5.1. Classification of GRI Metrics
The first analytical phase involved the systematic classification of the GRI indicators into the three canonical dimensions of sustainability—Economic, Social, and Environmental—in accordance with the GRI Standards framework [
42]. The outputs of this classification are presented in
Table 1 (Economic indicators: E),
Table 2 (Social indicators: S), and
Table 3 (Environmental indicators: V), each annotated with its corresponding GRI code to ensure traceability and reproducibility.
The classification process involved:
Indicator identification—extraction of all reported GRI metrics from sustainability reports.
Dimension assignment—allocation of each indicator to one of the three sustainability pillars based on GRI Topic Standards coding.
Binary coding—each indicator was coded on a binary scale (1 = disclosed, 0 = not disclosed) for each manufacturer (see
Table 1,
Table 2 and
Table 3).
Phase 2 consisted of mapping the classified GRI indicators to the United Nations SDGs to assess the degree of alignment between corporate reporting practices and the 2030 Agenda targets. This mapping exercise revealed that certain GRI indicators exhibited no meaningful correspondence with SDG targets, while others demonstrated partial or substantial alignment. A subset of indicators—specifically S4, S6, S16, V2, and V3—were found to be in full alignment with one or more SDG targets.
The results of this mapping are summarized in the linkage table, which cross-references the GRI indicators from
Table 1,
Table 2 and
Table 3 with the corresponding SDGs and targets. The metrics presented in
Table 1,
Table 2 and
Table 3 (E1–E23, V1–V26, S1–S38) have been matched with their corresponding GRI Standard codes, and the full mapping tables are provided in the
Supplementary Materials.
Table 4 provides the frequency of reporting for each indicator by the surveyed manufacturers.
According to the dataset, the most frequently reported metrics across the 12 manufacturers are as follows:
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Economic: E1, E17, E18, E19, E7
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Environmental: V1, V2, V3, V5, V6, V13
- -
Social: S1, S2, S5, S6, S7
Not all of the metrics presented in
Table 1,
Table 2 and
Table 3 are directly aligned with the SDGs. For some GRI indicators, it was not possible to establish a meaningful correspondence with specific SDG targets.
However, certain metrics demonstrate a substantial degree of alignment with the SDGs. This occurs when the content and scope of the indicators significantly overlap with particular SDG targets.
Full alignment is observed only for a limited number of indicators—specifically, S4, S6, S16, V2, and V3.
Table 4 indicates the number of metrics reported by the manufacturers.
Environmental metrics show moderate uptake, with only a few firms (M7, M9, M12) nearing full coverage.
Economic metrics tend to have more variation, possibly due to confidentiality concerns or different internal accounting frameworks.
Social metrics, despite being the most numerous (38 total), show wide variability. While M7, M9, and M12 fully report them, others like M3 and M11 report fewer than 60%.
Manufacturers M7, M9, and M12 exhibit near-complete sustainability disclosures, reporting over 97% of all available metrics. This indicates a high level of transparency and strategic alignment with sustainability principles. Firms such as M5, M6, M8, and M10 report between 60–85% of the metrics. These manufacturers demonstrate relatively strong engagement but may benefit from further standardization or integration across one or more dimensions (notably economic or social). Manufacturers M1, M2, M3, and M11 report less than 55% of the possible metrics, reflecting either a lack of comprehensive sustainability reporting systems or a more selective approach in their disclosures. While some firms (e.g., M6, M10) display relatively balanced reporting across all three pillars, others show disparities. For instance, M2 has strong economic reporting but relatively low environmental and social disclosures. This analysis reveals a significant heterogeneity in sustainability reporting practices among automotive manufacturers in Turkey. While a few companies lead with comprehensive disclosures, a majority still exhibit gaps, particularly in the social and environmental dimensions. Standardized reporting frameworks and regulatory alignment may help bridge these gaps and enhance overall sectoral transparency (
Table 4).
