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2022-12-31-accounts

BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022

BirdLife International

(The Secretariat to the BirdLife International Partnership)

The Trustees’ Report and the Financial Statements for the year ended 31 December 2022

Registered in England and Wales Company Number: 2985746 Charity Number: 1042125

www.birdlife.org

BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022

Page
Messages from our Chair and CEO 1
Trustees’ Report
Introduction 3
Objectives and Activities 4
Reference & Administrative Information
Officers, Trustees and Senior Staff 5-7
Offices 7
Principal Professional Advisers 8
Structure, Governance and Management 9-10
Strategic Report
Achievements and Performance 11-18
Plans for Future Periods 18-21
Financial Review 22-23
Risk and Uncertainty 23-25
Auditors 27
Acknowledgements 28
Independent Auditor’s Report 29-31
Financial Statements
Consolidated Statement of Financial Activities 32
Balance Sheets 33
Consolidated Cash Flow Statement 34
Notes to the Financial Statements 35-60
Supporting the Work of BirdLife International 61

www.birdlife.org

BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022

A message from our Chair

I was really delighted to be elected as Chair of BirdLife International’s Global Council during the Global Partnership Meeting and 100th anniversary celebrations held in Cambridge and London in September. This is a very fond return to BirdLife for me as I first joined the International Council for Bird Preservation (ICBP), BirdLife’s previous incarnation, in 1986, helping to transform the ICBP into the BirdLife International Partnership and then becoming the CEO from 1996 to 2009.

And what an exciting year to re-join as our global Partners and staff came together for the global partnership meeting, partnership fair and 100th anniversary celebrations.

I was especially pleased to participate in the Partnership’s adoption of the new ten-year BirdLife Strategy 2023-2032. Focused on our foundational core of birds, science and our unique partnership model, and implemented through our four pillars of species, sites, systems and society, BirdLife is positioned as never before to tackle the twin crises of biodiversity loss and climate change.

Our worldclass research, global community of national Partners and unique ability to collaborate at local, national and international scales, enables BirdLife to deliver extraordinary impact for the benefit of birds, wider biodiversity and people. Increasingly, we can provide system-wide solutions to unsustainable land-use, habitat destruction and abusive marine and fisheries practices; we have stepped up to the existential challenges all of these forces represent in ways that truly give me hope.

I look forward to working with my colleagues on the Global Council to further strengthen BirdLife’s governance and conservation effectiveness in the years ahead.

Dr Mike Rands Chair, BirdLife Council

A message from our CEO

2022 has truly been a seminal year for the BirdLife Partnership. As Mike mentions, we celebrated our 100th birthday in the course of holding our global partnership meeting along with a partnership fair, a multitude of seminars and workshops and a gala anniversary dinner. The diversity and energy of our global family has never been so evident.

With a dynamic new 10-year strategy, a new organisational structure and a laser focus on birds, nature and climate, we are truly perched to build on the many successes and innovations we have had over the past 12 months and even 12 years.

Although they are too numerous to comprehensively capture in this brief introduction, let me cite a few so illustrative of our unique approach and capacity.

I was particularly gratified by the establishment of the Luc Hoffmann Flyway Fund (LHFF) with a kick-off $5 million grant announced by his son Andre at our gala dinner. We launched our multibillion-dollar East Asian Australasian Flyways Initiative with the Asian Development Bank to help preserve and restore its critical sites and species while strengthening climate resilience. We are putting the finishing touches on a similar pan-continental Americas Flyways Initiative with our colleagues at Audubon and the Development Bank of Latin America. The LHFF and these two innovative initiatives bringing together innovative conservation financing with our world class science identifying the critical sites to save for these two important migratory “superhighways" are proof positive of BirdLife’s increasing stepped-up, systemic approach to the nature and climate crises we and our birds face.

Our 1 Planet 1 Right campaign, launched in 2020 with our Spanish partners SEO/BirdLife, helped ensure that the universal human right to a healthy planet was recognised by the United Nations General Assembly in a resounding majority with no negative votes. This will strengthen nature protection around the world, and new legal action is already underway by different worldwide stakeholders citing this right as they fight unbridled development and unsustainable practices.

Also on the ground, BirdLife’s diverse advances include saving species with more than 726 globally threatened bird species benefiting. We have worked on over 4,000 critical Important Bird & Biodiversity areas around the planet, many located along one of the 9 global flyways we focus on. From our successes in reducing seabird bycatch in many important fisheries by up to 95% to our science leading to the establishment of an enormous and important new Marine Protected Area in the North Atlantic called NACES (North Atlantic Current and Evlanov Sea-Basin) which is the size of France - BirdLife consistently punches above its weight. Our seminal Red List work included two completed updates: with 290 Threatened Species Forum topics discussed on new web platform resulting in 271 decisions and 670 updated assessments published or approved for publication by IUCN. Our State of the World’s Birds report provided critical context and background to these updates.

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BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022

And at 2022’s two important COPs, (The Conference of the Parties on Climate and Biodiversity), our important collaborations and science led to the Climate COP embracing and citing nature protection and restoration as an essential element in the fight against climate change, and likewise the Nature COP setting ambitious targets, including recognition of the links between climate and nature. These were ground-breaking advances.

As I said, this is but a thumbnail of the achievements and work accomplished over 2022. From strengthening ourselves through a new ERP (enterprise resource planning) system and a new 5-year business plan, to mobilising over $5 million to strengthen our global partners, we are more robust and ambitious than ever before.

Our core BirdLife teams and our extraordinary partners have worked tirelessly and urgently with sometimes limited resources to meet the existential crises of our time and it has been a privilege to help lead their efforts.

Post my departure as CEO, I look forward to continuing to support BirdLife in the future through collaboration with Conservation International

Patricia Zurita CEO

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BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022

Trustees’ Report

Introduction

Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements

The Trustees present their Report and the Financial Statements, together with the Auditor’s Report, for the year ended 31 December 2022 for BirdLife International (the Secretariat to the BirdLife International Partnership).

BirdLife International is a UK registered charity and company that in itself is only one component of a group of independent organisations working in 115 countries and territories around the world. This Report and the Financial Statements reflect the activities of the Secretariat, but do not report on the full activities of the BirdLife International Partners, who are the members of the company. However, to understand better what the Secretariat is and what it does, it is necessary to outline the purpose and work of the Partnership. The Trustees’ Report sets out the main elements of the Partnership’s strategy and then describes the Secretariat in more detail.

The BirdLife International Partnership

BirdLife International is the world’s largest nature conservation partnership. Together we are 119 BirdLife Partners worldwide (as at the end of 2022).

BirdLife is driven by our belief that local people, working for nature in their own places but connected nationally and internationally through our global Partnership, are the key to sustaining all life on this planet. This unique local-to-global approach delivers high impact and long-term conservation for the benefit of nature and people.

BirdLife is widely recognised as the world leader in bird conservation. Rigorous science informed by practical feedback from projects on the ground in important sites and habitats enables us to implement successful conservation programmes for birds and all nature. Our actions are providing both practical and sustainable solutions significantly benefiting nature and people.

Why does BirdLife exist?

BirdLife’s Vision is to see a world where nature and people live in greater harmony, more equitably and sustainably.

BirdLife’s priorities and programmes are based firmly on science, underpinned by the best available evidence. Our work to conserve biodiversity focuses on birds, because they are very good indicators for the natural world as a whole, as well as being important in their own right. Birds are popular, appealing and, as a result, exceptionally well-known, providing an excellent scientific foundation for BirdLife’s work. By saving the habitats and ecosystems important for birds, we effectively conserve a much broader array of biodiversity.

BirdLife takes practical action. We work with and for people – to improve their quality of life alongside, and as a result of, nature conservation. We collaborate with others wherever possible, at local, national, regional, or global levels, linking with community groups, governments, businesses, universities and other nongovernmental organisations (NGOs) to increase the impacts of our efforts.

BirdLife’s unique structure

BirdLife’s formal network comprises Partners, Affiliates and a Secretariat.

Partners are like-minded NGOs with a focus on conserving birds and the environment. Each Partner is an independent, supporterbased, grassroots organisation governed by an independent body. Through their members and supporters, volunteers and local groups they represent civil society and local communities.

Every Partner represents a constituency from a unique geographical country or territory and traditionally one Partner represents a country or region. The Partners have chosen to organise themselves into Regional groups for the purposes of planning and implementing regional programmes. Every four years the whole Partnership meets to adopt global strategies and programmes, elect governing bodies and agree priorities for shared action. The last Global Partnership Meeting took place in the UK in September 2022, when BirdLife also celebrated its centenary.

In some areas of the world where there is no BirdLife Partner organisation the Council appoints an Affiliate. A BirdLife International Affiliate is an organisation that is the BirdLife contact in its geographical territory which actively promotes the BirdLife strategy and programmes.

The Secretariat is the body of global and regional staff who coordinate and facilitate the BirdLife International strategies, programmes and policies.

BirdLife’s Mission is to conserve birds, their habitats and global biodiversity, working with people towards sustainability in the use of natural resources.

How does the Partnership work?

Three strands run through all BirdLife’s work: partnership, science and action.

BirdLife itself is a unique Partnership of national, membershipbased conservation organisations in 115 countries and territories across the world.

Partners plan and work together, sharing ideas, information, experience and support. Elected Partner representatives provide governance for BirdLife.

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BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022

Objectives and Activities

BirdLife’s charitable objectives, as set out in its governing documents, are to conserve all wild bird species and their habitats throughout the world.

BirdLife’s Strategy 2013-2022

BirdLife’s Strategy has four pillars – Save Species, Conserve Sites and Habitats, Encourage Ecological Sustainability and Empower People for Positive Change – which taken together constitute BirdLife’s approach to conservation.

Each strategic pillar comprises two to three strategic objectives. The Strategy directly supports the commitment of the world’s governments to take urgent and effective action to halt the loss of biodiversity, and to deliver on the 20 Aichi biodiversity targets.

BirdLife’s Strategic Objectives in Summary

Pillar 1 – Save Species

1.1 Prevent extinctions

1.2 Keep common birds common Pillar 2 – Conserve Sites and Habitats

2.1 Identify, conserve, restore and monitor the sites and habitats important for birds and other biodiversity

2.2 Promote resilient ecological networks Pillar 3 – Encourage Ecological Sustainability

3.1 Demonstrate and advocate nature’s values

3.2 Promote policies that support sustainability Pillar 4 – Empower People for Positive Change

These Global and Region-specific Conservation Programmes help the Partnership focus and work together around common priorities, communicate our work more clearly and mobilise resources. The Programmes promote coherence and cohesion across the Partnership and make it easier to explain and demonstrate BirdLife’s work.

