for the purpose of identifying potential disclosure 
problems.

Experts Suggest Changes to Requirements and Guidance, Increased 
Oversight, and Nonregulatory Actions to Increase and Improve 
Environmental Disclosure: 

The experts that we surveyed generally concur with the concerns 
identified by stakeholders and offered a variety of suggestions for 
improving disclosure or, in some instances, comments about why 
particular proposals are unnecessary or unworkable.[Footnote 25] For 
the most part, the experts believe that the identified concerns 
contribute to the inadequate disclosure of environmental information, 
and a few experts identified lawsuits in which shareholders alleged 
that their ability to make investment decisions was impaired as a 
result of the concerns regarding inadequate environmental disclosure. 
(See information on shareholder suits below.) The suggestions we 
obtained fell into three broad categories: modifying disclosure 
requirements and guidance, increasing oversight and enforcement, and 
adopting nonregulatory approaches to improving disclosure. To gain the 
perspective of companies that would be affected by the suggestions, we 
contacted representatives of reporting companies, who asserted that 
some of the suggestions would not improve disclosure of environmental 
information and to some extent, might hinder the ability of investors 
to make sound investment decisions.

Shareholder Suits Allege Inadequate Environmental Disclosure: 

Experts identified a few shareholder lawsuits alleging that corporate 
securities statements have contained material misrepresentations or 
omissions concerning the companies' potential environmental 
liabilities, thus leading shareholders to purchase the companies' stock 
at artificially inflated prices. The courts did not rule on whether the 
alleged failure to disclose actually caused whatever financial harm the 
shareholders may have suffered.To prevail in such cases, shareholders 
must demonstrate that (1) the company intentionally misled them by 
misstating or withholding material information about environmental 
risks or liabilities and (2) the misstatements or omissions caused the 
shareholders to suffer a financial loss. In some cases similar to those 
identified in our survey, the corporate officers reached settlements 
with the shareholders.

Some Experts Suggested Modifying Existing Disclosure Requirements and 
Related Guidance: 

About half (13 of 30) of the experts who participated in our survey 
offered suggestions on how SEC and other standard-setting bodies could 
improve the current requirements and guidance for disclosing 
environmental information. These suggestions are summarized below along 
with contrasting views from a few of the experts we surveyed and 
representatives of reporting companies, including the American 
Chemistry Council, the Business Roundtable, the Edison Electric 
Institute, and the U.S. Business Council for Sustainable Development.

On limiting the flexibility of existing requirements: Some experts 
suggested that SEC or the Financial Accounting Standards Board, as 
appropriate, clarify terms such as "probable," "reasonably possible," 
and "remote" relative to the occurrence of environmental liabilities, 
or require or recommend the use of expected value analysis in 
estimating the amounts of liabilities, as advocated by ASTM 
International.[Footnote 26] In addition, several experts commented on 
the need for more guidance on materiality, calling for clarification or 
more specific criteria. One participant suggested that SEC establish a 
presumption of materiality for environmental liabilities, thus shifting 
the burden of proving that such liabilities are not material to 
companies. In contrast, another expert commented that more specific 
guidance on estimating the amounts of liabilities would lead to rules 
not well suited for all companies and would mislead users of company 
filings by making estimates appear to be more precise than they really 
are. Company representatives made similar comments, saying that 
uncertainties about the nature and extent of environmental 
contamination, potential remediation costs, and the extent of the 
company's liability all affect the feasibility of deriving precise 
estimates. Company representatives also objected to requiring the use 
of the expected value method of cost estimation advocated by ASTM 
International, saying that it would lead to misleading disclosures 
because, for example, the method does not allow companies to factor in 
contributions from other potentially responsible parties in estimating 
their own potential liabilities. Finally, company representatives 
maintained that existing guidance on materiality is sufficiently clear 
and necessarily flexible to accommodate companies' individual 
circumstances.

On reporting existing environmental liabilities: A few experts 
suggested that SEC or the Financial Accounting Standards Board, as 
appropriate, clarify the accounting and disclosure procedures for 
unasserted but enforceable claims related to the cleanup of 
environmental contamination at current and former company facilities. 
This clarification would, among other things, specify the point at 
which such liabilities occur (and a disclosure obligation may exist)--
when the release happens or when a third party initiates action against 
the company. Representatives of reporting companies did not agree with 
this suggestion. They said that environmental laws require companies to 
study and remediate contaminated sites, and disclosing possible sites-
-based merely on their existence--does not advance investors' 
understanding of a company's economic value. Company representatives 
pointed to guidance from the Financial Accounting Standards Board, 
which notes that the existence of an environmental liability becomes 
determinable and the related costs estimable over a continuum of events 
and activities that help define the liability. Once a third party 
intervenes and companies learn more about the extent of the problem, 
they can make and disclose better estimates.

On disclosing future risks: Another suggestion from the experts was 
that SEC issue guidance clarifying when certain potential environmental 
issues should be disclosed, citing, in particular, the potential 
impacts of global climate change and controls over greenhouse gas 
emissions. More specifically, one expert commented that in the case of 
climate change, SEC should issue guidance advising companies to report 
their internal assessments of the impact of complying with pending 
environmental regulations over a specified time period, including the 
range of possible actions being considered by a company, how the 
actions might affect the financial condition and operations of the 
company, and whether the effects would be material to shareholders. 
Company representatives and a few of the experts commented that it is 
inappropriate to single out particular issues, such as climate change, 
for disclosure or to use SEC's disclosure requirements to advance the 
interests of particular groups. According to one expert, the current 
rules and guidance for disclosing future environmental risks are clear 
and companies know they cannot avoid disclosure of such risks by 
categorizing them as "forward-looking" information. Company 
representatives also questioned the value of disclosing "speculative" 
information to investors. Moreover, the representatives pointed out 
that such requirements could have significant ramifications for 
disclosure in general, depending on where one draws the line in 
deciding when the impact of potential legislation should be disclosed.

On requiring companies to report environmental performance information: 
Five of the experts we surveyed said that SEC should require companies 
to provide information on their environmental performance (e.g., 
pollutant releases and remediation expenditures) or issue guidance 
stating that such information might be considered material by 
investors. In one case, an expert suggested that SEC use the Global 
Reporting Initiative as a model for the types of environmental 
performance measures that should be disclosed.[Footnote 27] Some 
experts disagreed with proposals for reporting requirements involving 
companies' environmental performance, saying that such information is 
publicly available outside of SEC filings. One expert also questioned 
the justification for singling out environmental performance as opposed 
to other potentially important social issues. While some company 
representatives acknowledged that environmental performance data and 
intangible assets such as environmental management systems might be 
considered important by some investors, they said that such information 
is already available to the public through company Web sites; special 
reports on environment, health, and safety issues; and federal and 
state regulatory agencies.

On changing requirements for reporting monetary sanctions and 
aggregating liabilities: Some experts believe that SEC should (1) 
change the definition of monetary sanctions to include supplemental 
environmental projects that companies fund in exchange for reduced 
sanctions so that investors have a more complete picture of companies' 
potential costs and (2) issue guidance recommending that companies 
aggregate the estimated costs of similar liabilities before assessing 
materiality and the need for disclosure. Representatives of reporting 
companies questioned the proposed inclusion of supplemental 
environmental projects as monetary sanctions because companies are 
generally not permitted to use dollar-for-dollar offsets when they 
agree to a supplemental project. Some of the experts we surveyed 
commented that the threshold for monetary sanctions should be updated 
or abolished altogether. Company representatives also thought that the 
fixed thresholds for disclosures related to legal proceedings were 
outdated. They commented, for example, that the $100,000 threshold for 
monetary sanctions should be raised to $1 million to reflect increases 
in penalty amounts since the regulation was promulgated over 20 years 
ago. Regarding calls for aggregation of similar liabilities, one of the 
experts and some company representatives said that such a requirement 
would mislead investors by portraying a company that is one of many 
potentially responsible parties for several environmental remediation 
sites as equivalent to a company that is likely to be responsible for 
one or two larger cleanup sites, when the companies' actual liabilities 
could differ significantly. Other company representatives commented 
that although aggregation of liabilities related by some common cause 
or probability seems reasonable, aggregation of any and all 
environmental liabilities with differing circumstances would be 
arbitrary and not very useful to investors in analyzing a company's 
risks.