Although the quantitative analysis indicates that the social dimension achieves the highest average disclosure rate (77.3%), followed by economic (65.9%) and environmental (61.8%) dimensions, the discourse analysis of sustainability reports suggests a different priority hierarchy (
Table 4). The narrative foregrounds environmental stewardship—employing terms such as “energy,” “emissions,” and “resource management”, which are emblematic of eco-efficiency discourse [
49]. This observation aligns with prior studies showing that thematic salience in sustainability narratives often diverges from metric-based coverage, as companies strategically frame environmental issues to meet stakeholder expectations and regulatory demands [
50]. Consequently, despite the higher numerical coverage of social indicators, the prominence of environmental topics in both narrative framing and stakeholder communication reflects sectoral materiality and external pressure rather than a proportional KPI-based emphasis.
The Wilson 95% confidence intervals provide further insight into the robustness and variability of disclosure rates across the three GRI-based dimensions (
Table 5). Environmental disclosures averaged 61.8% (95% CI: 56.4–67.1), indicating that while more than half of the relevant indicators were reported, the coverage remains considerably lower than other dimensions. Economic indicators reached 65.9% (95% CI: 60.2–71.3), showing moderate consistency among companies. Social disclosures were highest at 77.2% (95% CI: 72.6–81.5), with a relatively narrow confidence interval, which suggests that reporting on employee, labor, and community-related issues is both more frequent and more homogeneous across the sector. Overall, the disclosure rate was 71.5% (95% CI: 68.6–74.1), confirming a broadly consistent reporting pattern among the 12 manufacturers analyzed. These results highlight a clear imbalance: while social aspects dominate corporate sustainability narratives, environmental disclosures remain weaker, a finding of particular importance given the increasing regulatory emphasis on climate- and environment-related transparency under the CSRD and ESRS.
When compared with European automotive sector trends, the Turkish sample demonstrates similar robustness in environmental reporting but significantly lags in areas like social disclosure. For instance, recent evidence from the European Union shows that country- and firm-level determinants critically influence SDG reporting practices, especially in governance and socially oriented indicators [
51]. Furthermore, differences in institutional contexts have been shown to result in contrasting SDG disclosure patterns across regions, underscoring the importance of both regulatory frameworks and organizational commitment [
52]. At the global level, comprehensive reviews highlight that integrating SDG reporting into corporate strategies not only improves transparency but also enhances strategic positioning in sustainability-conscious markets [
53]. These findings collectively suggest that Turkish automotive firms could benefit from adopting a more balanced disclosure approach, incorporating both environmental and social indicators to align more effectively with international best practices.
Further,
Table 6 shows that the Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) derived from the GRI disclosures collectively cover 32 SDG targets across 12 SDGs. However, certain targets are linked exclusively to indicators from a single sustainability dimension or, at most, two dimensions. Additionally, some indicators (e.g., S16, E10) appear multiple times in the mapping, reflecting the fact that a single GRI metric may correspond to multiple SDG targets or goals.
This multiplicity enables the construction of a coverage matrix that identifies the minimum combination of indicators necessary to achieve comprehensive coverage of all mapped SDG targets, thereby providing a practical basis for evaluating reporting completeness and prioritizing indicator selection in future sustainability disclosures.
Given the existence of multiple possible solutions, the selection process was guided by specific criteria. First, any target covered by a single GRI metric was automatically included in the solution. Second, GRI metrics that exactly matched those defined in the SDGs—six in total—were retained, as they measure the same concepts. Finally, for groups of metrics deemed to hold equal importance, the metric appearing most frequently across the seven GRI reports examined in this study was selected. In this context, the “importance” of a metric is defined by the number of SDG targets it addresses.
5.2. Alignment of the GRI Metrics with SDGs and Targets
This study examines the extent to which the economic, environmental, and social sustainability indicators (Key Performance Indicators—KPIs) reported by 12 automotive manufacturers operating in Turkey align with the SDGs and their corresponding targets.
The analysis reveals that a total of 12 SDGs are addressed across 32 specific targets, supported by 37 distinct KPIs identified within the sustainability reports of the selected manufacturers. These KPIs are categorized as follows:
- -
24.3% economic;
- -
48.6% environmental;
- -
27% social.
