Download PDFOpen PDF in browserAssessing Sustainability in the Electrical Construction Industry: Comparing Suppliers and Contractors10 pages•Published: June 2, 2026AbstractThe electrical industry plays a central role in advancing global sustainability, yet its Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) practices remain unevenly developed across the supply chain. This study examines ESG adoption within the U.S. electrical construction industry through a cross-sectional qualitative analysis, using manual coding, of 19 corporate ESG and sustainability reports, 10 from major electrical suppliers and 9 from top electrical contractors. Using a qualitative content analysis approach, 400 discrete ESG actions were identified and categorized into 24 sustainability themes adapted from prior ESG literature. Results reveal that suppliers exhibit greater reporting maturity, emphasizing emissions reduction, renewable energy investment, and policy-driven environmental management, while contractors focus primarily on workforce safety, inclusion, and project-based sustainability implementation. Despite differing motivations, both groups share common priorities such as emission reduction goals, safety training, and governance transparency. These findings highlight contrasting ESG reporting approaches between suppliers and contractors. Suppliers generally institutionalize sustainability through formalized, metric-based actions, while contractors emphasize project-embedded and workforce-centered practices. Bridging these approaches through clearer reporting guidance and capacity building will help lead to cohesive, industry-wide sustainability integration.Keyphrases: electrical industry, esg reporting, sustainability In: Wesley Collins, Anthony Perrenoud and John Posillico (editors). Proceedings of Associated Schools of Construction 62nd Annual International Conference, vol 7, pages 465-474.
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