On other regulatory approaches to improving disclosure: Experts' 
suggestions included a call for SEC to issue new guidance that focuses 
specifically on environmental disclosure as a way of underscoring its 
importance. Another suggestion was that the Public Company Accounting 
Oversight Board take action to improve procedures for evaluating the 
effectiveness of companies' internal control policies and procedures as 
they relate to environmental matters, in connection with the annual 
management assessment of internal controls required by the Sarbanes-
Oxley Act of 2002. Among other things, according to one expert, the 
board should issue guidance calling for independent auditors to verify 
environmental remediation liabilities during financial statement 
audits, with the assistance of specialists as necessary. Regarding the 
suggestion for guidance focusing on environmental disclosure issues, 
representatives of reporting companies said that SEC should first 
determine if there is a compliance problem and, if one exists, the 
agency could issue special guidance to highlight the importance of 
environmental disclosure requirements. Company representatives did not 
see a need for specific guidance on assessing internal controls over 
environmental matters. They commented that the Public Company 
Accounting Oversight Board has already issued a number of proposed 
rules for the auditing of companies' internal controls, which will 
encompass controls for environmental information.

Some Experts Called for Better Monitoring and Targeted Enforcement 
Actions to Increase Environmental Disclosure: 

A similar number (14 of 30) of the experts who participated in our 
survey had suggestions for enhancing SEC oversight of environmental 
disclosure through increased monitoring, enforcement, or coordination 
with EPA. Specifically, some experts said that SEC should review more 
filings in industries for which environmental disclosure is more likely 
to be a concern and issue more comment letters for problematic filings 
to force companies to reexamine their internal controls for the 
reporting of environmental information. Some experts also suggested 
that SEC put more emphasis on enforcing environmental disclosure 
requirements to (1) establish legal precedents for adequate disclosure, 
(2) achieve greater consistency in company reporting of environmental 
liabilities, and (3) ensure that companies take seriously the reporting 
of environmental information. While the experts did not specify how SEC 
should increase its enforcement, many of those that offered suggestions 
believe that increasing the emphasis on enforcement--for example, by 
initiating a few high-profile cases--would better deter nondisclosure 
of important environmental information. Two of the experts we surveyed 
did not see a need for increasing SEC's monitoring and enforcement. 
They commented that SEC is probably doing a reasonable job, given 
competing priorities and the lack of evidence that disclosure of 
material environmental information is inadequate. Representatives of 
reporting companies pointed out that the frequency of SEC's reviews of 
annual 10-K filings and the amount of resources available to conduct 
such reviews has increased significantly as a result of the Sarbanes-
Oxley Act of 2002.

Another suggestion from the experts was for better coordination between 
SEC and EPA and state environmental agencies to obtain information 
useful for evaluating companies' environmental disclosures. For 
example, one expert suggested that SEC work with EPA to develop a 
protocol for using EPA data on environmental remediation liabilities as 
an indicator of whether companies are adequately reporting 
environmental information in their filings. It was also suggested that 
SEC develop a mechanism for comparing real-time information on 
environmental liabilities and their related monetary sanctions with 
companies' filings. Some representatives of reporting companies 
believed that coordination between EPA and SEC is already occurring to 
the extent that SEC has access to publicly available databases such as 
the Enforcement and Compliance History Online and Toxics Release 
Inventory.[Footnote 28] For the most part, company representatives did 
not think increased coordination would yield much improvement in 
disclosure because many environmental regulatory agencies do not have 
expertise in financial disclosure.

Some Experts Said Certain Nonregulatory Approaches Could Increase and 
Improve Environmental Disclosure: 

One-third of the experts that participated in our survey (10 of 30) had 
suggestions for improving environmental disclosure by nonregulatory 
means. For example, they cited several voluntary disclosure 
initiatives, such as the Global Reporting Initiative and the Carbon 
Disclosure Project, in which companies might participate to demonstrate 
their commitment toward good governance on environmental 
issues.[Footnote 29] Another potential vehicle for improving 
environmental disclosure, according to some experts, is secondary 
markets, such as insurance and financial services. If these markets 
started incorporating environmental information into their company 
assessments, then companies would be more likely to disclose such 
information to improve their relative standing. One expert suggested 
creating a public database of companies' disclosure of environmental 
performance measures, similar to the Toxics Release Inventory database 
maintained by EPA. Such a database would allow investors to compare 
companies' environmental performance across industries, thus creating 
an incentive for companies to compete on that basis. Finally, some 
experts cited shareholder resolutions as a vehicle for encouraging 
companies to disclose environmental information or issue reports on 
corporate environmental performance by petitioning for a proxy vote on 
such matters by the entire body of shareholders.[Footnote 30]

Representatives of reporting companies agreed that nonregulatory 
approaches can be effective in making company management aware of 
public interest in environmental disclosure. For example, some 
representatives said that companies and trade associations have adopted 
voluntary disclosure guidelines for environmental information, 
although they also commented that projects such as the Global Reporting 
Initiative do not inform investors with broad interests. According to 
the American Chemistry Council, all of its members are required to 
publicly report on their environmental management systems. While 
company representatives acknowledged the growing number of socially 
responsible investors, particularly among institutional investors, 
they said that investment analysts have not demanded more information 
about environmental risks and liabilities. The representatives also 
commented that secondary markets would indeed prompt environmental 
disclosure if such information were in demand. Finally, while company 
representatives agreed that shareholder resolutions are one avenue for 
getting companies to disclose certain information, particularly 
information that would not be appropriate in SEC filings, the 
representatives believe that shareholders and other interest groups 
should also pursue informal discussions with company management.

Conclusions: 

Without more compelling evidence that the disclosure of environmental 
information is inadequate, the need for changes to existing disclosure 
requirements and guidance or increased monitoring and enforcement by 
SEC is unclear. SEC is already taking steps to collect information on 
the results of its reviews of company filings. As part of this process, 
we believe that SEC should ensure that it has the information it needs 
to allocate its oversight resources and determine where additional 
guidance might be warranted. In addition, because SEC's comment letters 
and the company responses are already available to the public on a 
piecemeal basis as a result of requests under the Freedom of 
Information Act, we believe that SEC should consider making the 
information more readily accessible by creating its own electronic 
database available through the agency's Web site. Doing so would have 
several benefits; it would (1) free up SEC resources, (2) ensure that 
companies and investors are informed about the nature and results of 
SEC's oversight regarding the disclosure of environmental and other 
information important to investors, and (3) enable researchers to do 
more robust analyses of companies' disclosures within and across 
industries. Finally, despite previous problems with the usefulness of 
EPA's data, because environmental disclosure is one issue that is 
specifically addressed in SEC's regulations--and is important to a 
growing number of investors--it makes sense for SEC to ensure that its 
staff is taking advantage of relevant information available from EPA.

