“…Although the environmental disclosure literature has recently increased its focus on carbon and greenhouse gas emissions (Ben Amar & McIlkenny, ; Calza et al, ; Stanny, ; Sullivan & Gouldson, ), research on water‐related issues, especially water disclosure practices, is exceptionally scant. In fact, the very few water‐focused studies have rather concentrated on analyzing the development of water accounting standards and frameworks (Chalmers, Godfrey, & Lynch, ); the extent and quality of water‐related reporting in the Australian mining industry (Leong, Hazelton, Taplin, Timms, & Laurence, ); the discursive motivations and strategies used by the leading multinational firms in the food and beverage sector to participate at the development of water‐related risks accounting (Daniel & Sojamo, ); access to corporate water disclosure as a human right (Hazelton, ); and the role of water labelling in rising corporate water accountability (Hazelton, ). Other studies have focused on water management accounting in the Australian wine‐industry supply chain (Christ, ); the importance and necessity of adding monetary data to corporate water accounting (Burritt & Christ, ); the water accountability change at an Australian university (Egan, ); water efficiency in the food and beverage industry in Australia (Egan, ); users' perceptions of corporate water reports in Australia (Tello, Hazelton, & Cummings, ); and the development of a comprehensive framework for corporate water management accounting (Christ & Burritt, ).…”