Over the past 10 years the BirdLife Partnership has worked to the strategy agreed by the Partnership in 2013, we have protected species, conserved sites and habitats, pushed for environmental sustainability and worked with people towards our vision of a "world rich in biodiversity with people and nature living in harmony, equitably and sustainably". Progress was reported on in 2016 through Making a Difference 1 and again in 2018 at the BirdLife Global Partnership Meeting.

Making a Difference 2 published for our 100th anniversary celebrations, reports back on some of our remarkable achievements over the past decade. These include overarching achievements in science and policy, our success in saving species from extinction and important sites under threat, our progress in the marine realm and for forests, and the progress we have made as a Partnership in building a grassroots civil society movement with independent local legitimacy across the world.

As the world lurches from one environmental crisis to another, and the challenges seem undiminished, we are sure readers of this report will find it heartening to see the differences BirdLife has made, which are just a fraction of the achievements over the past decade that we can be proud of. The full document can be found on our website.

4.1 Catalyse support for nature

4.2 Promote local conservation action

4.3 Strengthen the global BirdLife Partnership

Conservation Programmes to deliver the

Strategy

The Strategy is translated into action through a set of BirdLife Global and Region-specific Conservation Programmes.

Nine Global Conservation Programmes have been developed since the adoption of the last strategy and are in place for the period 2013-2022.

The diagram below shows the relationship between the BirdLife Strategy, Conservation Programmes and Regional Plans.

The Global and Region-specific Conservation Programmes are a planning, communications and fundraising tool. They are not intended to cover all of BirdLife’s work comprehensively. Thus, additional activities will be identified and undertaken regionally and globally to ensure effective delivery of the BirdLife Strategy.

The new strategy covering 2023 to 2033 was formally adopted at the Global Partnership meeting in September 2022. It includes four strategic pillars (Species, Sites, Systems and Society), each with their own goal and set of objectives, as well as three foundations (Birds, Science and Partnership).

The Secretariat has decided to organise its resources (people and money) around six conservation programmes (Preventing Extinctions, Forests, Flyways, Marine, Agriculture and Climate Change), seven functional plans (linked to the foundations / pillars of the Strategy - Science, Network and Capacity Development, Policy, Financing Nature, Business and Biodiversity, Communications and Fundraising) all supported by a Business Plan.

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BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022

Reference and Administrative Information

Officers, Trustees and Senior Staff

Honorary Officers [For the Partnership and Secretariat]

Honorary President

Her Imperial Highness Princess Takamado of Japan

Honorary President Emeritus

Her Majesty Noor al-Hussein Queen Dowager of Jordan

Honorary Vice Presidents

Baroness Young of Old Scone (UK) Anastasios P Leventis (UK) Gerard A Bertrand (USA) Benjamin Olewine IV (USA) Jane Fenton (UK)

BirdLife Council Members and Trustees

The Council members of the BirdLife International Partnership act as the Trustees of the Secretariat (BirdLife International the charity) and as Directors of BirdLife International, a UK company limited by guarantee. The following people served in the capacity of Trustee and Director during 2022 and up to the date of signing of these financial statements:

Current Council Members and Trustees

Chair:

Dr Mike Rands (UK) (appointed Sep 2022)

Treasurer:

Martin Birch (UK) (appointed May 2022)

Other Council Members:

Africa

Khadija Bourass (Morocco) (appointed Sep 2022) Sheku Kamara (Sierra Leone) (appointed Sep 2022) Dr. Vikash Tatayah (Mauritius) (appointed Sep 2022)

Asia

Dian Agista (Indonesia) (appointed Sep 2022) Ishana Thapa (Nepal) (appointed Sep 2022)

Americas

Andrew Couturier (Canada) Amanda Acosta (Belize) Rodrigo. W. Soria-Auza (Bolivia) (appointed Sep 2022)

Europe & Central Asia

Lieven De Schamphelaere (Belgium) (appointed Sep 2022) Kjetil Aadne Solbakken (Norway) (appointed Sep 2022) Mika Asikainen (Finland) (appointed Dec 2022)

Middle East

Fadi Naim Naser (Jordan) (appointed Sep 2022) Imad F. Atrash (State of Palestine) (appointed Dec 2022)

Pacific

Nunia Thomas (Fiji) (appointed Sep 2022) Samantha Vine (Australia) (appointed Sep 2022)

Co-opted members

Alfred Chandler III (USA) Beccy Speight (UK) John Gregory (UK) (appointed Dec 2022) Christie Constantine (USA) (appointed Dec 2022)

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BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022

Previous Council Members and Trustees

Chair

Braulio Ferreira De Souza Dias (Brazil) (resigned Sep 2022)

Africa

Muhtari Aminu-Kano (Nigeria) (resigned Sep 2022) Achilles Byaruhanga (Uganda) (resigned Sep 2022) Claudia Feltrup-Azafzaf (Tunisia) (resigned Sep 2022)

Asia

Sarath Kotagama (Sri Lanka) (resigned Sep 2022) Shawn Lum (Singapore) (resigned Sep 2022)

Americas

Rosabel Miro (Panama) (resigned Sep 2022)

Europe & Central Asia

Gergő Halmos (Hungary) (resigned Sep 2022) Vera Voronova (Kazakhstan) (resigned Sep 2022) Philippe Funcken (Belgium) (resigned Sep 2022)

Middle East

Assad Adel Serhal (Lebanon) (resigned Sep 2022)

Pacific

Kevin Hague (New Zealand) (resigned Sep 2022) Paul Sullivan (Australia) (resigned Sep 2022)

Secretary (non-voting member of Council) Patricia Zurita (CEO) (resigned Sep 2022)

Co-opted members

Mike Clarke (UK) (resigned Sep 2022) Simon Rye (Norway) (resigned Jul 2023)

BirdLife Advisory Group

The BirdLife Advisory Group is a body of high-level advisors, supporters and friends of BirdLife that provide advice to the CEO of BirdLife International. As a group it contributes to the strategic agenda of BirdLife International through their involvement with BirdLife Partners, Secretariat support, BirdLife donors and other supporters, government and NGO officials and through collaboration and/or involvement with other organisations in the environmental or wildlife conservation sectors. The members of the Advisory Group are:

Chair:

John Adams (co-chair)

Piyush Gupta (co-chair)

Other Advisory Group Members:

Geoff Ball John Gregory Mahima Sukhdev Nathalie Boulle Pamela Isdell Barry Sullivan Nick Butcher James Kushlan Terry Townshend Alfred Chandler III Tasso Leventis Kurt Vogt Christie Constantine Michael Mavrovouniotis (joined Feb 2022) Barbara Young Gonzalo Saenz de Miera H.E. Majid Al Mansouri Sean Dennis Hector Morales Scott Dresser Ben Olewine Peter Eerdmans Susan Orr Joe Ellis Adam Riley Dale Forbes Deborah Rivel

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BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022

Senior Management of the Secretariat

Chief Executive:

Patricia Zurita (resigned Jul 2023)

Interim Chief Executive:

Martin Harper (appointed Jul 2023) (Formerly Vice President of Regions and Partnership)

Global Directors:

Chief Operating Officer: Helen Bull

Director of Policy: Nina Mikander (appointed Mar 2023) Science, Policy & Information : Melanie Heath (resigned Oct 2022) Partnership, Capacity Development & Regions: Julius Arinaitwe (resigned Dec 2022)

Chief Development Officer: E.J. McAdams Conservation : Richard Grimmett Communications: Christopher Sands Chief Scientist: Stuart Butchart

Regional Directors:

Africa: Paul Kariuki Ndang’ang’a Americas: Ian Davidson Asia: Vinayagan Dharmarajah

Middle East: Ibrahim Khader Pacific: Margaret West Europe & Central Asia: Ariel Brunner (appointed Jan 2023)

Representative Director of Tokyo Office : Keiko Suzue

Secretariat Offices

Global Partnership Secretariat and Registered Office:

BirdLife International The David Attenborough Building, Pembroke Street, Cambridge, CB2 3QZ United Kingdom

Office of the Honorary President:

BirdLife International Tokyo Unizo Kakigara-cho Kitajima Bldg. 1F, 1-13-1 Nihonbashi Kakigara-cho, Chuo-ku, Tokyo 103-0014, Japan

Regional Partnership Secretariat Offices:

Africa Partnership Secretariat Westcom Point Building 6th Floor (Block C) Mahiga Mairu Avenue off Waiyaki Way Westlands Nairobi, Kenya

Americas Partnership Secretariat Av. República E7-61 y Martin Carrion Building, Titanium Plaza, Floor 8, Office 8-2, Zip 170518 Quito, Ecuador

Asia Partnership Secretariat (Singapore) 354 Tanglin Road, #01-16/17, Tanglin International Centre, Singapore 247672

Europe and Central Asia Partnership Secretariat c/o Hive5, Cour Saint-Michel 30 B B-1040, Brussels, Belgium

Middle East Partnership Secretariat Building 4, Bakr Al-Baw Street, Dahiat Al-Rasheed, P.O. Box 2295, Amman 11953, Jordan

Pacific Partnership Secretariat 10 MacGregor Road Suva, Fiji

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BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022

Principal Professional Advisers

Principal Bankers & Investment Managers

Barclays Bank PLC 9-11 St Andrews Street Cambridge CB2 3AA United Kingdom

Cazenove Capital 1 London Wall Place London EC2Y 5AU United Kingdom

Principal Solicitors

Mills & Reeve Botanic House, 100 Hills Road Cambridge CB2 1PH United Kingdom

Baker McKenzie LLP 100 New Bridge Street London EC4V 6JA United Kingdom

Registered Auditors

Principal Pension Advisors

Crowe U.K. LLP Becketts Financial Services Chartered Accountants and Registered Auditor St Thomas House 55 Ludgate Hill St Andrews Business Park London EC4M 7JW Norwich NR7 0HR United Kingdom United Kingdom

Several other bankers, solicitors and auditors are also used around the world providing support to our Regional Offices, Country Programmes and Site Projects

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BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022

The BirdLife International Secretariat

Structure, Governance and Management

Partnership Regional meetings and Rare Bird Club events. Recommendations and advice of the Advisory Group is reviewed and approved by the BirdLife Council during its regular meetings.

