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Greenpeace NZ ups campaigning, pays global HQ more

Greenpeace NZ ups campaigning, pays global HQ more as fundraising improves

By Jonathan Underhill

July 15 (BusinessDesk) – Greenpeace New Zealand, the local arm of the global environmental lobby group, spent more on national campaigns and lifted its contribution to head office in Amsterdam after a jump in its fundraising surplus.

The group’s 2012 annual report shows it raised $5.4 million in calendar 2012, from $4.87 million a year earlier. That’s the second-best year for fund raising in at least a decade after the group raised $5.76 million in 2010.

New Zealanders dug deeper into their pockets in 2012 as the group campaigned against deep-sea oil drilling off the nation’s coast, unsustainable tuna fishing in the Pacific and drilling for oil in the Arctic.

In February 2012, actress Lucy Lawless and six Greenpeace activists were arrested after climbing the Shell-chartered Noble Discoverer drilling rig at Port Taranaki in an Arctic drilling protest, attracting global attention. Also last year, Greenpeace and East Coast iwi Te Whanau a Apanui organised a protest flotilla against Brazilian oil company Petrobras’s plans to explore in the Raukumara Basin, off East Cape. In the event, Petrobras handed back its exploration licences, though that had more to do with the oil giant’s global financial losses.

"We're pretty sure that Kiwis back our work when they see that we're being effective, and we'd like to think that was certainly the case last year, across our campaigns against deep sea oil drilling right here in New Zealand and in the Arctic, protecting rainforests and looking after our wonderful oceans,” Bunny McDiarmid, executive director of Greenpeace NZ, said in an emailed statement.

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“We don't take money from government or from companies, so the funds we get from individuals are hugely important,” she said.

The net surplus for the year slipped to $541,094 from $549,009 as Greenpeace NZ lifted campaign spending by 5.7 percent to $1.78 million and raised its contribution to Greenpeace International by 12 percent to $2.15 million. That’s expected to fall back to $1.8 million, or around 20 percent of 2011 gross revenue.

It also reaped $92,281 of interest income from investments. It has $920,649 invested with Prometheus Finance, which describes itself as an ethical investor and counts Greenpeace NZ board member Noel Josephson as one of its directors, notes to its accounts show.

(BusinessDesk)


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