This distribution highlights a strong emphasis on environmental sustainability, indicating that automotive manufacturers in Turkey prioritize environmental responsibilities more heavily than economic or social dimensions.
Table 6 presents the outcomes of the SDG–GRI linkage analysis, identifying the specific indicators from
Table 1,
Table 2 and
Table 3 that are mapped to corresponding SDGs and targets. The complete set of goal–target associations for each indicator is provided in the
Supplementary Materials for transparency and reproducibility. Some targets are aligned with metrics from one or, at most, two sustainability dimensions. Certain metrics are repeated (e.g., S38; E19), indicating that a single metric can be associated with multiple goals or targets. This situation enables the construction of a coverage table that identifies the minimum combination of metrics required to cover all targets. Given the existence of multiple possible solutions, the adopted approach followed these steps:
- -
When a target is addressed by only one GRI metric, that metric is necessarily included in the solution.
- -
GRI metrics that overlap with (i.e., are identical to) those defined in the SDGs were retained, as they measure the same concepts.
- -
In cases where a group of metrics holds equal importance, the metric most frequently reported across the 12 GRI reports analyzed was preserved. Here, the concept of a metric’s “importance” is defined as the number of targets covered by each GRI KPI.
The strong positive correlations observed between metric disclosure rates and SDG target coverage in this study align with prior empirical evidence [
54,
55], suggesting that expanding the breadth of disclosures—especially in underreported social dimensions—can substantially improve SDG alignment. This highlights the strategic importance of adopting integrated reporting frameworks that explicitly map KPIs to multiple SDGs and targets.
Table 7 synthesizes the Sustainability-Driven Key Performance Indicators (SDKPIs) and the direct SDGs and targets they address, offering a consolidated view of their coverage significance. This summary enables the assessment of each SDKPI’s relative contribution to the breadth of SDG coverage and facilitates the identification of high-leverage indicators for strategic sustainability reporting.
Based on the analysis of the examined sustainability reports, automobile manufacturers disclose sustainability-related information through a defined set of Sustainability-Driven Key Performance Indicators (SDKPIs), distributed across the three dimensions of sustainability:
Economic dimension: 4 indicators—E7, E19, E15, and E1—collectively contribute to the coverage of 5 distinct SDGs and 12 associated targets.
Environmental dimension: 5 indicators—V4, V1, V2, V3, and V6—address 6 SDGs and 10 corresponding targets.
Social dimension: 8 indicators—S38, S3, S6, S16, S14, S10, S2, and S4—are aligned with 6 SDGs and 10 relevant targets (
Figure 2).
This distribution underscores the multi-dimensional contribution of manufacturers’ disclosures to the 2030 Agenda, with each sustainability pillar demonstrating varying degrees of goal–target coverage and thematic emphasis. Such differentiation is critical for assessing reporting completeness and identifying priority areas for enhanced disclosure alignment with the SDGs.
Approximately 50% of the selected KPIs are environmental indicators (e.g., V1, V2, V3, V4, V6, V11), confirming the sector’s emphasis on environmental stewardship. Among the environmental indicators, V9, V10, V19, V20, and V21 emerged as the least frequently reported metrics in the sustainability reports of Turkish automotive manufacturers. These indicators are often associated with advanced sustainability dimensions such as material circularity, biodiversity preservation, environmental remediation, and life cycle environmental costs—areas typically aligned with G12, G13 and G15. Their limited presence in corporate disclosures indicates a potential misalignment between reporting practices and the holistic environmental vision promoted by the SDGs.
This underrepresentation can be attributed to multiple factors: the absence of clear regulatory requirements for such detailed metrics, a lack of standardized methodologies for measurement, and limited data collection infrastructure in firms. Furthermore, these indicators often require forward-looking assessments, interdisciplinary input, and sector-specific expertise, which may not be readily available across all firms. As a result, while more commonly reported indicators (e.g., GHG emissions or energy use) align well with existing compliance frameworks (e.g., G13 and G7), the nuanced environmental dimensions represented by these lesser-reported metrics remain underdeveloped in practice.