BirdLife International structure

BirdLife International is a company limited by guarantee (company number 2985746) and a UK registered charity (charity number 1042125). The governing instrument is the Articles of Association. BirdLife International applies its income and property to the promotion of its objectives, which are to conserve all wild bird species and their habitats throughout the world. In the event that income exceeds expenditure in any year, such surplus shall not be distributed but retained by the company for the promotion of its objectives.

The BirdLife Partnership comprises the regional groupings of NGO Partners in Africa, the Americas, Japan, Asia ex-Japan, Europe & Central Asia, Middle East, and the Pacific. All regions have their own Secretariat office supporting their respective networks. In several countries with high biodiversity but no suitable NGO Partner or Affiliate in country, BirdLife International has established its own projects and Country Programmes.

The charity has reviewed the Charity Commission Governance Code, with the help of its questionnaire, and we comply with the code in all material respects. Council is committed to revisiting the principles of the Charity Commission Governance Code on a regular basis.

During the year, BirdLife reviewed its Business Model as part of the preparation of a Secretariat Business Plan which documents how we aim to implement BirdLife’s 2023 - 2027 Strategy.

The Secretariat’s Business Plan’s primary focus is on BirdLife’s Secretariat’s 5-year priorities through 2023-2027 and is internal to the Secretariat. The Business Plan sets secretariat priorities, covering the Partner network, our finances, fundraising ambition, marketing and communications and wellbeing of staff and volunteers. It sets out the Secretariat’s ambition, but it is funding dependent. Going forward, the Business Plan will be used by the Global Leadership Team to measure progress against these five priorities, and will re-visit the plan annually to assess whether we are meeting them and report to Council accordingly.

Governance

Every four years, the Partnership holds Global Partnership Meetings to adopt strategies, programmes and policies and elect a Board (known as Council) and Trustees (known as Council Members). A series of advisory Regional Committees are also elected. The Council appoints the Chief Executive to head a decentralised international Secretariat – the BirdLife International staff. The Secretariat co-ordinates and supports the Partnership to achieve BirdLife International’s aims and objectives.

Council comprises a Chairperson, a Treasurer, and other Trustees elected by the Partnership at the Global Partnership Meeting. In addition, up to six positions are available to be co-opted by those appointed to Council. Each elected Council member can serve up to two consecutive four-year terms, but a third consecutive term is possible if one or two of the terms were served as Chairperson or Treasurer. The maximum period of consecutive service on Council is 12 years. After an absence of four years re-election to the Council is possible. Trustees are elected by the Partnership on the basis of their relationship with particular Partners or groups of Partners. They have been informed that they must exercise their responsibilities independently of their links with each organisation. Once a new Council is elected an induction is given to ensure that the roles and responsibilities as Trustees are fully understood.

There are also separate Committees of Council covering Finance and Risk, Science & Policy, and People, which meet before each Council meeting.

BirdLife’s Advisory Group is an advisory body of high-level supporters and friends of BirdLife. The advisors contribute to the strategic agenda of BirdLife International through their involvement by being an ambassador for BirdLife; acting as a sounding board to provide advice and external input to the BirdLife Chief Executive on key strategic issues; working with BirdLife staff to identify and agree critical issues and opportunities for their intervention and support and attending the Global Partnership Meeting and, from time to time, BirdLife

As part of the review, the Secretariat determined that all subsidiary and regional arrangements continue to serve BirdLife’s charitable purpose.

Policies continue to be reviewed on a rolling basis and brought to Council for approval. Recent examples include a revised Financial Crime Policy, and a Diversity Equity & Inclusion Policy. Policies still to be introduced include procurement, sustainability, conflicts of interest, and registers for gifts/hospitality and Trustees’ interests.

The Secretariat has also set up a safeguarding team with its UK Partner to review the safeguarding policies, principles and practices and to develop further BirdLife International and its Partners’ practices and standards of behaviour in this area.

The results of all whistle-blowers’ disclosures and complaints , and subsequent management actions are to be disclosed to Council as a standing agenda item. Council will also consider whether current whistle-blowing arrangements are adequate.

Additional steps were also taken to support communication of information between the Trustees, including preparation of highlights reports on Council meetings in three languages, English, French and Spanish.

Trustees

The Trustees who served during the year are shown on pages 5 and 6.

Management

The Trustees delegate the day to day running of the organisation to the Chief Executive. Strategic issues, documents, and annual work programmes and budgets for the Secretariat are prepared by the management team, for consideration of the Trustees. The management team formally report to the Trustees at least twice a year.

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Pay and remuneration

BirdLife International’s pay philosophy is to be fair and sustainable. In order to attract and retain high calibre people, our aim is to set remuneration at a level which reflects local external markets, whilst maintaining a consistency of approach across geographic teams. Council is responsible for determining the Chief Executive’s remuneration. Remuneration for the Management Team is determined and reviewed by the Chief Executive and Director of Human Resources. Remuneration for all other staff is determined by the Chief Executive, Human Resources and the Management Team. BirdLife undertakes an annual pay review, taking account of inflation, affordability, organisational performance and external benchmarking. The Secretariat have initiated a fair pay project to further strengthen its pay policy. The first stage is job evaluation and development of pay bands; identifying internal disparities along with an initial benchmarking followed by the development of a road map to address any gaps.

Trustees’ responsibilities

The Trustees are responsible for preparing the Trustees' Report and the Financial Statements in accordance with applicable law and regulations. Company law requires the Trustees who are also the Directors to prepare financial statements for each financial year. The Trustees have elected to prepare the financial statements in accordance with United Kingdom Generally Accepted Accounting Practice (United Kingdom Accounting Standards) and applicable law. Under company law the Trustees must not approve the financial statements unless they are satisfied that they give a true and fair view of the state of affairs of the company and the group and of the surplus or deficit of the group for that period. In preparing these Financial Statements, the Trustees are required to:

The Trustees are responsible for keeping adequate accounting records that are sufficient to show and explain the company and group's transactions and disclose with reasonable accuracy at any time the financial position of the charity and group and enable them to ensure that the Financial Statements comply with the Companies Act 2006. They are also responsible for safeguarding the assets of the charity and group and hence for taking reasonable steps for the prevention and detection of fraud and other irregularities.

The Trustees are also responsible for ensuring that adequate arrangements are in place to manage risk and uncertainty as expanded further on pages 23-25. The Trustees confirm that they have paid due regard to the guidance contained in the Charity Commission’s general guidance on public benefit when setting the charity’s objectives and planning its activities. This report explains the Charity’s activities and demonstrates how they contribute to the Charity’s purposes and provide public benefit.

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BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022

Strategic Report

Achievements and Performance

2022 Programme Highlights

The BirdLife Secretariat work plan for 2022 was approved by the BirdLife Council at its 74[th] Meeting (December 2021). The work was organised in accordance with each of the nine global programmes and one regional programme (Agriculture, in Europe) in the BirdLife International Strategy, plus a small number of high-level overarching initiatives to deliver further on the sustainability pillar in the strategy. The following presents the main achievements in 2022 as presented to the BirdLife Council at its 78[th] Meeting (June 2023).

Preventing Extinctions

Two Red List updates were completed: 290 Threatened Species Forum topics discussed on new web platform resulting in 271 decisions; 670 updated assessments published or approved for publication by IUCN on Red List.

Surveys of the availability of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAID), some of which are lethal to vultures (and known to be responsible for the rapid declines in South Asia) were completed in SE Asia completed, finding toxic drugs widely available in Myanmar but not Cambodia; guidance provided on future NSAID surveys and advocacy. New Vulture Support Groups and Vulture Safe Zones (now covering 1 million ha) created in East and southern Africa, and two traders arrested in Guinea Bissau for selling vulture body parts.

Revised Decisions adopted by Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) Conference of Parties (COP), attended by BirdLife with coordinated advocacy, side-events and interventions, regarding West African Vultures (trade in body parts) and songbirds worldwide (for cagebird trade), and used to promote implementation and justify new projects in Africa and SE Asia. International trade in White-rumped Shama strictly regulated and in Straw-headed Bulbul banned, through amendments to CITES appendices.

The Wildlife Comeback report (a collaboration between Rewilding Europe, the European Bird Census Council, ZSL and BirdLife International) showed that despite the wider picture of decline in biodiversity across all taxa in Europe, some species are bucking the trend and bouncing back (including European Bison, Dalmatian Pelican, Black Stork and Griffon Vulture). With an understanding of the main reasons for their recovery, the keys to future successes become clear: improved species protection, habitat protection and restoration, conservation action over many years all underpinned by sound laws, long-term funding and brilliant people.

Middelpunt Nature Reserve (South Africa) declared for Whitewinged Flufftail, with progress towards protection of neighbouring areas, and new project proposed to advance this. Moroccan Northern Bald Ibis population increase continued since 2018 downlisting, with record 175 pairs in 2022.

Patrolling shows zero poaching of Helmeted Hornbills at ‘safe havens’ in Malaysia, Thailand and Myanmar, and hornbill needs incorporated in site management plans. Important stopover site for Sociable Lapwing protected in Uzbekistan.

New projects: on Sangihe, Indonesia, with new records and population estimates (c. 100 or less) for four Critically Endangered species, advancing forest restoration and initial review of the proposed gold mining showing strong community organisation against this threat; for Citron-crested Cockatoo in Indonesia; for Helmeted Hornbill in Sumatra, Sarawak, Peninsular Malaysia and Sabah, and addressing demand for hornbill products in Hong Kong; for grassland and riverine birds in India (upstream dam discharges threatening skimmer nests stopped by urgent BNHS – BirdLife in India - intervention); for Blue-eyed Ground-dove in Central Brazil; tackling vulture poisoning across Mara-Serengeti Landscape in Kenya/Tanzania (Darwin Initiative); and identifying ‘lost’ bird species and promoting searches for them.

Important Bird and Biodiversity Areas (IBAs)

Implementation of the project “Key Biodiversity Areas – establishing a blueprint for 30x30” funded by the Bezos Earth Fund has progressed during this period. KBA National Coordination Groups have been established in six of the seven project countries in Andes and Congo Basin with representatives of 83 organizations, including governments. KBA training workshops were held in all seven countries where more than 200 experts participated. New KBA Regional Focal Points were appointed in Latin America and Francophone Africa, whose role is to support the national KBA processes. A KBA Training Officer started in August in the KBA Secretariat in Cambridge. French and Spanish versions of the KBA Guidelines, the KBA Proposal Process Guidelines and the online KBA training course have been completed.