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

To improve the tracking and transparency of information on 
environmental disclosure problems, we recommend that the Chairman, SEC, 
take the following two actions, recognizing that they will also affect 
the amount of information available to SEC and the public on other 
disclosure issues: 

* As SEC develops its new procedures for closing memoranda following 
its reviews of company filings, take steps to ensure that key 
information from the memoranda is electronically tracked and organized 
in a way that would facilitate its analysis across multiple filings. 
Among other things, SEC should consider organizing the information so 
that agency officials can systematically determine the most frequently 
identified problem areas, analyze trends over time or within particular 
industries, and assess the need for additional guidance in certain 
areas.

* Explore the creation of a searchable database of SEC comment letters 
and company responses that would be accessible to the public.

We also recommend that the Chairman, SEC, work with the Administrator, 
EPA, to explore opportunities to take better advantage of EPA data that 
may be relevant to environmental disclosure and examine ways to improve 
its usefulness.

Agency Comments: 

We provided a draft of this report to SEC and EPA for review and 
comment. We received comments from officials within SEC's Division of 
Corporation Finance and EPA's Office of Enforcement and Compliance 
Assurance. (See app. VI for the full text of SEC's comments.) SEC 
agreed with the report's recommendations and is taking some actions to 
implement them. Regarding the tracking of key information from its 
reviews of company filings, SEC said that it is creating a searchable 
electronic database that will facilitate analysis across multiple 
filings. In addition, SEC agreed to make its comment letters and the 
company responses available to the public and, in late June, announced 
that the information will be accessible through its Web site, beginning 
with August 2004 filings. SEC also agreed to consider our 
recommendation for taking better advantage of relevant EPA data in its 
future efforts to work with EPA. EPA generally agreed with the 
information presented in the report but did not provide a letter. SEC 
and EPA provided technical comments, which we have incorporated as 
appropriate.

Unless you publicly announce its contents earlier, we plan no further 
distribution of this report until 30 days from the date of this letter. 
At that time, we will send copies to appropriate congressional 
committees; the Chairman of SEC; the Administrator, EPA; and the 
Director of the Office of Management and Budget. We will also make 
copies available at no charge on the GAO Web site at [Hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov].

Please call me at (202) 512-3841 if you or your staff have any 
questions. Major contributors to this report are listed in appendix 
VII.

Signed by: 

John B. Stephenson: 
Director, Natural Resources and Environment: 

[End of section]

Appendixes: 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

To determine key stakeholders' views on how well SEC has defined the 
requirements for environmental disclosure, we first identified what 
environmental information companies are required to disclose. 
Specifically, we reviewed SEC's disclosure regulations, generally 
accepted accounting principles promulgated by the Financial Accounting 
Standards Board, auditing standards issued by the AICPA, and applicable 
guidance issued by all three entities. To confirm that we had 
identified all relevant disclosure requirements and to clarify our 
understanding of them, we interviewed officials within SEC's Division 
of Corporation Finance and Office of Chief Accountant. We met with a 
variety of groups that had a stakeholder interest in the disclosure 
requirements because they (1) had a particular interest in 
environmental disclosure; (2) used disclosure information as investors, 
financial analysts, or researchers; or (3) were involved in the 
disclosure process as reporters or preparers of SEC filings. Our 
stakeholder contacts included representatives of investor 
organizations, including those that identify themselves as socially 
responsible and those with general investment interests; financial 
services institutions; environmental groups, attorneys, and 
consultants; business associations; credit rating agencies; and public 
accounting firms.

To determine the extent to which companies are disclosing environmental 
information in their filings with SEC, we identified existing studies 
on environmental disclosure and analyzed their results and methodology. 
First, we conducted a literature search on the Internet, using the 
keywords "SEC," "disclosure," and "environmental," to identify 
references, including studies, journal articles, and other material, 
that focused on the disclosure of environmental information by publicly 
held companies. We identified additional references by reviewing the 
bibliographies of the material from the initial Internet search and 
through contacts with study authors. Overall, we identified 152 
references in material published from 1990 to 2003.

To zero in on the most useful material, we established two criteria: 
(1) the reference had to be relatively recent, with a date of 1995 or 
later, and (2) it had to contain original research. After eliminating 
50 references that were published prior to 1995 and 75 references that 
reviewed or summarized research performed by others, we were left with 
27 studies that met our criteria. (The studies were published, 
presented at a conference, or provided by the authors during 1995 to 
2003.) We reviewed each of the remaining 27 studies in detail and (1) 
assessed each study's research methodology, including its data quality, 
research design, and analytic techniques and (2) summarized its major 
findings and conclusions. When a study focused on compliance with 
disclosure requirements, we determined whether the criteria used to 
assess the adequacy of companies' disclosures were consistent with 
existing regulations, standards, and guidance. We also assessed the 
extent to which each study's data and methods support its findings and 
conclusions.

Overall, we eliminated 8 of the 27 studies from our analyses because 
they had severe methodological limitations or provided little or no 
information on key aspects of the study methodology. We eliminated 
another four studies because they did not address environmental 
disclosure in terms of SEC's reporting requirements or examine the 
amount of environmental information being disclosed. The latter four 
studies focused entirely on other issues such as the impact of 
environmental disclosure on investor behavior and the relationship 
between environmental disclosure and market value. The remaining 15 
studies had strong limitations, which should be considered in 
interpreting the results, but the limitations were not so severe as to 
preclude the studies' use. Appendix III briefly summarizes the 
objectives, scope, and limitations of the 15 studies included in our 
analyses.

To supplement our review of existing disclosure studies, we also 
conducted a limited examination of disclosures related to potential 
future risks, focusing on the impacts of potential controls on 
greenhouse gas emissions at 20 U.S. electric utilities with relatively 
high emissions of carbon dioxide. We obtained emissions data from EPA's 
EGRID2002 database, using emissions in 2000 (the most recent data 
available), and identified 20 utilities with high emissions that are 
also publicly traded companies subject to SEC disclosure 
requirements.[Footnote 31] These companies were the AES Corporation; 
Allegheny Energy, Inc; Ameren Corporation; American Electric Power 
Company, Inc; CenterPoint Energy, Inc; Cinergy Corporation; Dominion 
Resources, Inc; DTE Energy Company; Duke Energy Corporation; Edison 
International; Entergy Corporation; FirstEnergy Corporation; FPL 
Group, Inc; Mirant Corporation; PPL Corporation, Inc; Progress 
Energy; Reliant Energy, Inc; The Southern Company; TXU Corporation; 
and Xcel Energy, Inc.[Footnote 32] For each company, we reviewed the 
most recent available annual and quarterly filings, namely, the fiscal 
year 2003 forms 10-K and 10-Q filings (including any such filings that 
were amended). We looked for disclosures related to the impact of 
potential controls over greenhouse gas emissions, including any 
discussion of estimated risks to the utilities' operations or financial 
condition and the estimated cost impact. To ensure that we identified 
all relevant disclosures, we searched the documents for a number of key 
terms, including "global warming," "climate change," "Kyoto Protocol," 
"greenhouse gases," and specific elements of greenhouse gases such as 
"carbon dioxide." We focused on the sections of the filings most likely 
to yield disclosures related to the impact of potential controls over 
greenhouse gas emissions, including Forward-Looking Information (when 
it was included as a separate section), item 1, Description of 
Business; item 3, Legal Proceedings; item 7, Management's Discussion 
and Analysis of Results of Operations and Financial Condition; and item 
8, Financial Statements and Supplemental Data. When a company included 
its annual report to shareholders in its filing by reference, we also 
reviewed that report in the same manner as the filing. After extracting 
the relevant excerpts from the filings, we created a table and 
categorized the disclosures by company and type of disclosure.