This discrepancy highlights a gap in environmental reporting maturity and points to the need for expanding disclosure frameworks to include indicators that reflect long-term ecological impacts. Integrating such metrics into standard reporting practices would strengthen corporate alignment with global sustainability targets, support sectoral contributions to the SDGs, and enhance transparency around resource efficiency, ecosystem integrity, and environmental restoration efforts.
Analysis of social indicators reveals that metrics such as S3 and S16, which address gender equality and decent work, are widely reported by all manufacturers, indicating a sector-wide commitment to these two social metrics. Nevertheless, other socially oriented KPIs, including S23, S25, and S31, are both quantitatively limited and reported at notably lower frequencies. These indicators often address qualitative dimensions such as social justice, employee well-being, and stakeholder engagement. Their limited disclosure may stem from challenges related to data availability, measurement difficulties, or a lack of strategic prioritization within firms.
This uneven distribution underscores a fragmented sustainability reporting landscape in which environmental and economic aspects receive structured and extensive coverage, while social and governance-related dimensions remain comparatively underrepresented. To enhance the comprehensiveness of sustainability disclosure, a more balanced integration of all three ESG pillars—particularly the social dimension—is essential.
Furthermore, the low reporting frequency of economic metrics such as E11, E12, and E13 underscores a gap in the coverage of advanced financial and strategic indicators. These metrics typically capture critical aspects such as profitability ratios, economic value added, and innovation investments. Their limited disclosure may stem from insufficient data collection practices or a reluctance to share such sensitive information within the context of voluntary sustainability reporting. This pattern highlights a broader lack of holistic integration in corporate sustainability disclosures. For sustainability to be meaningfully assessed, it must encompass economic performance alongside environmental and social dimensions. Enhanced reporting of financial sustainability indicators—particularly E11, E12, and E13—would contribute to greater transparency and provide deeper insights into firms’ long-term value creation potential and strategic resilience.
G8 emerges as the most represented SDG, with seven distinct SDKPIs linked to multiple targets, highlighting the automotive sector’s strong emphasis on labor practices, economic performance, and employment generation. Similarly, G12 and G7 are well covered through indicators such as E15, V1, and V4, reflecting the sector’s engagement with circular economy strategies and energy transition initiatives. These results reflect the sector’s particular focus on employment, production processes, and energy efficiency, which are intrinsic to the automotive industry’s sustainability strategy.
In contrast, G 16 and G13 are each represented by only one SDKPI (S4 and V5, respectively), indicating limited sectoral focus on governance, institutional transparency, and climate-related actions. This distribution suggests that the Turkish automotive sector primarily prioritizes operational areas—such as production efficiency, economic output, and environmental performance—while governance and ethical dimensions remain underrepresented.
Among the SDKPIs, E15 stands out as the most comprehensive, aligning with six different targets under both G 7 and G 12. This reflects a strong alignment with key sustainability issues such as clean energy use, energy efficiency, and responsible consumption. E19 also demonstrates multidimensional coverage, linking to four targets across Goals 3, 8, and 9, which span public health, innovation, and economic development.
Moreover, G15 and G17 were not addressed by any of the selected SDKPIs, suggesting blind spots in sectoral sustainability engagement. For G 15 (Life on Land), outcome-oriented indicators in the automotive sector could include the percentage of deforestation-free sourcing across critical raw materials such as leather and natural rubber, verified against international frameworks; net biodiversity gain (NBG) expressed in hectares or as a percentage relative to baseline habitat conditions in production sites and sourcing landscapes; and corporate nature-impact intensity, such as ecosystem-service loss per unit of revenue or per vehicle [
56]. In addition, restoration outcomes (hectares restored or percentage of affected areas restored to a defined ecological threshold) in sourcing regions and near production facilities can be directly mapped to G 15 targets.