The project “Implementing Alliance for Zero Extinction (AZE) Site Conservation and Preventing Global Extinctions” has started with two inception meetings organized for the implementing organizations in the four project countries.

BirdLife is part of a consortium which was successful in securing €10m as part of Horizon Europe to help Member States identify, protect and manage an ecologically coherent network of terrestrial protected areas covering 30% of EU territory with a third of these as strict protected areas. Project implementation has started.

The Africa Secretariat and a number African Partners became part of the first 100 projects to be funded under the TerraFund for AFR100, a financing facility led by World Resources Institute. The

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fund will support restoration in Cote d’Ivoire, Ethiopia, Nigeria, and Rwanda, aimed at reversing land degradation and deforestation to fight climate change, boosting food security, and helping rural communities thrive. BirdLife is leading the project in Rwanda and supported the application in Cote d’Ivoire.

Funding secured from Mandai Nature and Full Circle Foundation for Sarus Crane conservation projects at Boeung Prek Lapouv and Anlung Pring, two IBAs in Danger in Cambodia

The Altyn Dala Initiative in Kazakhstan led by ACBK (BirdLife in Kazakhstan), supported by RSPB (BirdLife in the UK) and others was selected by the United Nations as one of ten mega sea/landscape-scale projects out of >150 nominees as World Restoration Flagships.

Migratory Birds and Flyways

Coastal wetlands .

BirdLife is co-coordinator of World Coastal Forum Establishment Group (WCFEG), leading on the scope, vision and programme of work for the World Coastal Forum (WCF) ahead of its formal launch in November 2022. Montijo Airport planning and Iceland afforestation project are reported as Case files to the Bern Convention. Good progress with development of pre-proposal for the German Climate Initiative (IKI) on climate resilient coastal wetlands in the East Atlantic Flyway. BirdLife’s assignment for the Asia Development Bank Regional Flyway Initiative (RFI) advancing well with key sites identified and consultations with governments initiated.

Energy infrastructure.

As reported above, AVISTEP, featuring India, Nepal, Thailand and Vietnam, was launched and discussions are underway to expand across Asia, Africa and Americas. A regional energy event in Egypt to celebrate the achievements of the Migratory Soaring Birds project to reduce risks of energy infrastructure to migratory birds was well attended by government, energy companies and civil society. 250 high-risk pylons in Jordan were insulated with an immediate drop in bird mortality. Materials purchased for insulation of another 750 high-risk pylons in Jordan and Saudi Arabia. A new study commissioned by our German Partner NABU, provided an overview of the many solutions available to protect birds from getting electrocuted by, and colliding with, powerlines across Europe.

Landbirds.

At present 613 producers participate in the Southern Cone Grassland Alliance, incorporating nature conservation into the management of nearly 860,000 ha. Pilot projects to estimate initial soil carbon contents launched in Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay and Argentina. Conservation Investment Plans (CIS) progressing for terrestrial migratory birds in the Ecuadorian Choco and the Caribbean Slope.

Several new grants to Mediterranean Partners secured, including from NABU (BirdLife in Germany), BirdLife Finland, VBN (BirdLife in the Netherlands), as well as the CMS.

Central Asian Flyway (CAF).

BirdLife is leading on a situation analysis of migratory birds in the Central Asian Flyway as part of the development of a CMS framework. The situation analysis will identify priority conservation actions for migratory birds and will be presented to the CMS COP 14 in October 2023.

Funding.

US$ 10 Million secured from the MAVA Foundation to establish the Luc Hoffmann Flyway Fund.

Marine

The Marine Science team published a novel technique to identify the risk to the Wandering Albatross in the South Atlantic. GPS loggers provided the position of birds at-sea associated with surrounding vessels thanks to radar detecting technology. The use of immersion loggers attached to Wandering Albatrosses from South Georgia enabled the team to match bird and vessel activity, drawing new insights into how vulnerable seabirds interact with high-risk fleets.

The Marine Programme launched a series of animations on the threats facing seabirds, as well as the simple and effective solutions that are available. This was coordinated to coincide with World Albatross Day and brilliantly showcased via BirdLife and RSPB social media accounts. Additional attention and dissemination was achieved through presentations at international conferences including the UN Oceans Conference, the International Seabird Group Conference and at the BirdLife World Congress.

The Albatross Task Force teams in South America and southern Africa have successfully demonstrated the importance of adopting electronic monitoring systems on fishing vessels in priority fleets. The use of cameras on trawl vessels in Argentina has resulted in soaring levels of compliance with regulations that require the use of bird-scaring lines. Official data indicate compliance levels reaching over 85%. In South Africa trial video footage is also being collected to inform development of artificial intelligence systems and in Chile vessels are being outfitted with cameras in line with new regulations.

The MAVA-funded projects in West Africa are coming toward successful completion, with new funding secured for the continuation of high priority projects in the region. This establishes a legacy for the investment in the region that has provided high levels of capacity building, delivered critical research that informed where to focus our next steps and developed strong partnerships in government and civil society.

Illegal Killing of Birds (IKB) .

€5.2 million was secured for a ‘third phase’ of Safe Flyways IKB in the Mediterranean. Another €250k was secured for strategic learning from the IKB experience in the Mediterranean region.

Our European and Central Asia team has developed marine spatial planning guidance for improved, robust and timely processes. The team has identified ten recommendations to

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facilitate European climate, energy and biodiversity targets and led a case study on data monitoring for nature-friendly offshore wind.

Invasive Alien Species

Island Restoration

A trial assessing the feasibility of drone technology for rat eradication, confirmed this is unlikely to succeed because of (current) autonomous flight limitations in complex, high relief, and remote terrain inhibiting access/bait application. Consequently, the operations scheduled for 2022 for the 3 Rapa islets and 3 Marquesas islets in French Polynesia have been (further) postponed. Alternative capability has been identified in the form of a micro-copter (and potentially helicopter services); trials have confirmed the micro-copter capability and preparations are underway to implement these operations in 2023.

In May the Te Ipukarea Society successfully led an operation to eradicate rats from the remaining infested islet on Suwarrow (Cook Islands).

Research is underway to determine the reasons for failure of the attempt to eradicate mice from Gough (UK Overseas Territory in the Atlantic) which will be vital to inform this and similar projects.

Two projects have commenced on Rennell Island Solomon Islands addressing landscape scale rat control in protecting the Islands endemic birds (and other biodiversity), safeguarding crops and other local livelihoods and increasing climate resilience.

Programme Development

The Secretariat of the Pacific Regional Environment Programme has provided financing for the eradication of rats from priority Phoenix Petrel and Polynesian Storm Petrel islets within the Kiritimati lagoon (Kiribati). BirdLife will lead the operation together with the Ministry of Environment from late 2022.

An IUCN-led GEF project with the Kiribati government, which is under development, includes an operation to recover a critical Phoenix Petrel population by eradicating rats from Enderbury Island, and establish biosecurity. Implementation would commence in 2024.

A large-scale regional project has been developed with the Kiwa Initiative (French Development Agency administered) which will address invasive species at priority sites as a NbS, delivering biodiversity, livelihood and climate resilience outcomes. The project will be implemented with BirdLife Partners in Fiji, French Polynesia, and Palau, and the Samoa Conservation Society. The project is expected to commence from the first half of 2023.

Forests

Landscape Sustainable Finance Accelerator

An Accelerator grant for 2022-2023 approved by the Hempel Foundation. New phase has been designed and launched with a call for proposals from BirdLife Partners for seed funding. Seed funding has been provided to 8 BirdLife Partners who are piloting and developing projects on carbon finance, forest friendly enterprises and payment for ecosystem services. An in-person training workshop was held with BirdLife Partners in September during the BirdLife Congress.

Forest carbon

A Forest Carbon Portfolio has been developed including 21 Partner sites. Discussions are ongoing with potential donors and technical partners to develop projects. BirdLife is currently developing forest carbon projects with Partners in Cambodia and Madagascar and supporting scoping studies in Kenya, Fiji, Colombia and Paraguay.

Forest restoration and connectivity

The Trillion Trees Impact report for 2021 was published including highlights of targets and progress towards restoration objectives. An investor guide for restoration was designed and published online and a white paper was published on the ‘true cost of restoration’ (informed by ongoing forest restoration projects). These aim to help better inform those who want to pay for restoration to think beyond price per tree or number of trees in the ground. Ongoing grants this year have been provided to Partners in Kenya, Uganda, Brazil and Bolivia for forest restoration through funding raised with Trillion Trees; a concept note was also developed for Madagascar but is pending endorsement by the Government.

There was further development and update of BirdLife ‘Forest Landscape restoration portfolio’ of sites to support and raise funding through the established Reforest Fund. As noted above, there was also an update of BirdLife’s principles and practice for nature restoration, which was shared in a UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration Learning Session in September.

Addressing forest loss drivers

BirdLife has continued to support Partners in Argentina and Paraguay to promote forest friendly Yerba Matte production through certification (Argentina) and commercial businesses (Paraguay). BirdLife has continued to pilot sustainable rubber production in Harapan Indonesia in collaboration with BMWParelli and have carried out a living income survey which aims to ensure fair prices paid to farmers for sustainable farming.

Continuation of the EU-funded Forest Governance project including gathering the lessons learned from the project and sustainability.

BirdLife has been at the fore front of efforts to reform EU bioenergy polices that are driving deforestation and forest degradation all around the globe.

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Flagship forest landscape initiatives

Tsitongambarika (TGK)– Madagascar: A first phase of a REDD+ feasibility was completed and discussions with government to establish project are ongoing. BirdLife is continuing to support park management of TGK through grant funding. Greater Gola - Liberia, Sierra Leone: Sierra Leone’s Gola Rainforest National Park REDD+ continues to generate revenues, Liberia REDD+ prefeasibility study to be launched soon; sustainable financing plan for the landscape completed and being implemented. Sao Tome & Principe: Sustainable financing plan for protected areas validated and being implemented. Management plan for Sao Tome Natural Park finalised and validated nationally in June and endorsed by the Government in August; in Sao Tome island, a decree-law to recognize identified 21 High Conservation Value (HCVAs) as special reserves was finalised in September. Hutan Harapan, Indonesia: Ongoing support to site management to develop sustainable funding mechanisms while providing livelihood opportunities for communities. Current initiatives include Vanilla and Rubber. Project design is underway in collaboration with Cambridge University to use drones to monitor forest change. Lomphat Wildlife Sanctuary – Cambodia: BirdLife is currently supporting the development of a REDD+ project with NatureLife. The project has been approved by the government and listed by Verra (carbon credit certification). Cofunding has been secured from USAID and negotiations are ongoing to secure $3.5M to kickstart implementation. Atlantic Forest – Argentina, Brazil and Paraguay: Second phase to design and secure funding from Jensen, Hempel, and Starling Bank (through Trillion Trees) is ongoing.

