Greenpeace’s Next Reform? It’s Finances

International Business Times

Published Jul 15, 2014 09:27AM ET

Updated Jul 15, 2014 10:00AM ET

Greenpeace’s Next Reform? It’s Finances

By Kathleen Caulderwood - Greenpeace International has fired a well-intentioned but misguided employee who lost the Amsterdam-based environmental advocacy group more than $5 million on a badly-timed currency trade last year

Greenpeace, funded soley by charitable donations, said it's continuing to audit its treasury procedures to repair its reputation and win back some disillusioned members.

“We’ve completely rewritten our authorization policy to make it absolutely explicit who can authorize which transaction and who can sign off on invoices,” Greenpeace representative Mike Townsley said to Bloomberg.

“There have been two failures. One, an individual acting outside their authority, and the second is that the existing systems were not adequate,” he said.

Greenpeace officials announced in June that the financial expert was acting outside of his authority.

His trades bet that the euro, which was rising when the trade was put on, would continue to do well against other currencies. He was wrong, to the tune of  3.8 million euros, or more than $5 million.

While his job included managing currency risks he wasn’t authorized to be making such big bets, the group said.

“Every indication is, this was done with the best of intentions but not the best of judgement,” spokesman Mike Townsley said to NBC News.

Intentions aside, the fallout was real. With a substantially lower budget than usual adding to continued pressure from international governments such as India that have condemned the organization’s activities, its workers made their feelings known.