To assess the adequacy of SEC's efforts to monitor and enforce 
compliance with the disclosure requirements, we obtained information 
from the Division of Corporation Finance, which is responsible for 
reviewing companies' filings to check their compliance with disclosure 
requirements, and the Division of Enforcement, which has authority to 
initiate civil or criminal actions to enforce the requirements. 
Specifically, we obtained information on SEC's procedures for reviewing 
company filings, issuing comment letters, and documenting the results; 
reviewed relevant documents, including SEC's analysis of annual filings 
by Fortune 500 companies; obtained available statistics on SEC's 
monitoring and enforcement process; and interviewed SEC reviewers 
responsible for reviewing annual filings of companies in industries 
with a greater likelihood of being affected by environmental disclosure 
requirements. We also obtained information on enforcement actions by 
SEC's Division of Enforcement, including cases involving environmental 
disclosure, and met with officials within SEC and EPA's Office of 
Enforcement and Compliance Assurance to obtain information on the 
nature of interagency coordination on environmental disclosure.

To obtain suggestions on actions for increasing and improving 
environmental disclosure, we conducted a Web-based survey of 30 experts 
on environmental disclosure issues. We selected the participants from a 
larger group of 52 widely recognized experts on environmental 
disclosure, which we compiled by consulting organizations and 
individuals with a stakeholder interest in environmental disclosure, 
relevant literature, authors of reports on disclosure issues, and other 
sources. We also obtained assistance from the National Academies of 
Science in identifying experts on environmental disclosure.

In compiling our initial list of experts, we sought to achieve balance 
in terms of various areas of expertise, including environmental laws 
and regulations, accounting and auditing standards and guidance, SEC 
disclosure requirements, the disclosure interests of socially 
responsible investors, the disclosure interests of investors with 
general investment interests; and the relationship between business 
strategy and corporate governance. We also sought to achieve 
participation by experts from fields that use the filings in some way, 
including auditing and accounting, consulting, financial services, 
insurance, nonprofit advocacy groups, the legal profession, public 
employee pension funds, credit rating agencies, nonprofit research 
groups, and academia. Appendix IV lists the 30 experts who participated 
in our survey.[Footnote 33]

Our questionnaire focused on concerns about SEC's environmental 
disclosure requirements, asking the experts for their views on the 
concerns and for suggestions on how best to resolve them. To identify 
concerns, we analyzed the results of 27 recent studies about 
environmental disclosure;[Footnote 34] reviewed other relevant 
literature; and, as discussed earlier, interviewed representatives of 
groups with a stakeholder interest in environmental disclosure. In 
total, we identified 15 concerns, which we categorized into five 
general areas: (1) addressing uncertainty regarding the likelihood and 
amount of existing and potential liabilities related to environmental 
contamination, (2) determining whether environmental information is 
material, (3) disclosing future risks, (4) ensuring disclosure of 
important environmental information, and (5) monitoring and enforcing 
environmental disclosure. For each concern, we asked the experts about 
the extent to which they shared the concern and thought that it 
contributed to inadequate disclosure of environmental information. We 
also asked a series of questions on the impact of inadequate disclosure 
and ways to address problems related to inadequate disclosure.

We pretested the questionnaire with five experts in Boston, 
Massachusetts, and Washington, D.C., revised it based on the feedback 
we received, and posted the final version on GAO's survey Web site. We 
notified the participants of the availability of the questionnaire with 
an e-mail message, which contained a unique user name and password for 
each. The participants were able to log on and fill out the 
questionnaire but did not have access to the responses of others. We 
obtained responses from all 30 experts for a response rate of 100 
percent.

We analyzed the content of the responses given to the open-ended 
questions to identify suggestions for increasing and improving 
environmental disclosure. For each question, two coders independently 
read the responses and identified broad categories for the responses. 
We discussed these categories and reached agreement on which ones to 
use. Each coder then worked independently to classify responses into 
the categories. The coders then compared their classifications and 
resolved any differences through discussion so that there was 100 
percent agreement.

Finally, we discussed the experts' suggestions with representatives of 
businesses responsible for filing reports with SEC, including 
industries such as electric utilities and chemical manufacturing in 
which environmental disclosure is more likely to be relevant. We met 
with the American Chemistry Council, the Business Roundtable, the 
Edison Electric Institute, and the U.S. Business Council for 
Sustainable Development to get their views; in addition to the staff 
from these associations, representatives from approximately 10 
companies participated in the discussions.

[End of section]

Appendix II: Principal Requirements and Guidance Applicable to the 
Disclosure of Environmental Information in SEC Filings: 

Document[A].

Issue date: 1972; Document[A]: Securities and Exchange Commission, 
Regulation S-X: Form and Content of and Requirements for Financial 
Statements, Securities Act of 1933, Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 
Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935, Investment Company Act of 
1940, Investment Advisers Act of 1940 and Energy Policy and 
Conservation Act of 1975, 37 Fed. Reg. 14592, codified at 17 C.F.R. 
Part 210.[B].

Issue date: 1975; 
Document[A]: Financial Accounting Standards Board, Statement of 
Financial Accounting Standards No. 5: Accounting for Contingencies. 
Norwalk, CT: 1975.

Issue date: 1976; 
Document[A]: Financial Accounting Standards Board, Interpretation No. 
14: Reasonable Estimation of the Amount of a Loss: An Interpretation 
of FASB Statement No. 5. Norwalk, CT: 1976.

Issue date: 1982; 
Document[A]: Securities and Exchange Commission, Regulation S-K: 
Standard Instructions for Filing Forms under Securities Act of 1933, 
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Energy Policy and Conservation Act 
of 1975, 47 Fed. Reg. 11401, codified at 17 C.F.R. Part 229.[C].

Issue date: 1989; 
Document[A]: Securities and Exchange Commission, SEC Interpretation: 
Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results 
of Operations; Certain Investment Company Disclosures [Release Nos. 33-
6835; 34-26831; IC-16961; FR-36], 54 Fed. Reg. 22427.

Issue date: 1990; 
Document[A]: Financial Accounting Standards Board, Emerging Issues Task 
Force 90-8: Capitalization of Costs to Treat Environmental 
Contamination. Norwalk, CT: 1990.

Issue date: 1992; 
Document[A]: Financial Accounting Standards Board, Interpretation No. 
39: Offsetting of Amounts Related to Certain Contracts: An 
Interpretation of Accounting Principles Board (APB) Opinion No. 10 and 
Financial Accounting Standards Board Statement No. 105. Norwalk, CT: 
1992.

Issue date: 1993; 
Document[A]: Financial Accounting Standards Board, Emerging Issues Task 
Force 93-5: Accounting for Environmental Liabilities. Norwalk, CT: 
1993.

Issue date: 1993; 
Document[A]: Securities and Exchange Commission, Staff Accounting 
Bulletin No. 92, Topic 5.Y: Accounting Disclosures Relating to Loss 
Contingencies, 58 Fed. Reg. 32843. Staff Accounting Bulletin No. 103 
(listed below) amended SAB 92.

Issue date: 1994; 
Document[A]: American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, 
Statement of Position 94-6: Disclosure of Certain Significant Risks and 
Uncertainties. New York, NY: 1994.

Issue date: 1996; 
Document[A]: American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, 
Statement of Position 96-1: Environmental Remediation Liabilities. New 
York, NY: 1996.

Issue date: 1999; 
Document[A]: Securities and Exchange Commission, Staff Accounting 
Bulletin No. 99: Materiality, 64 Fed. Reg. 45150.

