TEMPORAL DYNAMICS BETWEEN SUPRANATIONAL BIODIVERSITY POLICY AND CORPORATE DISCLOSURE Assessing the Semantic Relationship between Earnings Calls Conferences and the Work of the Taskforce on Nature-related Financial Disclosures
Abstract
This thesis investigates the influence of the work of the Taskforce on Nature-related
Financial Disclosures (TNFD) on corporate biodiversity disclosure. It provides a
scalable method for assessing disclosure trends and contributes to the understanding
of how voluntary frameworks like the TNFD are received in corporate communication.
Through this, the study extends research techniques in Information Systems
Research beside the work done in terms of biodiversity research through its specific
case. By employing linear regressions with boolean and metrical time-series data as
dummy variables, correlation between the framework’s inception date and corporate
disclosure is inferred. By comparing TNFD glossary terms with earnings call conference
transcripts from global companies between 2014 and 2024, the study applies
semantic analysis to measure the framework’s reception globally. The results show
that terminology from TNFD’s LEAP framework, particularly terms tied to risk and
opportunity, are reflected increasingly in corporate language. Especially after the
date of the TNFD inception in 2021, terms relating to impacts on nature are less
precisely adopted and compared to risks, opportunities and dependencies on nature,
they show weaker statistical signals. Through a lens of governmentality, the findings
support the idea that supranational initiatives can shape corporate communication
without direct legal authority. The findings underline timely research in supporting
that the adoption of terminology linked to financial or internal strategic benefits (anthropocentric
framing) is received more openly by companies than the proposition
of healing nature for nature’s own sake. It is concluded that governmentality is alive
but must be framed anthropocentrically in biodiversity. The question remains open
whether this dynamic will translate into fruitful change in the future; while the
method applied shows to be a valid research instrument in the scholarship of Information
Systems research.
Degree
Master theses
View/ Open
Date
2025-06-24Author
Kammering, Jonathan
Keywords
TNFD
biodiversity
corporate disclosure
semantic similarity
governmentality
green finance
supranational governance
Taskforce on Nature-related Financial Disclosures
Language
eng