Gransnet forums

Charities

Helping the environment for the long haul.

(12 Posts)
DonaldS1 Sat 02-Nov-24 03:15:08

I'm switching from donating to 'people' charities to ones that help wildlife and the environment for the long run. Not for next year, but for the next 100, 1,000, 10,000 years. But there are so many out there. What I'm trying to figure out is, which one of ones can truly may an impact. Many charities spend an awful lot of money doing not much.

Thanks for any thoughts.

mae13 Sat 02-Nov-24 04:45:00

And many charities appear to have generously salaried CEO's - while the "foot soldiers", the volunteers, give the time and efforts for free.

mum2three Sat 02-Nov-24 05:26:14

I also only give to animal charities. Their work automatically helps the environment,too. I think local wildlife trusts seem to be the most efficient when it comes to their budget. They rely very much on volunteers rather than admins taking large salaries.

Aveline Sat 02-Nov-24 06:59:17

I'm a trustee of a tiny local charity that helps people. We have only volunteers on our board and every penny (that we have to desperately scrabble for) goes on the work of the charity.
Not every charity is huge and has highly paid staff.

Casdon Sat 02-Nov-24 07:40:01

How about supporting a local charity which plants trees DonaldSI? The results are visible, and the charity isn’t over managed. If you choose one which does one thing, their costs will be lower. This is my local one, which is a farmer led initiative, and is excellent - is there anything similar near you?
stumpupfortrees.org/

Jaxjacky Sat 02-Nov-24 07:53:01

Our contribution towards the environment is in actions, rather than money, not flying for a start which we (apart from MrJ to Belfast yearly) haven’t done for six years.
I actively support our Parish council with their planting, creating a woodland and building ponds locally.

keepingquiet Sat 02-Nov-24 08:15:07

Why not both?

pascal30 Sat 02-Nov-24 09:07:53

Casdon

How about supporting a local charity which plants trees DonaldSI? The results are visible, and the charity isn’t over managed. If you choose one which does one thing, their costs will be lower. This is my local one, which is a farmer led initiative, and is excellent - is there anything similar near you?
stumpupfortrees.org/

That looks like an excellent charity Casdon

Quercus Sat 02-Nov-24 09:20:18

Flora and Fauna International seems a good one to me. They have many specific projects to protect specific areas and endangered animals. They don't appear to spend a lot on advertising either.

petra Sat 02-Nov-24 09:30:59

I’ve been a supporter of Greenpeace for over 40 years. In a different life I could have been an activist.
I know how good local charities can be but what we are dealing with now needs the hard hitters that’s where GreenPeace can use their muscle.

Tizliz Sat 02-Nov-24 10:04:41

there was an article on radio scotland this morning about the reduction in forests. When you knew that your estate would be handed down many generations, you planted and planned for them. Now you are only looking at selling things.

We need more future planning

Allira Sat 02-Nov-24 10:10:33

Planting a tree or arranging for one to be planted in a forest is a good idea to mark special occasions or to remember someone, much better than gifts which no-one wants or donations if you do worry about the salaries some chstity workers receive.