Issue date: 2001; 
Document[A]: Financial Accounting Standards Board, Statement of 
Financial Accounting Standards No. 143: Accounting for Asset Retirement 
Obligations. Norwalk, CT: 2001.

Issue date: 2001; 
Document[A]: Financial Accounting Standards Board, Statement of 
Financial Accounting Standards No. 144: Accounting for the Impairment 
or Disposal of Long-Lived Assets. Norwalk, CT: 2001.

Issue date: 2001; 
Document[A]: Securities and Exchange Commission, Action: Cautionary 
Advice Regarding Disclosure About Critical Accounting Policies 
[Release Nos. 33-8040; 34-45149; FR-60], 66 Fed. Reg. 65013.

Issue date: 2002; 
Document[A]: Securities and Exchange Commission, Commission Statement 
about Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and 
Results of Operations [Release Nos. 33-8056; 34-45321; FR-61], 67 Fed. 
Reg. 3746.

Issue date: 2003; 
Document[A]: Securities and Exchange Commission, Commission Guidance 
Regarding Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition 
and Results of Operations [Release Nos. 33-8350; 34-48960; FR-72], 68 
Fed. Reg. 75056.

Issue date: 2003; 
Document[A]: Securities and Exchange Commission, Staff Accounting 
Bulletin No. 103: Update of Codification of Staff Accounting 
Bulletins, 68 Fed. Reg. 26840.

Source: GAO.

[A] Some of these documents have been amended since they were first 
issued.

[B] SEC adopted Regulation S-X in 1940 and issued a comprehensive 
revision in 1972. Provisions of Regulation S-X relevant to 
environmental disclosure include 17 C.F.R. §210.3-01(a), which requires 
annual submission of consolidated audited balance sheets; §210.3-02(a),
which requires annual submission of consolidated statements of income 
and cash flow; and §210.4-01(a)(1), which provides that financial 
statements filed with SEC that are not prepared in accordance with 
generally accepted accounting principles will be presumed to be 
misleading or inaccurate.

[C] In 1982, SEC consolidated all existing uniform disclosure 
requirements under the federal securities laws, including those related 
to environmental information, into an integrated disclosure system 
under Regulation S-K. As part of this effort, SEC included interpretive 
releases issued prior to 1982, such as those related to the disclosure 
of environmental compliance costs (Conclusions and Final Action on 
Rulemaking Proposals Relating to Environmental Disclosure [Release Nos. 
33-5704; 34-12414]) and environment-related legal proceedings (Proposed 
Amendments to Item 5 of Regulation S-K Regarding the Disclosure of 
Certain Environmental Proceedings [Release Nos. 33-6315; 34-17762]). 
The provisions of Regulation S-K most directly relevant to 
environmental disclosure include 17 C.F.R. §229.101 (Description of 
Business), §229.103 (Legal Proceedings), and §229.303 (Management's 
Discussion of Financial Condition and Results of Operations).

[End of table]

[End of section]

Appendix III: Summary of Disclosure Studies Included in Our Analysis: 

Study: Austin, Duncan and Amanda Sauer, Changing Oil: Emerging 
Environmental Risks and Shareholder Value in the Oil and Gas Industry, 
World Resources Institute, 2002; 
Objective and scope (time frame)[A]: 
Objective: To assess the potential impact of various scenarios for (1) 
controls over greenhouse gas emissions and (2) pressures to restrict 
access to oil and gas reserves on shareholder value; 
Scope: 16 oil and gas companies (forward-looking); 
Major limitations[B]: 
* Small sample size within a single industry; 
* Estimates in study depend heavily on the accuracy of various 
assumptions; 
* The authors attempted to incorporate input from various experts into 
the assignment of probabilities to final scenarios; however, the 
response rates from these experts was quite low. The authors then 
assigned probabilities on the basis of the limited responses and using 
their best judgment; 
* Authors applied judgmental factors in attempting to distinguish 
different refinery product mixes.

Study: Barth, Mary E; Maureen F. McNichols; and Peter G. Wilson, 
"Factors Influencing Firms' Disclosure about Environmental 
Liabilities," Review of Accounting Studies, Vol. 2 (1997): pp. 35-64; 
Objective and scope (time frame)[A]: 
Objective: To identify factors that influence companies' decisions to 
disclose information about environmental liabilities; 
Scope: 257 companies that have a high concentration of Superfund 
exposure from four industries (1989 through 1993); 
Major limitations[B]: 
* No information on how the matching to produce potentially responsible 
party sites was done or the accuracy of the matching process related to 
the use of industry data files; 
* Study results not generalizable.

Study: Deis, Donald R; Santanu Mitra; and Mahmud Hossain, "10-K Report 
and Market Pricing of Environmental Segment Information for Chemical 
Firms," Accounting Enquiries, Vol. 11, No. 1, fall 2001/winter 2002, 
pp. 1-42; 
Objective and scope (time frame)[A]: 
Objective: To assess the impact of environment-related disclosures in 
companies' 10-K reports on the market pricing of chemical firms; 
Scope: 30 public chemical companies (1994 through 1997); 
Major limitations[B]: 
* Small sample size; no discussion of extent to which selected 
companies are representative of the single industry; 
* Study results not generalizable.

Study: Freedman, Martin; Bikki Jaggi; and A.J. Stagliano, "Pollution 
Disclosures by Electric Utilities: An Evaluation at the Start of the 
First Phase of 1990 Clean Air Act," Sixth Annual Conference of the 
Greening of Industry Network, (1997); 
Objective and scope (time frame)[A]: 
Objective: To examine the extent of disclosures related to emissions 
controls required under the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990; 
Scope: 38 public companies that owned 88 coal-fired electric utilities 
(1989, 1990, and 1995); 
Major limitations[B]: 
* Analyses may have been affected by differences in collection of 
emissions data in 1990 and 1995; 
* Small size of subgroups used in modeling affected ability to draw 
meaningful conclusions and design of subgroups relied on authors' 
judgments; 
* Conclusions go beyond what is supported by the analysis.

Study: Freedman, Martin and A.J. Stagliano, "Disclosure of 
Environmental Cleanup Costs: The Impact of the Superfund Act," 
Advances in Public Interest Accounting, Vol. 6, (1995): pp. 163-176; 
Objective and scope (time frame)[A]: 
Objective: To examine the extent to which companies identified as 
potentially responsible parties disclosed information related to 
potential remediation liabilities in their 1987 Form 10-Ks; 
Scope: 193 companies that were potentially liable for Superfund 
remediation costs (1987); 
Major limitations[B]: 
* Criteria for assessing adequacy of disclosure not consistent with 
the requirements; 
* No information on how companies were identified for inclusion in the 
study or the extent to which the companies are representative of 
others; 
* No description of the content analysis or steps taken to ensure 
inter-rater reliability.

Study: Freedman, Martin and A.J. Stagliano, "Superfund Disclosures in 
Annual Accounting Reports: The Impact of AICPA Statement of Position 
96-1," provided by authors; 
Objective and scope (time frame)[A]: 
Objective: To determine whether the issuance of additional guidance 
(American Institute of Certified Public Accountants Statement of 
Position No. 96-1) led to improved disclosure of Superfund liabilities 
in companies' annual filings with SEC; 
Scope: 137 companies identified as potentially responsible parties at 
3 or more Superfund sites (1994 and 1997); 
Major limitations[B]: 
* Criteria for assessing adequacy of disclosure not consistent with 
the requirements; 
* Limited time period covered by analysis; 
* Use of a "disclosure index" that is not defined; 
* No information on data analysis techniques and study does not 
include tables; 
* No information on methods used to measure dependent variables, the 
statistical tests conducted, the results of such tests, or methods used
to interpret the results; 
* Insufficient information to assess reasonableness of study 
conclusions.

