ECO (Environment and Conservation Organisations)
ECO was founded in 1971 as CoEnCo to meet the needs of the
conservation community. We became ECO in 1976. We are a non-profit
network of 70 organisations with a concern for conservation and the
environment.
Our membership includes large international groups such as
Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth, national groups including
Federated Mountain Clubs of New Zealand and the National Council of
Women, as well as small local groups such as Kapiti Environmental
Action and Save the Otago Peninsula, and issue oriented groups like
the Biodynamic Farming and Gardening Society and the Yellow-eyed
Penguin Trust.
ECO has been centrally involved in campaigns to protect native
forests, lakes and rivers, the reform of the Mining Act and defeat
of the National Development Act, and in supporting the Resource
Management Act and the establishment of the Department of
Conservation and Ministry of the Environment. ECO continues to be
at the forefront of environmental campaigns on fisheries, transport
and environmental management.
ECO's work is carried out largely by volunteers, supported by a
small office and resource centre in Wellington. There are around
500 "Friends of ECO," individual subscribers who support our
work.
We need support to enable us to remain independently funded and
autonomous - we are a non-profit organisation and we rely on our
supporters to contribute funds to cover our running costs. ECO's
campaigns are run by committed unpaid workers with decades of
collective experience and in-depth knowledge of the issues.
To find out more about ECO please feel free to browse our
website at www.eco.org.nz