For G 17 (Partnerships for the Goals), sector-relevant outcome indicators include the number of formal multi-stakeholder sustainability partnerships established in the automotive sector, the amount of funding mobilized for sustainable mobility initiatives, and capacity-building outcomes among SME suppliers—such as the percentage demonstrating verified performance improvements (e.g., emissions reduction, workplace safety rates) within 12 months of capacity programs [
57]. Furthermore, the degree of interoperability of partnership reporting—measured by the percentage of initiatives using shared SDG taxonomies and reporting protocols—provides evidence of scaling and comparability.
The adoption of such outcome-oriented metrics would not only enhance the alignment of corporate reporting with global sustainability priorities but also improve comparability across firms, strengthen compliance with evolving EU frameworks such as CSRD and ESRS, and render the sector’s sustainability contributions more transparent and visible.
Similarly, for SDGs that remain insufficiently addressed—particularly SDG 5 (Gender Equality) and SDG 16 (Peace, Justice, and Strong Institutions)—the reporting of outcome-oriented indicators is of critical importance. For SDG 5, metrics such as the proportion of women in management positions, the median gender pay gap, and the retention differential between male and female leaders can provide robust evidence of gender equality outcomes. For SDG 16, indicators including the number and resolution rate of confirmed corruption cases, the average closure time of whistleblowing reports, and verified supplier compliance with anti-bribery standards can serve as direct measures of institutional integrity and accountability. Collectively, the incorporation of such outcome-based indicators would substantially strengthen the alignment of corporate reporting with the SDGs, enhance cross-firm comparability, and support compliance with evolving regulatory frameworks such as the CSRD and ESRS [
58,
59].
V1 and E7 provide broader thematic integration, each aligning with four targets, while S14, S38, V23, and V25 are limited to a single target, highlighting their constrained strategic impact.
These findings indicate the need for more holistic and balanced sustainability reporting within the sector. Expanding coverage of underrepresented SDGs, particularly those tied to governance, climate action, and partnerships, alongside the adoption of standardized reporting mechanisms for social and ethical dimensions, would significantly strengthen the sector’s alignment with global sustainability priorities.
Adopting a global perspective, this study analyzes the selected SDKPIs within the context of the automotive manufacturing sector, as illustrated in
Figure 3, focusing on their alignment with relevant SDGs and targets, as well as the frequency of their disclosure in GRI-based sustainability reports.
As illustrated in
Figure 3, the analyzed SDKPIs exhibit distinct clustering patterns in terms of both their SDG coverage and reporting frequency. Three notable observations emerge from this analysis:
Several high-coverage SDKPIs—most notably E1 and S10—are underreported in terms of their frequency of disclosure within the analyzed GRI reports, despite their strategic relevance for SDG alignment.
Conversely, other high-coverage indicators, such as V1, V2, V3, S2, and E1, demonstrate widespread reporting, indicating strong adoption across manufacturers’ sustainability disclosures.
A significant proportion of SDKPIs are reported either at a high frequency (e.g., E1, S2) or a medium frequency (e.g., S4, S6, S10, E15, S38), yet these indicators are each associated with only a single SDG and one target. This suggests a reporting emphasis on a limited thematic scope, which may constrain their overall contribution to broad SDG coverage.
5.4. Thematic Dimension Analysis
Table 8 categorizes the indicators across the three core sustainability dimensions and summarizes their cumulative SDG impact. While environmental and economic dimensions are robustly represented, social indicators, despite their broader SDG connections, suffer from relatively lower reporting frequency.
The distribution of Sustainable Development Key Performance Indicators (SDKPIs) across economic, environmental, and social dimensions indicates a relatively balanced representation in terms of the number of metrics, yet notable differences emerge in overall SDG coverage. The economic dimension, comprising 5 SDKPIs, addresses 12 SDG coverage points, with a primary focus on SDG 8 and SDG 9. While this reflects a strong alignment with productivity, innovation, and industrial competitiveness, the narrower thematic scope suggests a need to broaden economic indicators to encompass other relevant SDGs, such as responsible consumption or climate action, which are increasingly linked to economic resilience.
