The Development and Application of Water Governance Matrix: A Case of Malaysia

The study proposes a framework (in the form of a matrix) to map organisations on their level of water-related risk, taking into consideration ‘industry intensity’ and ‘corporate commitment towards water protection and preservation’. On the basis of Ceres (2011), ‘industry intensity’ is measured as e...

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Main Authors: Mohd Remali Atina Rahmah, Mohd Ali Inaliah, Alrazi Bakhtiar, Mat Husin Norhayati
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2017-01-01
Series:SHS Web of Conferences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1051/shsconf/20173600013
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spelling doaj-e2f0bb67b21a4463b250aacf684e5bf22021-04-02T09:15:46ZengEDP SciencesSHS Web of Conferences2261-24242017-01-01360001310.1051/shsconf/20173600013shsconf_icga2017_00013The Development and Application of Water Governance Matrix: A Case of MalaysiaMohd Remali Atina RahmahMohd Ali InaliahAlrazi BakhtiarMat Husin NorhayatiThe study proposes a framework (in the form of a matrix) to map organisations on their level of water-related risk, taking into consideration ‘industry intensity’ and ‘corporate commitment towards water protection and preservation’. On the basis of Ceres (2011), ‘industry intensity’ is measured as either low, medium, or high. Furthermore, ‘corporate commitment’ - measured along the same classification (low, medium, or high) – is based on the extent of corporate disclosure of water policies, initiatives, and performance. These indicators are then aggregated and used to develop a matrix - called Water Governance Matrix (WaGM) - which measures the level of riskiness of an organisation towards water - high (red), moderate (yellow), and low (green). An exploratory study of 30 top public listed companies in Malaysia reveals that only one company falls under the low-risk category, while more than 50% falls under the high-risk category; mainly due to low corporate water disclosure. This innovative matrix is of importance for organisations to monitor and manage their water risk and for stakeholders to make informed investment and other decisions about the organisations.https://doi.org/10.1051/shsconf/20173600013water governanceindustry intensitycontent analysisMalaysia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mohd Remali Atina Rahmah
Mohd Ali Inaliah
Alrazi Bakhtiar
Mat Husin Norhayati
spellingShingle Mohd Remali Atina Rahmah
Mohd Ali Inaliah
Alrazi Bakhtiar
Mat Husin Norhayati
The Development and Application of Water Governance Matrix: A Case of Malaysia
SHS Web of Conferences
water governance
industry intensity
content analysis
Malaysia
author_facet Mohd Remali Atina Rahmah
Mohd Ali Inaliah
Alrazi Bakhtiar
Mat Husin Norhayati
author_sort Mohd Remali Atina Rahmah
title The Development and Application of Water Governance Matrix: A Case of Malaysia
title_short The Development and Application of Water Governance Matrix: A Case of Malaysia
title_full The Development and Application of Water Governance Matrix: A Case of Malaysia
title_fullStr The Development and Application of Water Governance Matrix: A Case of Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed The Development and Application of Water Governance Matrix: A Case of Malaysia
title_sort development and application of water governance matrix: a case of malaysia
publisher EDP Sciences
series SHS Web of Conferences
issn 2261-2424
publishDate 2017-01-01
description The study proposes a framework (in the form of a matrix) to map organisations on their level of water-related risk, taking into consideration ‘industry intensity’ and ‘corporate commitment towards water protection and preservation’. On the basis of Ceres (2011), ‘industry intensity’ is measured as either low, medium, or high. Furthermore, ‘corporate commitment’ - measured along the same classification (low, medium, or high) – is based on the extent of corporate disclosure of water policies, initiatives, and performance. These indicators are then aggregated and used to develop a matrix - called Water Governance Matrix (WaGM) - which measures the level of riskiness of an organisation towards water - high (red), moderate (yellow), and low (green). An exploratory study of 30 top public listed companies in Malaysia reveals that only one company falls under the low-risk category, while more than 50% falls under the high-risk category; mainly due to low corporate water disclosure. This innovative matrix is of importance for organisations to monitor and manage their water risk and for stakeholders to make informed investment and other decisions about the organisations.
topic water governance
industry intensity
content analysis
Malaysia
url https://doi.org/10.1051/shsconf/20173600013
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