Environmental management accounting is a mechanism for determining and evaluating, and incorporating these cost and benefit in the day-to-day business decision making, the full spectrum of environmental costs of current production processes and the economic benefits of contamination prevention, or cleaner processes. In practice, the past 10 years have acquired significance from corporate accounting, which is the most prominent part of cost accounting. Limits were widely acknowledged of conventional financial and cost accounting techniques reflecting companies' sustainability efforts and providing management with necessary information for sustainable business choices. Information on companies' environmental performance may be somewhat accessible, but both domestic decision makers and those at the level of public authorities are seldom able to connect environmental information with economic variables and are essentially deprived of environmental cost information. Decision makers do thus not recognize the economic worth of natural resources as asset and the commercial and financial benefit of excellent environmental performance. Beyond 'goodwill' efforts, there are a number of market-based incentives for integration with decision making of environmental issues. This article provides an outline of environmental management methods and we evaluate environmental costs in terms of current economic crisis.
CITATION STYLE
Podolskaya, T., Kravchenko, G. V., & Shatila, K. (2021). Environmental crisis effect on environmental costs. In IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science (Vol. 937). IOP Publishing Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1088/1755-1315/937/2/022036
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