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Health & Science3h 26m ago
Rajabalizadeh's new study finds that companies led by CEOs with stronger managerial ability use more consistent climate-risk language from year to year.
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U.S.
Who
Postdoctoral Researcher Javad Rajabalizadeh from the University of Turku
What
Rajabalizadeh's new study finds that companies led by CEOs with stronger managerial ability use more consistent climate-risk language from year to year.
When
Thu, 11 Jun 2026 21:20:03 GMT · 3h 26m ago
Where
U.S. ·
Why
Climate disclosures help investors and the public understand how companies view risks such as extreme weather, carbon regulation and the transition to cleaner energy.
The Frontline Impact
How this affects you
The research suggests that repeated climate language in company disclosures, especially from capable leadership, may signal a deliberate long-term approach to communicating climate risks rather than just boilerplate text. This insight holds relevance for regulators, boards, and investors in interpreting climate reporting more accurately.
Story chain
3 events in this thread- Health & Science3h 26m agoA new study found that companies led by CEOs with stronger managerial ability use more consistent climate-risk language from year to year.Open article
- Health & Science3h 26m agoA new study by Postdoctoral Researcher Javad Rajabalizadeh finds that companies led by CEOs with stronger managerial ability use more consistent climate-risk language from year to year.Open article
- Currently Reading3h 26m agoRajabalizadeh's new study finds that companies led by CEOs with stronger managerial ability use more consistent climate-risk language from year to year.