Study: Freedman, Martin and A.J. Stagliano, "Political Pressure and 
Environmental Disclosure: The Case of EPA and the Superfund," Research 
on Accounting Ethics, Vol. 4 (1998): pp. 211-224; 
Objective and scope (time frame)[A]: 
Objective: To determine whether companies' disclosures about potential 
Superfund liabilities changed as a result of EPA efforts to prompt 
increased enforcement of disclosure requirements by SEC; 
Scope: 140 companies that were potentially liable for Superfund costs 
(1987, 1989, and 1990); 
Major limitations[B]: 
* No justification for the particular weighting scheme used in study, 
although finding of statistical significance is heavily dependent on 
it; 
* Study results not generalizable.

Study: Freedman, Martin and A.J. Stagliano, "Environmental Disclosure 
by Companies Involved in Initial Public Offerings," Accounting, 
Auditing and Accountability Journal, Vol. 15, No. 1 (2002): pp. 94-
105; 
Objective and scope (time frame)[A]: 
Objective: To determine whether differences exist in the disclosure of 
environmental liabilities by companies identified as potentially 
responsible parties at Superfund sites, depending on the companies' 
involvement in initial public offerings; 
Scope: 26 companies making initial public stock offerings that were 
identified as potentially responsible parties under the Superfund 
program (1984 through 1993); 
Major limitations[B]: 
* Small sample size; 
* Initial sample of 45 was cut to 26 when some of the selected firms 
could not be paired with comparison firms; no discussion regarding the 
possible effects of reduced sample; 
* Possible bias introduced because matching, in terms of both standard 
industrial codes and assets, is very imprecise; 
* No information on steps taken to ensure inter-rater reliability of 
content coding.

Study: Gamble, George O; Kathy Hsu; Devaun Kite; and Robin R. Radtke, 
"Environmental Disclosures in Annual Reports and 10Ks: An Examination," 
Accounting Horizons, Vol. 9, No. 3, (September 1995): pp. 34-54; 
Objective and scope (time frame)[A]: 
Objective: To determine the relative quality of disclosures over time 
and whether such information is sufficient to satisfy stakeholders' 
needs; 
Scope: 234 companies from 12 industries combined into six industry 
groups selected from Standard & Poor's Compustat Services (1986 through 
1991); 
Major limitations[B]: 
* Criteria for assessing adequacy of disclosure not consistent with 
the requirements; 
* No information on how the companies were selected; 
* Requirement that at least six companies remain within an industry 
group could have influenced the analyses; 
* No information on steps taken to ensure inter-rater reliability of 
content coding; 
* Study results not generalizable; 
* Conclusions go beyond what is supported by the analysis.

Study: Kreuze, Jerry G; Gale E. Newell; and Stephen J. Newell, "What 
Companies Are Reporting (Environmental Disclosures)," Management 
Accounting, Vol. 78, No. 1, (1996); 
Objective and scope (time frame)[A]: 
Objective: To examine the extent to which companies disclosed 
environmental information in their annual reports to shareholders; 
Scope: 645 Forbes 500 corporations (1991); 
Major limitations[B]: 
* Criteria for assessing adequacy of disclosure not consistent with 
the requirements; 
* No information on how the sample was chosen or the universe from 
which companies were selected; 
* Limited time period covered by analysis; 
* Study results not generalizable; 
* Conclusions go beyond what is supported by the analysis.

Study: Repetto, Robert and Duncan Austin, Coming Clean: Corporate 
Disclosure of Financially Significant Environmental Risks, World 
Resources Institute, 2000; 
Objective and scope (time frame)[A]: 
Objective: To assess the adequacy of companies' disclosure of material 
environmental exposures in accordance with SEC rules; 
Scope: 13 public pulp and paper companies (1998 and 1999); 
Major limitations[B]: 
* Criteria for assessing adequacy of disclosure not consistent with 
the requirements; 
* Small sample size; 
* No information on how the companies were selected, the selection of 
experts who "identified environmental pressures" on firms, how authors 
identified these pressures, etc; 
* Estimates in study depend heavily on the accuracy of various 
assumptions; 
* Conclusions go beyond what is supported by the analysis.

Study: Repetto, Robert and Duncan Austin, Pure Profit: The Financial 
Implications of Environmental Performance, World Resources Institute 
(2000); 
Objective and scope (time frame)[A]: 
Objective: To assess the potential financial impact of projected 
environmental developments such as pending air and water quality 
regulations. The study also examined the extent of companies' 
disclosures related to future environmental expenditures and 
contingencies; 
Scope: 13 pulp and paper companies that will be significantly impacted 
by near future environmental developments (forward-looking); 
Major limitations[B]: 
* Criteria for assessing adequacy of disclosure not consistent with 
the requirements; 
* Small sample size; 
* No information on how the companies were selected, the selection of 
experts who "identified environmental pressures" on firms, how authors 
identified these pressures, etc; 
* Estimates in study depend heavily on the accuracy of various 
assumptions.

Study: Schmidt, Richard J., "Disclosing Past Sins: Financial Reporting 
of Environmental Remediation," The National Public Accountant, Vol.
42, Issue 5 (July 1997): pp. 41-45; 
Objective and scope (time frame)[A]: 
Objective: To examine the disclosure of environmental remediation 
liabilities in companies' financial reports before and after a period 
in which the emphasis on improving such reporting increased; 
Scope: 17 corporations representing 20 Superfund sites from EPA's 1995 
National Priorities List (1991 and 1994); 
Major limitations[B]: 
* Criteria for assessing adequacy of disclosure not consistent with the 
requirements; 
* Small sample size; 
* No information on criteria used to select sample; 
* No information on why study focused on 1991 and 1994; 
* Used dichotomous measures that ignore gradations in quality and 
extent; 
* Study results are not generalizable.

Study: Stagliano, A.J. and W. Darrell Walden, "Assessing the Quality 
of Environmental Disclosure Themes," Second Asian Pacific 
Interdisciplinary Research in Accounting Conference, Osaka City 
University, Osaka, Japan, August 1998; 
Objective and scope (time frame)[A]: 
Objective: To examine the quantity and quality of environmental 
disclosures in the financial and nonfinancial sections of corporate 
annual reports; 
Scope: 53 companies in four industries (1989); 
Major limitations[B]: 
* Criteria for assessing adequacy of disclosure not consistent with 
the requirements; 
* Small sample size; 
* No specific information on sample selection (e.g., no elaboration on 
"leaders in their respective industries"); 
* Possible sample selection bias cannot be determined; 
* Study results not generalizable.

Study: Stanny, Elizabeth, "Effect of Regulation on Changes in 
Disclosure of and Reserved Amounts for Environmental Liabilities," The 
Journal of Financial Statement Analysis (summer 1998): pp. 34-49; 
Objective and scope (time frame)[A]: 
Objective: To examine the impact of SEC's Staff Accounting Bulletin 
No. 92 on the disclosure of environmental remediation liabilities and 
associated reserves; 
Scope: 199 nonfinancial firms from the 1994 Standard & Poor's 500 
index (1991, 1992, and 1993); 
Major limitations[B]: 
* Criteria for assessing adequacy of disclosure not consistent with 
the requirements; 
* Low number of cases used in some aspects of the modeling raise 
questions of external validity and potentially false negative results 
in tests of significance; 
* No discussion of efforts to address possible issues of 
autocorrelation in the multiple regression models due to pooling of 
multiple years.

Source: GAO.