The environmental dimension features 6 SDKPIs with a total of 15 SDG coverage points, primarily aligned with SDG 7, SDG 12 and SDG 13. This demonstrates a clear emphasis on energy efficiency, resource management, and climate mitigation. However, the absence of coverage in biodiversity-related SDGs (e.g., SDG 14 or 15) highlights a potential gap in reporting on ecosystem protection within the environmental metrics.
The social dimension, also consisting of six SDKPIs, records the highest SDG coverage (17 points), encompassing a broad range of goals such as SDG 4, SDG 5, SDG 10, and SDG 16. This breadth reflects a strong orientation toward inclusivity, human capital development, and institutional governance. Nevertheless, the relatively higher coverage may also indicate thematic dispersion, where the inclusion of multiple social targets could dilute focus unless supported by robust, measurable indicators.
Overall, the data suggest that while the social dimension leads in SDG coverage breadth, the environmental dimension is more concentrated around energy and climate-related themes, and the economic dimension remains narrower in thematic scope. Achieving a more integrated and balanced approach across dimensions will require both expanding underrepresented thematic areas and enhancing the depth of reporting in the most frequently addressed SDGs. These results align with Glavo and Panko [
60], who found that social indicators exhibit the highest breadth of SDG coverage within the automotive industry, reflecting their strategic relevance to inclusive and equitable development.
5.5. Regulatory Framework and Compliance Dynamics
The analysis of sustainability reporting in the automotive sector reveals several practical implications for firms in Türkiye. First, companies should enhance target-level reporting by adopting measurable and comparable KPIs, thereby moving beyond broad thematic disclosures. This will enable longitudinal performance assessment and support outcome-oriented sustainability performance. Second, integrating environmental, social, and governance indicators within a unified ESG–GRI–SDG framework can increase the strategic value of reporting and align corporate practices with inclusive development priorities. Third, greater emphasis should be placed on social justice, governance, and supply chain responsibility, which remain underrepresented compared to climate- and energy-related themes. In addition, firms are encouraged to incorporate forward-looking economic metrics—particularly those capturing long-term value creation and innovation capacity—to strengthen strategic resilience. To ensure credibility, sustainability reports should be subject to independent verification, thereby reducing the risks of selective disclosure and “greenwashing.” Finally, the adoption of a standardized SDG mapping protocol and the inclusion of SME suppliers in sustainability disclosure will enhance comparability across firms, strengthen supply chain transparency, and support compliance with EU regulations such as the CSRD, the EU Taxonomy, and the CBAM. Collectively, these measures have the potential to transform sustainability reporting in the Turkish automotive sector from a procedural exercise into a strategic tool for competitiveness and resilience in international markets.
With the entry into force of the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) in 2024, the European Union has significantly expanded the scope of sustainability reporting compared to the previous 2014/95/EU Directive. In line with this, the European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS) have been introduced as mandatory reporting frameworks. Importantly, the CSRD not only applies to EU-based companies but also extends to non-EU entities with an annual turnover exceeding EUR 150 million within the EU, thereby directly affecting Turkish automotive exporters.
A comparison between GRI and ESRS highlights substantial methodological and scope-related differences. The GRI Standards, as a widely adopted voluntary global framework, provide flexibility for measuring and disclosing sustainability performance across sectors. In contrast, ESRS introduces the principle of double materiality—capturing both the outward environmental and social impacts of a company and the inward financial implications of these impacts—and requires more detailed, binding data points. Furthermore, ESRS mandates the disclosure of over 100 ESG indicators, a requirement that distinguishes it from GRI and enhances cross-sectoral comparability.
For the Turkish automotive sector, the implications of these new standards can be summarized in three key areas:
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Reporting obligations will now include Scope 3 emissions and circular economy indicators, which have previously been underreported.
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While existing GRI-based reporting practices provide a robust foundation for compliance, companies must restructure their methodologies, enhance data quality, and develop target-based performance metrics to align with ESRS.
- -
Compliance will not only ensure regulatory adherence but also strengthen investor confidence, enhance international competitiveness, and increase the visibility of sustainability strategies.