Climate Change

Nature-based Solutions (NbS)

With a nature-based solutions (NbS) definition adopted at the 5th Session of the UN Environment Assembly, BirdLife and BirdLife Partners continued to advocate to have this definition and clear targets reflected across the different MEAs, including in the CBD and UNFCCC COPs. Key asks to incorporate NbS were developed through the BirdLife Partnership and amplified by coalitions such as Nature4Climate. Advocacy was successful with NbS included across Ramsar, UNFCCC, and CBD conventions final decisions. BirdLife coordinated and co-hosted the CAN International Festival of Ideas workshop on 'Aligning CBD COP15- UNFCCC COP27 outcomes to enhance climate, biodiversity and rights ambition', with speakers from RSPB and SEO and over 100 participants registered from across the globe discussing NbS and opportunities to increase integration between the CBD and UNFCCC. We also co-hosted an event on ‘Money where it matters for nature and climate actions: innovative solutions and learnings from practice’ with IIED and Flora and Fauna International in celebration of New York Climate Week, September 2022. Key asks to incorporate nature-based solutions were developed through the BirdLife Partnership to take to UNFCCC SB56 and COP27, amplified by Nature4Climate Coalition. Continued advocacy on EU’s climate and restoration legislation in relation to the role of NbS in agriculture, forests and land use.

With Partners, BirdLife International has undertaken natural capital pre-feasibility assessments for NbS projects on selected corporate landholdings in South Africa, Madagascar and Guinea.

Renewable Energy

BirdLife has continued to coordinate the Convention on Migratory Species (CMS) Energy Task Force (ETF), with the 6th Meeting of CMS ETF held in February with Birdlife Partners from Egypt, Greece and Jordan attending. A new contract between the CMS and BirdLife International was signed in June, which is operational until end of 2024. Side events were held relating to the climate-biodiversity-energy nexus organised as part of Middle East and North Africa Climate Week, UNFCCC SB56, UNFCCC COP27, and several other industry conferences throughout 2022, such as:

A major capacity building multi-day workshop was held to develop Guidance on ‘Mediterranean +’ BirdLife Partners on powerlines and migratory birds, contributing to the delivery of the Migratory Soaring Birds project. Other capacity building webinars were held on offshore wind and key issues in the Americas.

ECA and European BirdLife Partners lead extensive campaigning and advocacy work targeted at new EU legislation on renewable energy, emission reduction and climate target. We focused on containing the harm done by bioenergy subsidies and improving safeguards for the development of wind and solar energy. With representation on the board of the Renewable Grid Initiative and a lead role on the Offshore Coalition for Energy and Nature, we continued to break new ground in terms of cooperation with electricity grid operators and the offshore wind industry, promoting good practice, progressive policies and the use of smart planning and design tools.

Multilateral Environmental Agreements

Advocated for NbS and safeguards through international policy processes, including UNFCCC, CBD and Ramsar, and with international financial institutions, such as the Asian Development Bank and through the African Development Bank safeguards consultation on climate change and nature.

Building capacity and provided support to Partners and regional staff (with a focus on those in the Middle East, Africa and the Pacific) to advocate for inclusion of NbS within Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs), with a focus on NDC implementation and ambition; harmonisation and synergies between CBD and UNFCCC, including supporting Partners and regional staff attending the UNFCCC Middle East and North Africa and African Regional Climate Week.

We hold leadership roles within environmental NGO coalitions to help advance BirdLife climate policy agenda and increase visibility, such as actively participating in Nature4Climate and the Climate Action Network (CAN).

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Climate Change Impacts

Papers published on evidence that conservation interventions can benefit species impacted by climate change (Bowgen et al., 2022), and on climate change adaptation of Critical Sites in the Africa‐ Eurasian waterbird flyways (Breiner et al., 2022). PhD students at universities in Rome and Durham both submitted their theses on climate change impacts on birds and are preparing publications.

Through the Afrievolve project funded by the German Government, NABU (BirdlLife in Germany) is supporting six BirdLife partners (Nature Kenya, Nature Tanzania, Nature Uganda, SOS Forets, Ghana Wildlife Society and NATURAMA) in organizational development, but also through pilot climate resilient agriculture projects that are helping to restore degraded land and reduce pressure on nearby protected areas.

Local Engagement & Empowerment (LEEP)

Conservation and rights

Efforts are ongoing to support mainstreaming of BirdLife sociocultural safeguard policies and positions (positions on Conservation and Human Rights, Conservation and Gender, Working with Indigenous Peoples in Conservation) into BirdLife conservation projects. Support and training has been provided to Partners and secretariat teams to address social and rights issues. Initial contributions to the development of a new strategy for the Conservation Initiative for Human Rights group have been made, a process led by Conservation International.

Local Conservation Groups (LCGs)

Two LCG case studies outlining work from the Asia-Pacific Forest Governance project (one on citizen science monitoring with indigenous peoples and local communities to input into forest management policy frameworks (with Haribon, Philippines) and another on participatory biodiversity planning (Burung Indonesia)) have been written, and shared on ‘Hatch’, BirdLife’s internal communications platform, and via a LCG community of practice webinar. An additional webinar led by Haribon discussed experiences of Free, Prior Informed Consent (FPIC) processes with Indigenous groups in the Philippines.

African LCG/Site Support Group (SSG) data from the 2021 review survey was presented back to Africa Secretariat staff, and next steps identified to build/renew Africa Secretariat support to Partners in the SSG approach. Preparation of capacity development tools for local protected area identification/management is ongoing in the Americas, through the Conserva Aves programme (see above).

Engagement and Behaviour change

An innovative microfinance mechanism (community revolving fund - CRF) was developed to support behaviour change and vulture conservation in the Mara-Serengeti ecosystem with Nature Tanzania (BirdLife Partner in Tanzania). The fund aims to help mitigate threats of poisoning and belief-based use of vultures in the Makao Wildlife Management Area, bordering the Serengeti national park, by targeting financial incentives at traditional healers and other stakeholders involved in the trade of vultures locally. With initial capitalisation secured through Darwin

Initiative project funding, discussions with donors to grow the capital of the CRF are ongoing.

Planning is underway to support the Flyways programme and Partners to build capacity and develop behaviour change strategies to mitigate Illegal Killing of Birds in the Mediterranean.

Social marketing and behaviour change training has been developed and delivered to Partners in the Atlantic Forest to support adoption of sustainable commodities and forest management practices.

Engagement, education and awareness raising

Erasmus 'Its Time' project operational with leadership from BirdLife Malta, in collaboration with global secretariat, BirdLife Romania, OTOP. 30+ Youth leader representatives from BirdLife Partners attended the World Congress, and pilot 'BirdLife Youth Council' concept to encourage youth engagement with BirdLife was developed. Additional support from Canon was secured to complement Erasmus+ funding and ensure global representation.

The 2022 Spring Alive Season was completed successfully, with good outcomes reported from both European and African Partners.

Capacity Development

Hatch Capacity Development mechanism

Hatch second phase implementation with the support of the MAVA Foundation in the Mediterranean and West Africa successfully concluded, with over EUR 300,000 re-granted to Partners, 21 training events, 9 communities of Practice and 7 organisational development tools finalised. New funding has been secured for Partner development work in West Africa from the Hans Wildorf Foundation and Sigrid Rausing Trust for ECA Partners.

A capacity development thematic session was held at World Congress, and case studies were presented on leadership, Partner to Partner collaboration, and using the Partnership as a mechanism for scaling up collaboration.

The Graeme Gibson Fellowship (GGF) awards was launched, with 20 applicants received for 10 Fellowship positions. Ten Fellows were selected and six met and networked at the World Congress, including amongst themselves, with their mentors and with the BirdLife Young Leaders council. Grant implementation by Partners under the Migratory Soaring Birds project is ongoing, supporting Partners in Middle East and North Africa to meet requirements of the project’s capacity 'triggers'.

Collaboration and support is ongoing to the Asia Development Band Regional Flyway Initiative and EAAFP on stakeholder engagement, capacity assessment and capacity building.

BirdLife Partners and Advisory Group have rallied to support the BirdLife Partner in Ukraine in the face of the invasion of their country. Particularly noteworthy has been the support provided by OTOP (BirdLife in Poland) who have provided assistance to

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conservationist refugees and their families, from both Ukraine and Belarus.

Quality Assurance System (QAS) II

QAS global, regional, programmatic and Partner summaries have been produced and disseminated to relevant Partner and Secretariat staff. Scoping/conceptualisation of analysis of strengths and weaknesses of the Partnership based on the QAS II data has begun. Planning for QAS III (to collect baselines for the new strategy) is underway alongside new BirdLife Strategy metrics development and Ways of Working planning processes.

Partner-Partner Support and Cooperation

The Hatch Platform is live and growing to support partnerpartner and secretariat-partner communications, sharing and engagement with over 1200 registered users from across the Secretariat and Partnership. VBN (BirdLife in the Netherlands) has extended support to Africa Partners to address COVID emergency - Euro 57,000 now given out in grants to selected partners.

Network Development

Support to potential partners identified in Africa, Asia, Europe and Central Asia and Americas continuing. Nature Tanzania recruited into the Partnership as a Partner, Jocotoco foundation in Ecuador as Affiliate.

Leaders of the future

The Conservation Leadership Programme projects selection complete, with 16 projects selected (14 funded by Arcadia, 2 projects funded by a new donor March Conservation Fund). New funding from March identified for 2023. Three internships starting shortly with BirdLife in the Americas: the three interns will work for the Flyway programme, IBA programme and the communication department.

Creating Capacity Building Tools

Sensitisation/capacity building webinars held with all BirdLife regional secretariats to encourage usage of BirdLife’s Project Management Toolkit (published in 2021). A new toolkit on Fundraising and Marketing was also launched in 2022

Europe – Agriculture

BirdLife Europe and Central Asia has been working hard to influence the European Commission's approval process of the Common Agriculture Policy national strategic plans with a view to maximise positive spending and minimising harmful spending. We have supported most partners to challenge what has been proposed and, in most countries, have achieved some tangible improvements or damage mitigation. A comprehensive assessment of the new plans was launched in December. In addition, we have been reviewing our overall agriculture strategy and have been campaigning for new EU legislation on pesticides and sustainable food systems.