[A] The overall objectives of some studies did not focus explicitly on 
disclosure of environmental information under SEC rules. However, we 
included such studies in our analysis if they contained an assessment 
of the amount or adequacy of disclosure in addition to their primary 
focus.

[B] This table combines studies with strong and very strong 
limitations. The column on "major limitations" includes some but not 
all of the major limitations we identified.

[End of table]

[End of section]

Appendix IV Experts Who Participated in GAO Survey: 

Gavin Anderson: GovernanceMetrix International, Inc.; 
Duncan Austin: World Resources Institute; 
Constance E. Bagley: Harvard Business School; 
Michelle Chan-Fishel: Friends of the Earth; 
Jack Ciesielski: R.G. Associates, Inc.; 
Holly Clack: PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP; 
Doug Cogan: Investor Responsibility Research Center; 
Mark A. Cohen: Vanderbilt University; 
Andrew N. Davis: LeBeouf, Lamb, Greene, and MacRae, LLP; 
Martin Freedman: Towson University; 
Julie Gorte: Calvert Funds; 
Suellen Keiner: National Academy of Public Administration
Donald Kirshbaum: Office of Connecticut State Treasurer; 
Gayle S. Koch: The Brattle Group; 
Jerry G. Kreuze: Western Michigan University; 
Peter Lehner: Office of Attorney General, State of New York; 
Tim Little: The Rose Foundation; 
Steven D. Lydenberg: Domini Social Investments LLC; 
Thomas M. McMahon: Sidley Austin Brown & Wood LLP; 
Dennis M. Patten: Illinois State University; 
Ken Radigan: AIG Environmental; 
Robert Repetto: Stratus Consulting, Inc.; 
Amy Ripepi: Financial Reporting Advisors LLC; 
Greg Rogers: Guida, Slavich & Flores, P.C.; 
Solomon Samson: Standard & Poor's; 
Christopher Scudellari: Ernst & Young; 
Elizabeth Stanny: Sonoma State University
William L. Thomas: Pillsbury Winthrop LLP; 
Martin Whittaker: Innovest Strategic Value Advisors, Inc.; 
Cynthia Williams: University of Illinois College of Law:; 

[End of section]

Appendix V: Survey Questions and Results: 

[See PDF for image] 

[End of figure] 

[End of section]

Appendix VI: Comments from the Securities and Exchange Commission: 

UNITED STATES SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION 
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549:

DIVISION OF CORPORATION FINANCE:

July 2, 2004:

John B. Stephenson:
Environmental Issue Director, Natural Resources and Environment Team: 
General Accounting Office:
441 G Street, NW: 
Washington, DC 20548:

Dear Mr, Stephenson:

Thank you for the opportunity to review and comment on the General 
Accounting Office's draft report regarding Environmental Disclosure. 
The GAO recommends three actions for executive action, and I appreciate 
your seeking our input on these recommendations as you finalize your 
report.

First, the GAO has recommended that the SEC take steps to ensure that 
information from staff examinations of corporate filings is 
electronically sorted and tracked to facilitate its analysis across 
filings. As you indicate, the Division of Corporation Finance has 
recently implemented a procedure to do just that. Through the process 
of collecting a summary of our work product in what we call a closing 
memo, we have already begun to implement your recommendation. You are 
correct in noting that we are currently documenting our final work 
product on paper; however, our work on creating a searchable electronic 
database of this information is nearly complete. We wholeheartedly 
agree with your recommendation that we track the results of our 
reviews, and, as you noted in your report, our efforts in this area 
have been underway for some time.

The GAO also recommends that the SEC create a publicly available 
searchable database of its comment letters and company responses to 
those letters. For some time now, this topic has also been under 
consideration, and, on June 24th, the SEC announced its plans to make 
public staff filing related correspondence. Again, we wholeheartedly 
agree with your recommendation and our efforts to implement it are 
underway.

Finally, we note your recommendation that the SEC continue to work with 
the EPA to explore opportunities to take better advantage of EPA data 
in evaluating public company disclosure in filings made with us. As the 
report indicates, there have been efforts in the past to work together, 
and we will fully take this recommendation into account in our future 
efforts.

As a final point, we reviewed the information in your report regarding 
the views of stakeholders, and the SEC values the input of all 
interested parties. We have not commented on this section of the 
report, as we believe their views speak for themselves.

Thank you for the courtesy the GAO extended to the SEC during the 
course of preparing its report, and thank you again for the opportunity 
to provide comments to the GAO as it prepares its final draft of the 
report.

Sincerely,

Alan L. Beller:
Director: 

[End of section]

Appendix VII: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contacts: 

Ellen Crocker, (617) 788-0580 Les Mahagan, (617) 788-0517: 

Staff Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the individuals named above, Kate Bittinger, Mark Braza, 
Stephen Cleary, Evan Gilman, Kevin Jackson, Rich Johnson, Tom Melito, 
Lynn Musser, Cynthia Norris, and Judy Pagano made key contributions to 
this report.

(360299): 

FOOTNOTES

[1] The securities laws authorize SEC to prescribe the methods to be 
followed in the preparation of accounts and the form and content of 
financial statements to be filed under those laws. To assist in meeting 
these responsibilities, SEC has historically relied upon private sector 
standard-setting bodies designated by the accounting profession to 
develop accounting principles and standards. Since 1973, SEC has 
officially recognized the Financial Accounting Standards Board as the 
authoritative standard-setting organization. 

[2] The AICPA continues to exist as the officially recognized standard-
setting body for independent financial audits of nonpublic companies.

[3] In 2002, we issued a report on the imbalance between SEC's workload 
and resource levels. See U.S. General Accounting Office, SEC 
Operations: Increased Workload Creates Challenges, GAO-02-302 
(Washington, D.C.: Mar. 5, 2002).

[4] Social Investment Forum, 2003 Report on Socially Responsible 
Investing Trends in the United States (Washington, D.C.: December 
2003).

[5] If the best estimate in a range is accrued, then the potential for 
additional liability need not be disclosed. However, under guidance 
from the AICPA, companies must disclose the risks and uncertainties of 
their estimates when it is at least reasonably possible that the 
estimates will change in a way that is material to the financial 
statements within the next year. See AICPA, Statement of Position 94-6: 
Disclosure of Certain Significant Risks and Uncertainties, (New York, 
N.Y.: 1994).

[6] See Basic, Inc., v. Levinson, 485 U.S. 224, 231 (1988) citing TSC 
Industries v. Northway, Inc., 426 U.S. 438, 449 (1976).

[7] SEC regulations provide a "safe harbor" under which the agency will 
generally not consider forward-looking statements to be fraudulent.

[8] SEC's guidance further states that if management determines that 
the known trend, demand, commitment, event, or uncertainty is not 
reasonably likely to occur, no disclosure is required. However, if 
management cannot make such a determination, it must proceed on the 
assumption that the trends or events will come to fruition; disclosure 
is then required unless management determines that a material effect is 
not reasonably likely. See Securities and Exchange Commission, SEC 
Interpretation: Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial 
Condition and Results of Operations; Certain Investment Company 
Disclosures [Release Nos. 33-6835; 34-26831; IC-16961; FR-36] 54 Fed. 
Reg. 22427, 22430 (1989).

[9] See AICPA, Statement of Position 96-1: Environmental Remediation 
Liabilities, (New York, N.Y.: 1996).

[10] A supplemental environmental project is part of an enforcement 
settlement related to the violation of an environmental law or 
regulation. As part of the settlement, a violator voluntarily agrees to 
undertake an environmentally beneficial project in exchange for a 
reduction in the penalty; the project does not include activities a 
violator must take to return to compliance with the law.

