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Carbon performance and executive compensation: The moderating role of governance

Carbon performance and executive compensation: The moderating role of governance
Carbon performance and executive compensation: The moderating role of governance
Amid growing global emphasis on corporate environmental responsibility, the role of executive compensation (EC) in driving carbon performance (CP) remains underexplored, particularly in a cross–country context. This paper addresses this limitation directly by examining the association between EC and CP, considering the moderating effects of corporate governance (CG) and national governance quality (NGI). Using a panel dataset of 1122 firms across 28 countries over an 18-year period (i.e., 13,413 firm-year observations), we find that EC is positively associated with carbon reduction initiatives (process-oriented CP) while negatively associated with carbon intensity (poor outcome-oriented CP). Our results further reveal that CG mechanisms, such as board size, independent directors, CEO–chair duality, gender diversity and sustainability committee, moderate the EC–CP nexus, strengthening the alignment between executive incentives and environmental objectives. Additionally, firms in countries with low NGI rely more on EC to achieve meaningful CP improvements. These findings remain robust across alternative model specifications and endogeneity tests. By integrating insights from neo–institutional theory, this study contributes to the literature by demonstrating how governance structures at both firm and national levels shape the effectiveness of EC in promoting sustainability. Our results offer practical implications for policymakers, investors and corporate leaders seeking to design governance frameworks that strengthen the link between executive incentives and CP in diverse institutional contexts.
carbon performance, corporate governance, executive compensation, national governance quality, neo–institutional theory, social and environmental accounting, sustainability development
0964-4733
8358-8389
Alzyod, Mohammad Hamad Ahmad
c0e48fdd-ae61-460d-a554-009ae0ffaf71
Ntim, Collins
1f344edc-8005-4e96-8972-d56c4dade46b
Malagila, John K
cc93732f-b2bd-49c9-843e-4a6039b4124c
Al-Sayed, Mahmoud
f860b45e-e641-4e16-b4f8-6baf99b122f4
Alhossini, Mohammed Abdulaziz M
71ffd7dc-3d4e-4730-9124-cc5dec36308b
Alzyod, Mohammad Hamad Ahmad
c0e48fdd-ae61-460d-a554-009ae0ffaf71
Ntim, Collins
1f344edc-8005-4e96-8972-d56c4dade46b
Malagila, John K
cc93732f-b2bd-49c9-843e-4a6039b4124c
Al-Sayed, Mahmoud
f860b45e-e641-4e16-b4f8-6baf99b122f4
Alhossini, Mohammed Abdulaziz M
71ffd7dc-3d4e-4730-9124-cc5dec36308b

Alzyod, Mohammad Hamad Ahmad, Ntim, Collins, Malagila, John K, Al-Sayed, Mahmoud and Alhossini, Mohammed Abdulaziz M (2025) Carbon performance and executive compensation: The moderating role of governance. Business Strategy and the Environment, 34 (7), 8358-8389. (doi:10.1002/bse.70007).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Amid growing global emphasis on corporate environmental responsibility, the role of executive compensation (EC) in driving carbon performance (CP) remains underexplored, particularly in a cross–country context. This paper addresses this limitation directly by examining the association between EC and CP, considering the moderating effects of corporate governance (CG) and national governance quality (NGI). Using a panel dataset of 1122 firms across 28 countries over an 18-year period (i.e., 13,413 firm-year observations), we find that EC is positively associated with carbon reduction initiatives (process-oriented CP) while negatively associated with carbon intensity (poor outcome-oriented CP). Our results further reveal that CG mechanisms, such as board size, independent directors, CEO–chair duality, gender diversity and sustainability committee, moderate the EC–CP nexus, strengthening the alignment between executive incentives and environmental objectives. Additionally, firms in countries with low NGI rely more on EC to achieve meaningful CP improvements. These findings remain robust across alternative model specifications and endogeneity tests. By integrating insights from neo–institutional theory, this study contributes to the literature by demonstrating how governance structures at both firm and national levels shape the effectiveness of EC in promoting sustainability. Our results offer practical implications for policymakers, investors and corporate leaders seeking to design governance frameworks that strengthen the link between executive incentives and CP in diverse institutional contexts.

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Accepted_Manuscript_BSE_26_May_2025 - Accepted Manuscript
Restricted to Repository staff only until 16 June 2027.
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Accepted/In Press date: 26 May 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 16 June 2025
Published date: November 2025
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2025 ERP Environment and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Keywords: carbon performance, corporate governance, executive compensation, national governance quality, neo–institutional theory, social and environmental accounting, sustainability development

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 502722
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/502722
ISSN: 0964-4733
PURE UUID: 8635ccfe-311c-4a79-8e0d-137db496957d
ORCID for Collins Ntim: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1042-4056
ORCID for John K Malagila: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5327-2286
ORCID for Mohammed Abdulaziz M Alhossini: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8523-3265

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 07 Jul 2025 16:41
Last modified: 18 Nov 2025 02:27

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Contributors

Author: Collins Ntim ORCID iD
Author: John K Malagila ORCID iD
Author: Mohammed Abdulaziz M Alhossini ORCID iD

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