Overarching Initiatives

Avian Sensitivity Mapping

AVISTEP, the Avian Sensitivity Mapping Tool for Energy Planning, funded by the Asian Development Bank and featuring India, Nepal, Thailand and Vietnam, was launched and discussions are underway with other potential investors to expand across Asia, Africa and Americas.

Restoration in Europe

RENATE (restoring nature in the east) is a new project launched by BirdLife in Europe with the support of the Sigrid Rausing Trust with the aim of building the capacity for nature restoration by partners in the Balkans, Eastern Europe, Turkey and the Caucasus.

Thanks, in large part, to our relentless promotion, the European Commission has tabled a legal proposal for a ground-breaking nature restoration law. This would set legally binding, quantitative and time bound targets obliging all EU countries to restore nature. It includes targets for habitat restoration, reversing the decline of farmland birds and pollinators, improvements to farmed landscapes, urban areas, forest management, peatlands, and marine ecosystems. Based largely on original BirdLife proposals this could be a game changer not just for biodiversity but also for climate mitigation and adaptation.

Post-2020 Agenda and SDGs

The much-delayed Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework was finally agreed by Parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) at COP15 in Montreal in December, following 7 weeks of in-person negotiations across 2022 at which BirdLife made considerable impact, resulting in the majority of our key asks on species, ecosystems, rights, finance, implementation, monitoring and a nature-positive mission being included. Following coordination through the Post-2020 Task Team of around 25 Partners, at the preliminary talks in March in Geneva and June in Nairobi we worked closely with 9 BirdLife Partners, produced policy briefs on 13 thematic areas of importance to BirdLife, delivered 22 interventions, and held meetings with over 32 government Party delegates. At COP15 the 53+ strong BirdLife delegation, including 22 Partners from 5 regions of which 6 were in government delegations, collectively influenced the agenda via a variety of public and informal channels including an on-site campaign, contact groups, formal interventions, 26 side events, two press conferences and partnering on the Nature Positive Pavilion (linked to a similar pavilion at UNFCCC COP27 in November). Partnering on a Heads of State and Ministers UN General Assembly Leaders Pledge for Nature event in New York in September, at which BirdLife featured strongly, and engagement in the UN Environment Assembly in March, the Stockholm+50 conference in June, and Ramsar Convention on Wetlands COP14 in Geneva and CITES COP19 (on trade in endangered species) in Panama, both in November, helped to maintain momentum and ensure links to wider policy processes including the SDGs.

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1planet1right campaign

Historic and resounding vote in July by United Nations General Assembly (161 states in favour, 0 against) to recognise the right to a clean, healthy and sustainable environment in July, following political advocacy via core group of UN-focused civil society groups and UN agencies and direct outreach via BirdLife Partners and wider networks. Convened over 30 similar organisations, led engagement with the core group of states and UN Special Rapporteur on human rights and the environment and hosted a series of side events at meetings of the Convention on Biological Diversity in Geneva, Nairobi and Montreal to get the right to a healthy environment as part of a wider human rights-based approach integrated into the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework in December. This was also achieved at the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) COP27 in November where the right to a healthy environment was recognised in the Sharm el Sheikh Implementation Plan (final decision text), following critical 11th hour mobilisation as part of the Climate Action Network (CAN) advocating for its restoration.

Green Recovery Agenda

BirdLife completed a project on ‘Green Recovery’ in selected countries and the Nigerian Conservation Foundation (BirdLife in Nigeria) has continued to influence their national agenda. BirdLife updated its principles and practice for nature restoration for green recovery and beyond which were shared in a UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration Learning Session in September.

2. Launch our new 2023-2032 strategy, which sets out our stepped up and refocused approach to addressing the nature and climate crises.

The new strategy and six regional implementation plans for the first five years were adopted by the Partnership. The strategy recognises three foundations, namely birds, science and Partnership and four pillars, namely: species, sites, systems and society.

In addition, eight thematic sessions were organised to delve deeper into some elements of the strategy implementation, including new areas such as agriculture and climate change. The partners also engaged in a session that considered how implementation of the strategy will be resourced.

3. Continue to increase the visibility and strength of our brand and our work.

A keynote presentation of the difference that the Partnership has made in implementing the 2013-2022 strategy was delivered. The presentation was based on the “Making a difference” report, developed largely from the Quality Assurance System (QAS) results, which Partners provided in 2021. Key highlights from the report include:

State of the World’s Birds 2022

BirdLife seminal report on the State of the World’s Birds was previewed at the BirdLife World Congress (see below) and launched to media at the end of September. Copies were distributed to Partners at various intergovernmental meetings and workshops and additional copies are being shipped to regional offices for further distribution. A video is in development for further promotion.

2022 BirdLife World Congress & new Strategy

The BirdLife World Congress was held from 11-16 September 2022 in Cambridge and London, convened by the Secretariat and hosted in collaboration with the RSPB (BirdLife in the UK). At least 1,230 people participated in-person and virtually. It was a great opportunity for BirdLife Partners to meet and renew relationships and exchange information post the Covid restrictions.

The Congress had set objectives and the following report summarises what was achieved:

1. Reconnect and strengthen the collaborations, friendships and exchanges that are so critical to our effectiveness.

The Congress was fully hybrid and connections with Partners extended beyond those physically present. Overall, 597 members of the Partnership registered and 262 participated physically; 180 staff registered and 100 participated physically. Most regional staff and Partners stayed at the Jesus College in Cambridge to maximise interaction beyond the formal agenda.

Partners, some key donors and collaborators exhibited their work at the Partnership Fair. It was a fantastic opportunity for Partners to share and learn about each other’s work, and for external stakeholders to learn about the work of the Partnership.

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The congress coincided with the celebration of 100th anniversary of BirdLife and provided a huge rallying point for communications.

Organisational Priorities:

4. Nourish existing and create new relationships with donors, influencers and decision-makers.

The ‘Future of our Planet’ conference in London held high-level panel discussions with thought-leaders on nature, business and philanthropy. Panellists from government, intergovernmental organisations, corporates and NGOs shared insights on a range of topics. Some of the organisations represented were Keidanren, Japan; Rio Tinto; Heidelberg Materials; Iberdrola; Roche Pharmaceauticals; Irish Distillers; Bezos Earth Fund; Prince Albert II of Monaco Foundation; Global Environment Facility; Asian Development Bank; Paulson Institute; Ninety One; RePLANET; and DBS.

5. Refresh our governance.

The Partnership refreshed members of its governance by endorsing the elected regional representatives to the Global Council and electing a new Council Chairman and Treasurer.

100th year anniversary celebrations

An anniversary celebration dinner was held at the world-famous Victoria & Albert Museum attended by over 300 delegates, mainly donors, members of BirdLife Advisory Group, members of the BirdLife Global Council and some Partners, saluted by luminaries such as Sir David Attenborough.

Business and biodiversity

We launched a new collaboration with the minerals company Sibelco and continued our engagement with Heidelberg Materials and Rio Tinto.

Plans for future periods

Highlights from 2023 work plan

At BirdLife International’s World Congress, a new 10-year Strategy (2023-32) was adopted alongside six five-year Regional Plans (2023-27).

To this end, the Secretariat has:

The scope of BirdLife’s operations is vast, but the Global Implementation Plan has sought to offer priorities under each conservation programme and function. In addition, headline priorities for the Secretariat have been identified (clustered according to strategy pillar and foundation) to provide focus of effort and organisational momentum. The intention is that these would galvanise the leadership and align the organisation around the most important themes for the year.

The proposed top organisational priorities for 2023 are:

SPECIES: Complete and release the annual update to the Red List.

SITES: Deliver a step change in our global efforts for flyways conservation by reviewing and bolstering the structure and resourcing of the Flyways Programme to maximise the impact of new investment and profile.

SYSTEMS: Establish and bolster BirdLife’s capability to influence financial flows for nature in support of its site conservation priorities (especially for forests, grasslands and coastal wetlands).

SOCIETY: Support Partners to translate (hoped for new) Global Biodiversity Framework targets into regional and national ambition while also positioning BirdLife as implementor of the GBF.

SCIENCE: Strengthen the integration of our science into each of the Programmes by identifying the information and research required to underpin their effective delivery, and start to fundraise for and undertake such research.

PARTNERSHIP: Develop a shared strategy (with supporting Partners) for developing network capacity in each of the six regions and ensure Secretariat resources are aligned to deliver this strategy.

BUILDING A BETTER BIRDLIFE: Consolidate and operationalise the charity’s new structure, leadership, ways of working, resource planning system and governance; lead a crossorganisational effort to grow our income (restricted and unrestricted) to ensure we are on track to meeting our strategic ambitions while balancing the budget and bolstering the charity’s financial reserves

Conservation Programme and Functional Plan Priorities for 2023

Note: The Climate and Agriculture programmes are under development, as are the functional plans for financing nature, and communications

1. Preventing Extinctions (PEP)

This programme exists to understand the status of all bird species and through targeted species-recovery actions prevent, halt or reverse their slide to extinction.

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Top Five Priority Activities for 2023

Top Five Priority Activities for 2023

5. Science

2. Marine

BirdLife International’s Marine Programme coordinates global efforts to improve the conservation status of seabirds - the most threatened group of birds on the planet.

Top Five Priority Activities for 2023

3. Forests

This programme exists to improve protection, advance restoration and address the threats driving deforestation, across a set of key forest landscapes around the world.

Top Five Priority Activities for 2023

4. Flyways

The BirdLife Global Flyways Programme aims to ensure the integrity of each of the major migration flyways by reducing direct threats to migratory birds and strengthening the network of sites and habitats on which they depend.

This function exists to coordinate and undertake the data gathering, analysis, and scientific research that underpins BirdLife’s Conservation Programmes, developing tools and approaches, and publishing and promoting outputs to provide better understanding of the threats to birds and their sites and habitats that each programme addresses, and the solutions needed to mitigate these and help species recover.

Top Priority Activities for 2023

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training in monitoring provided; IBAs in Danger list updated.

6. Policy

BirdLife’s function exists to engage and influence multi-lateral agency policy makers and national governments to contribute to the sustained delivery of BirdLife’s conservation objectives, through the adoption and implementation of ambitious international policy goals and targets, and working with BirdLife Partners to seek the development, implementation and enforcement of appropriate national laws and policies to achieve globally agreed frameworks and targets to address the biodiversity and climate crises.