[11] Environmental assets could include, for example, emission 
"credits" under an emission trading program in which companies that 
keep their pollutant emissions below their allowed level may sell their 
surplus allotments, known as emission reduction credits, to other 
companies. 

[12] Among the studies included in our initial selection were two EPA-
sponsored studies on the disclosure of environmental legal proceedings. 
Although the studies have never been published, the results of one were 
included in a paper presented at a conference and have been widely 
cited in the literature. According to EPA officials, the agency stopped 
short of publishing the studies because of concerns about the 
methodology used and the validity of the results obtained. For example, 
when EPA officials attempted to verify the results of one study, they 
found many instances in which the companies had actually disclosed some 
of the information that EPA's contractor had determined to be 
unreported. EPA officials identified several reasons for the 
discrepancies, including instances in which the companies had disclosed 
legal proceedings prior to the time frame reviewed by the contractor, 
inappropriate criteria for determining whether particular disclosures 
were "correct," and the use of search terms that were not sufficient to 
identify company disclosures. According to EPA officials, both studies 
used similar methodologies. We also identified methodological 
limitations and eliminated the EPA-sponsored studies from our analysis.

[13] Our 1993 report, Environmental Liability: Property and Casualty 
Insurer Disclosure of Environmental Liabilities, GAO/RCED-93-108 
(Washington, D.C.: June 2, 1993), did not fall within the time frame we 
established for this review. If the report had been included, however, 
certain limitations, such as a small sample size and narrow scope, 
would have affected the extent to which conclusions could be drawn from 
the study.

[14] Martin Freedman and A.J. Stagliano, "Political Pressure and 
Environmental Disclosure: The Case of EPA and the Superfund," Research 
on Accounting Ethics (Vol. 4, 1998).

[15] Martin Freedman, B. Jaggi, and A.J. Stagliano, "Pollution 
Disclosures by Electric Utilities: An Evaluation at the Start of the 
First Phase of the 1990 Clean Air Act," Advances in Environmental 
Accounting & Management (2004).

[16] Specifically, the study focused on Staff Accounting Bulletin No. 
92, Topic 5.Y: Accounting Disclosures Relating to Loss Contingencies. 
See Elizabeth Stanny, "Effect of Regulation on Changes in Disclosures 
of and Reserved Amounts for Environmental Liabilities," The Journal of 
Financial Statement Analysis (summer, 1998).

[17] For example, the study cited the issuance of SEC's 1989 guidance, 
SEC Interpretation: Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial 
Condition and Results of Operations; Certain Investment Company 
Disclosures. See George O. Gamble, Kathy Hsu, Devaun Kite, and Robin R. 
Radtke, "Environmental Disclosures in Annual Reports and 10Ks: An 
Examination," Accounting Horizons, Vol. 9, No. 3, (September 1995).

[18] Three of these studies are among those that examined changes in 
the amount of disclosure over time.

[19] Greenhouse gases include carbon dioxide (mainly from burning coal, 
oil, and natural gas); methane and nitrous oxide (largely due to 
agriculture and changes in land use); and hydrofluorocarbons, 
perfluorocarbons, and sulfur hexafluoride (manufactured by industry). 
These gases trap heat in the atmosphere and are believed to contribute 
to climate change, including global warming. 

[20] In December 1997, the United States participated in drafting the 
Kyoto Protocol, an international agreement to specifically limit 
greenhouse gas emissions. Although the U.S. government signed the 
Protocol in 1998, the Clinton administration did not submit it to the 
Senate for advice and consent, which are necessary for ratification. In 
March 2001, President Bush announced that he opposed the Protocol. 

[21] In some instances, the company filings use terms like 
"significant," "substantial," or "far-reaching" to characterize the 
potential impacts, without referring specifically to materiality.

[22] For our review, we focused on SEC's monitoring of companies' 
annual 10-K reports. SEC also reviews quarterly filings, known as 10-
Qs, and various "transactional" filings related to newly issued 
securities, efforts to raise additional capital, and mergers and 
acquisitions. According to SEC officials, the reviewers examine most 
filings related to initial public offerings and selectively review 
other transactional filings as well as a sampling of the annual and 
quarterly filings. 

[23] Other actions resulting from a filing review can include 
requesting an amendment of a past report or advising the company to 
make a disclosure in a future report.

[24] Among the most common problems identified in the Fortune 500 study 
were the need for better analysis of--and less boilerplate information 
on--companies' financial condition and results of operations; expanded 
discussion of companies' critical accounting policies, including, for 
example, the most difficult and judgmental estimates and the areas most 
sensitive to material change from external factors; clarification of 
how companies recognize revenue; and more comprehensive disclosures 
related to restructuring charges and pension plans.

[25] Appendix IV contains a list of the experts that participated in 
our survey and appendix V includes our questionnaire and a summary of 
the responses to the closed-ended questions. 

[26] ASTM International is a standard-setting organization originally 
known as the American Society for Testing and Materials. Expected value 
analysis is a method of estimating the mean value of an unknown 
quantity, which represents a probability-weighted average over the 
range of all possible values.

[27] The Global Reporting Initiative develops and disseminates globally 
applicable sustainability reporting guidelines for voluntary use by 
organizations for reporting on the economic, environmental, and social 
dimensions of their activities, products, and services. Examples of 
environmental indicators include energy, material, and water use; 
greenhouse gas and other emissions; effluents and waste generation; use 
of hazardous materials; and recycling, pollution, waste reduction, and 
other environmental programs.

[28] The Enforcement and Compliance History Online is a Web-based tool 
that integrates information from data systems across EPA programs and 
provides public access to monitoring, compliance, and enforcement 
information for approximately 800,000 EPA-regulated facilities. The 
Toxics Release Inventory is another publicly accessible database that 
contains information on estimated releases of hundreds of chemicals, 
which companies report annually to EPA and the states.

[29] The Carbon Disclosure Project is an organization of institutional 
investors representing assets in excess of $10 trillion. Its mission is 
to inform investors about the "significant risks and opportunities" 
presented by climate change and company management about shareholder 
concerns regarding the impact of such issues on company value. The 
project has written to the 500 largest companies in the world by market 
capitalization, asking for disclosure of investment-relevant 
information concerning their greenhouse gas emissions.

[30] According to statistics compiled by the Investor Responsibility 
Research Center, shareholders filed 66 petitions on environmental 
issues in 2003 and had filed 57 as of mid-April 2004. Among other 
things, the petitions have called for companies to report on their 
greenhouse gas emissions, how climate change will affect their 
operations, or their performance against environmental and other 
indicators using the reporting guidelines established for the Global 
Reporting Initiative.

[31] The Tennessee Valley Authority and two non-U.S. companies were 
among the top 20 emitters in EPA's database, but we excluded them from 
our analysis because they are not required to file 10-K reports. In 
addition, according to an EPA official, EPA makes a number of 
assumptions in allocating carbon dioxide emissions from facilities with 
multiple owners and the relative ranking of the top emitters could be 
affected as a result. Also, the measurement of carbon dioxide emissions 
for smaller sources involves estimates, which could affect the amounts 
by a small percentage. However, the official agreed that we had 
included companies that were among the highest emitters of carbon 
dioxide in our analysis.

[32] Effective April 2004, Reliant Resources changed its name to 
Reliant Energy, Inc.

[33] We initially asked 31 individuals to participate. One person 
declined.

[34] As noted earlier, our review of existing studies on environmental 
disclosure included 27 studies. However, at the time we were developing 
our questionnaire, we had identified only 25 of the studies.

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