Top Priority Activities for 2023

7. Network and Capacity Development

This function exists to strengthen the capacity and capability of individuals and organisations, mainly in the BirdLife Partnership, to become a strong global network of sustainable, independent, effective local and national civil society conservation organisations that collaborate effectively to achieve the BirdLife Mission.

Top Priority Activities for 2023

8. Biodiversity and Business Partnerships

This programme exists to transform business-as-usual through informing evidence-based biodiversity policy, practice, and investment.

Top Priority Activities for 2023

9. Development

Development exists to raise the critical unrestricted and restricted funds required to deliver BirdLife’s Strategy by engaging supporters, institutions, corporations and foundations.

Top Priority Activities for 2023

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BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022

10. Business Plan (aka Building a Better BirdLife)

Top Priority Activities for 2023

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BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022

Financial Review

Review of finances

The Trustees review, approve and monitor performance against the annual budgets of the Secretariat. Expenditure is planned to optimise the benefits towards the strategic objectives of the Partnership, while maintaining a financially stable Secretariat.

The Secretariat continued to gain financial support for its conservation objectives from various United Nations and European Commission budgets, from national government budgets, from foundations including the Aage. V. Jensen Foundation, the Packard Foundation, , Arcadia Foundation and The Bezos Earth Fund, the Luc Hoffman fund, and a significant number of trusts, companies and individuals.

The financial support from within the Partnership, including joint fundraising for programmes (as disclosed on pages 55 to 57) is critical to the stability that allows the Secretariat to service the Partnership.

The Secretariat has increased its income during 2022 with total income of £40.5 million compared to £24.3 million in 2021. Unrestricted income was higher than 2021. However, the main growth in income is in restricted income.

Although our income has increased over the preceding year, the global threats to wildlife are immense and increasing. Many organisations like BirdLife are finding it difficult to ensure their funding keeps pace with the scale of this challenge.

The Secretariat’s total expenditure has risen to at £32.2 million in 2022 compared to £24.7 million in 2021. This enabled the organisation to deliver the many conservation results (see the 2022 Programme Highlights section).

The Secretariat’s unrestricted net income before transfers showed a surplus of £267,774. This compares to a surplus of £391,346 in 2021. The organisation is committed to creating surpluses in order to increase the unrestricted reserves to at least the minimum level set out in the reserves policy.

The financial outlook for the next few years continues to look challenging. Despite turning the corner from the COVID-19 pandemic other immediate and ongoing uncertainties have arisen in the last few months resulting in unprecedented levels of inflation. Headline inflation has accelerated in the UK to 10% in August 2022, its highest inflation rate since March of 1992, being driven by supply bottlenecks and the spike in energy and other commodities associated with the war in the Ukraine. Although inflation is expected to moderate, we have only seen a move to 8% rather than the 2% target so suspect it is likely to remain above trend for some time. BirdLife is reviewing the potential future impact of all these factors on future forecasts. Management will also develop plans to mitigate the possible impact and keep the organisation resilient to deliver its conservation goals.

The Secretariat is dependent upon voluntary income to cover a significant proportion of the operational costs of the organisation as well as build operating reserve; however, this income has historically not been sufficient to cover both these priorities. During 2021 and 2022, a significant investment was made to increase the capacity of the fundraising team and looking forward it is expected that, combined with the other measures the

organisation has taken and is taking, will strengthen the reserves base of BirdLife as well as the long-term funding commitment projects and partners require.

Securing and maintaining unrestricted income remains a key challenge and was a key focus area in 2022. See the Fundraising section for additional details.

A statement of financial activities is set out on page 32.

Financial reserves

BirdLife holds financial reserves to be applied to future activities in a number of categories:

The Trustees review BirdLife's reserves and endowments regularly. BirdLife aims to maintain unrestricted income reserves sufficient to maintain BirdLife’s operations, in the event that income is unexpectedly reduced from budgeted levels. The Trustees consider the probability of a reduction in and security of each source of income together with the ability to reduce expenditure in a planned manner and also the risk associated with the equity investments, in which a proportion of the reserves are held.

The charity reviewed and updated its reserves policy during 2020. The updated policy includes a target of holding unrestricted reserves of £2 million to £6 million. BirdLife met the lower target in 2021 and has continued to build reserves in 2022. These targets have been set with the intention to grow reserves steadily while at the same time maintaining key operations supporting the Partnership. The charity is committed to adding to reserves each year to increase the financial resilience of BirdLife.

At the end of 2022 total reserves were £27.5 million (2021: £19.6 million). Of this £21.3 million is restricted funds and not available for general purposes (2021: £13.1 million), and £3.6 million is endowment funds (2021: £4.0 million). The remaining funds of £2.6 million (2021: £2.3 million) represent the unrestricted reserves of the charity. Free reserves amount to £1.3 million (2021: £1.1 million). £889,558 of free reserves have been absorbed by costs capitalised in connection with the systems development and website.

The Trustees recognise that whilst the reserves still are above the minimum target set by them in the policy, they are still on the low side and therefore plan to continue to rebuild reserves over the next few years.

Going concern

The Trustees have assessed BirdLife’s ability to continue as a going concern. The Trustees have considered several factors when forming their conclusion as to whether the use of the going concern basis is appropriate when preparing these financial

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BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022

statements including a review of updated forecasts to the end of 2024 and a consideration of key risks, including COVID-19 and higher inflation, that could negatively affect the charity.

Committee of Council which meets quarterly (or more often if required)

2022 has been another good year with the unrestricted reserves moving back inside the agreed range. BirdLife’s core unrestricted reserves are funded from a combination of fundraising income and programme grants, a portion of which is allocated to funding the charity’s running costs.

BirdLife continues to benefit from continued good relationships with key funders, good overall cash flow and proven ability to secure new funding. Planning processes, including financial projections, take into consideration the current economic climate and its potential impact on the various sources of income and planned expenditure, with associated mitigation plans.

The Trustees are monitoring the current financial position of the organisation very closely while reserves are just within policy levels, and in light of the current economic climate. For the period of review to 31 December 2024, cash holdings are sufficient to ensure adequate cash flow for the foreseeable future. The finances will continue to be reviewed for the medium- and long-term projections, and plans will be adjusted as necessary to ensure the organisation remains a going concern. The organisation will continue to be disciplined in managing costs. This along with an increased focus on unrestricted income fundraising will ensure the long-term financial health of the organisation and its ability to replenish reserves to policy levels over the next few years.

The Trustees have introduced a rigorous risk management process, implementing the guidance set out in Charity Commission publication CC26, to assess business risks and implement risk management strategies. This involves identifying the types of risks and issues the charity faces, prioritising them in terms of potential impact and likelihood of occurrence, and identifying means of mitigating the risks and acting on them. The organisation has identified the risks on the following pages as being among the most significant.

As part of this process the Trustees have reviewed the adequacy of the charity’s current internal controls as part of the risk review. The Trustees continue to refer to the specific guidelines issued by the Charity Commission on internal financial controls. Following the most recent risk review, the Trustees are satisfied with the controls in place and the steps taken to manage risk.

The Trustees therefore have a reasonable expectation that the organisation has sufficient resources to continue in operational existence for the foreseeable future and believe that there are no material uncertainties that call into doubt the ability of BirdLife International to continue as a going concern.

Risk and uncertainty

The Trustees have overall responsibility for ensuring that BirdLife International has an appropriate system of controls, financial and operational. They are also responsible for keeping proper accounting records, which disclose with reasonable accuracy at any time the financial position of the company and the group and enable them to ensure that the financial statements comply with the Companies Act 2006. They are also responsible for safeguarding the assets of the group and for taking reasonable steps for the prevention and detection of fraud and other irregularities and to provide reasonable assurance that:

The systems of internal control are designed to provide reasonable, but not absolute, assurance against material misstatement or loss. They include:

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Risk Mitigation Operational risks Secretariat work might be deficient or delivered We are in the process of: improving the way in which work is planned across the late. This could be due to difficulties in Secretariat; introducing additional training for staff; improving induction and recruitment, excessive workloads, inadequate performance review processes; continuing the rollout of ERP system (to reduce skills and training, overreliance on manual the need for manual processes); and introducing new policies and processes processes, and factors such as illness. where appropriate. Scientific data (e.g. in WDKBA) becoming poor BirdLife will support Partners to update their IBA/KBA inventories, monitor quality and out of date these sites, and contribute to global Red List assessments. Red List assessments continue to be published annually, with the aim to reassess all species every 4-5 years. World Database of KBAs was launched in June 2022 and continues to be developed, including integrating IBA fields and functionality to streamline and facilitate site identification and update process for Partners. KBA monitoring protocol finalised and functionality to support its application being implemented in database. KBA National Coordination Groups now established in 19 countries, forming in 10 and interest expressed in another 23. Fundraising for KBA identification is underway.

Lost or compromised data, websites and IT We will implement all appropriate security measures, including two-factor systems or equipment, as a result of cyberattacks, authentication, data encryption and the latest security releases and bug patches. or lost or stolen hardware. Staff undergo mandatory training on BirdLife’s IT policies, and there is regular phish penetration testing (with additional training for any staff who fail the test). We have also introduced a process to ensure redundant websites are retired, and that new websites are developed and launched, in good order. To demonstrate its commitment to cybersecurity, BirdLife is beginning the process of gaining Cyber Essentials certification.

BirdLife might enter into relationships with third parties who have a poor reputation, or who carry out actions that do not conform to BirdLife's mission and values, resulting in adverse publicity and loss of public trust. It is also possible that these third parties are restricted in some way (e.g. SDN list, asset freezes). These third parties could be donors, corporate partners or subscribers to data services.

Fraud: payments might be made to criminals or unauthorised personnel, instead of authorised recipients

A new Gift Acceptance Policy has been approved and is operational, including a donor due diligence process using a tool that enables us to check global sanctions and associated entities, enforcement actions, PEPs, state-owned enterprises, adverse media and more. The Global Council policy on working with Corporates is also well embedded and operationalised. Parties to contracts with BirdLife Secretariat are also subject to a due diligence check before contract signature.

We have implemented a number of payment authorisation safeguards, including a requirement for Finance staff to verbally validate all requests for changes to banking details. A revised Financial Crime policy has been issued. Training is planned for 2023, and real-life examples (e.g. payment diversion fraud emails) are publicised to staff to illustrate this risk.

Financial risks

Access to funding: there might be a reduction in the sources of funding we are able to access. In addition, our funding model might prove to be suboptimal to deliver our objectives, particularly in relation to the mix of restricted versus unrestricted income. The UK’s withdrawal from the EU (Brexit) is a particular issue here.

BirdLife has transactions in foreign currencies in the UK entity as well as its overseas operations. This gives rise to various foreign exchange exposures, on period end translation of nonfunctional currency balances, on transactions in foreign currencies, and on consolidation of entity accounts into GBP.

BirdLife intends to continue advocating for nature-based funding, rather than location- or species-specific funding. BirdLife will also embrace innovative sources of funding (e.g. business sustainability), rather than relying purely on philanthropic donors. In addition, there is the option to consolidate fundraising efforts into bigger nature-based projects, so that larger grants can be applied for. To mitigate the impact of Brexit, and depending on future strategy, other regional offices may be used to apply for grants and implement projects. BirdLife Pacific is being registered as a legal entity which will enable it to access EC funding in its own right. Recruitment of a permanent CDO will also contribute to mitigating this risk. In addition, BirdLife has implemented tight budgetary and forecasting controls to ensure costs are managed in line with the reserves policy.

We have implemented a number of controls. In particular, a foreign exchange exposure hedging strategy for the year ahead will be developed at the time of preparing the Budget based on expected future cash flows from secured income only. This will be reviewed and amended on a quarterly basis as additional income is secured. This will be approved by the Global Council on advice from the Finance Committee at the same time as the Budget.

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BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022

Risk

Mitigation

Compliance with laws and regulations

Violation by BirdLife Secretariat, or by Partners and sub-grantees, of applicable laws and regulations or common ethical values. Violation by Partners and sub-grantees of applicable laws and regulations, or terms of Operational Procedures or the Partnership Agreement.

BirdLife’s Partner policies and official positions are clear in our Operational Procedures, and are communicated to Partners and sub-grantees. We have an objective mechanism for removing Partners who do not meet the expected standards of behaviour. All project funding agreements contain obligations in relation to ethical conduct, and we intend to look at implementing mechanisms for monitoring compliance with this on a periodic basis. The new Partner Quality Assurance System will provide more data on Partner policies and compliance.

BirdLife’s internal policies have been reviewed and some new policies are in development. Extant policies are being supported by training for all staff. A compliance check is also in progress on a rolling basis for each regional office.

Governance

Partners may struggle to perform to the level desired as a member of BirdLife International. There could also be difficulties if a Partner’s departure from the Partnership is contentious.

Partner reviews every four years (via the QAS) help to identify organisations with significant weaknesses, so that these become the focus of Secretariat support. The roll-out of our communications platform Hatch across the Partnership will facilitate mobilising and directing capacity development support in a targeted manner.

With regard to exiting Partners, the process (in the Articles of Association and Operational Procedures) for removal is transparent and objective, including full consultation with affected Partners, and the availability of a complaints procedure that may be used by any person. Consideration will be given to "optics" of any decision.

Working as part of consortia (IBAT, CCI, KBA Partnership, Red List authority) could cause difficulties with competition between organisations, dilution of BirdLife brand/identity, governance problems, lack of clarity over liability for consortium's activities, and a lack of clarity over BirdLife's role as service provider to some consortia.

Lack of "One Birdlife" approach across Partnership regions, leading to different ways of working and different results. Can lead to some regions becoming dominant and Partners not having the same level of engagement, meaning BirdLife is not united as a global organisation.

BirdLife is party to the consortia governance mechanisms, which provide protection for BirdLife's involvement and IPR. As regards the KBA Partnership, we host/employ positions integral to those consortia. If/when we leave the consortia we have rights over our data, other IPR and software. We also have a director-level position on the CCI services company. In addition, we have the ability to opt out of certain activities. We continue to put considerable effort into mitigating any specific risks as they arise. IBAT income for 2021 was over $1.8 million and has a growing user base. BirdLife also secured $5 million from the Bezos fund for KBA Partnership work, which puts us in a strong position. We are also taking an active role in procuring changes to the IBAT Alliance agreement, to protect BirdLife as well as the other partners. We are working closely with other Red List Partners (and are well aligned with them) to ensure proposed revisions to the Red List Partnership agreement and governance structures are not detrimental to our interests.

The Network and Capacity Development Board has representation from all regional directors and representatives of regional committees, and is looking to strengthen its remit. A cross-regional management team also helps reduce the risk of regional fragmentation. Where a Secretariat office has an independent director boards, there is a representative from BirdLife HQ as a member. The launch of Hatch as a communications tool will also help to bring the Partnership together.

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BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022

Fixed assets and investments

The movements in tangible fixed assets during the year are set out in note 10 to the financial statements. The land included in tangible fixed assets relates to a conservation island in the Seychelles. Fixed asset investments are disclosed in note 11 to the financial statements.

Summary of investment policy

The Trustees of BirdLife International have delegated investment decisions to the Finance Committee.

The Finance Committee are charged with agreeing a suitable asset allocation strategy for the reserves with the investment manager. They are also charged with recommending to the Trustees primary investment management arrangements, advising on the balance of practical operational considerations versus diversification of management arrangements.

Investment management is delegated to an authorised professional investment manager, Cazenove Capital, regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority. Cazenove were appointed in December 2019 following a competitive tender process.

Investment objectives

The Charity has adopted an ethical investment policy to ensure that its investments do not conflict with its aims. It has adopted a set of principles for direct corporate sector engagement which have a general exclusion for: i) Armaments, ii) Tobacco, iii) Trade in globally threatened flora and/or fauna, iv) Trade in timber from old-growth forests, v) Animal testing for cosmetic or other nonmedical products, vi) Trade in fish from, or at-sea with history of practising IUU (illegal, unregulated or unreported) fishing, vii) Oil & Gas.

The Charity's ethical investment policy is to align with the principles above, in as far as practical. The investment portfolio is structured in a manner to allow for sufficient screening against significant investment in companies engaged in these sectors.

The Finance Committee has responsibility for agreeing strategy and monitoring the investment assets. They are also charged with overseeing and judging the degree of ethical alignment against a balance of financial and practical considerations. Performance of the long-term reserves will be measured against inflation and agreed market indices. The return of the short-term reserves will be monitored against benchmark cash rates. The level of capital volatility will be monitored to ensure the risk profile remains appropriate for the Charity.

In 2013 US$3 million was received from Singapore Airlines to set up a permanent endowment to help fund the Harapan Rainforest Initiative. This was invested in 2014 in a tailored US Dollar based portfolio, and is currently managed by Cazenove, with investment objectives aligned to the initiative.

Investments underpinning BirdLife’s other endowment funds, set up with aligned investment objectives, were pooled into a Sterling-based main portfolio.

As shown in note 11 the value of the combined portfolio has increased from £5.0m in 2021 to £5.2m in 2022.

Subsidiary holding

The Charity has one wholly owned subsidiary, BirdLife Services Limited, which changed its name to BirdLife Limited in May 2018. This has remained dormant since 2001, as disclosed in note 23.

Grants and awards policy

BirdLife works on many and varied conservation projects around the world and makes grants or awards to further the conservation objectives of the organisation. The determination of recipients is case dependent.

The aim of making grants to Partner organisations and other conservation NGOs is to develop the world-wide network of bird conservation organisations and support their conservation work. One of the roles of the BirdLife Secretariat is to help develop the capacity of local and national organisations to carry out conservation work in their own countries. Grants are made following cost benefit analysis on the conservation impacts that such grants will achieve. The grant expenditure is then closely monitored.

For the majority of programmes, funding is specifically sought for collaborative work with identified Partner organisations. The grant/subcontracting arrangements then follow appropriate processes deriving from specific funder requirements.

Section 172 (1) Statement

The Trustees, who are directors for the purposes of the Companies Act, confirm that in accordance with Section 172 (1) of the Companies Act, they act in a way they consider most likely to achieve the purposes of the company. In making this assessment the Trustees consider the relevant actions of the board. Engagement with all stakeholders is described throughout this annual report

The likely consequences of any decision in the long term

BirdLife’s long-term sustainability is considered by the Trustees as set out in the funds position and reserves policy and going concern sections on pages 22-23. The Finance, Risk and audit committee and the management team review management information, budgets, forecasts, cash flow projections and progress against budget on a regular basis.

The interests of the company’s employees

BirdLife’s employees and volunteers make the charity the special place it is today. Their experiences help inform BirdLife’s work and people policies. BirdLife promotes flexible working practices to show our commitment to a healthy work-life balance and receives feedback on employee wellbeing through regular

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surveys and staff appraisals. The board receives regular workforce updates in respect of all of the above.

The impact of the company’s operations on the community and environment

BirdLife’s family of Partners connecting national communities around the globe, its ground breaking, highly cited science, and proven nearly century-old track record of saving species from extinction and sites from destruction is increasingly recognised for its value and effectiveness. 2022 was another year of great achievements, highlights are outlined in the strategic report from page 11 and throughout this Trustees’ report.

The desirability of the company maintaining a reputation for high standards of business conduct

BirdLife follows a rigorous risk management process to manage regulatory and legal risk and is committed to complying with all applicable laws and regulations relating to fraud, bribery and corruption. Risk management is also discussed in detail in this report, from page 23.

The need to act fairly between members of the company

The Trustees understand the Charity Commission requirements and understand the need to avoid and manage potential conflicts of interest.

The need to foster the company’s business relationships with suppliers, customers and others (including engagement)

BirdLife’s network of partnership organisations is key to its work worldwide. BirdLife is driven by its belief that local people, working for nature in their own places but connected nationally and internationally through the global Partnership, are the key to sustaining all life on this planet. This unique local-to-global approach delivers high impact and long-term conservation for the benefit of nature and people. During the year Trustees and the management team have overseen relationships with our key suppliers to ensure a positive and effective relationship is fostered through our procurement process.

Energy Usage

Year End 31 December 2021

Year End 31 December 2021
UK Energyuse(kWh) 119235.086 kWh
Associated greenhouse gas
emissions
(Tonnes
CO2
equiv.(TC02e))
22.912 tCO2e
Intensity ratio emissions per
FTE(TCO2e/FTE)
0.198

Fundraising

In 2022 we delivered a new fundraising strategy which focusses on diversifying our income by: growing unrestricted income and improving overhead rates on restricted grants, increasing our small but active supporter base, and developing new relationships with philanthropists in the US and Asia. This is supported by a new global approach to fundraising led by the Chief Development Officer. Over the course of the strategy, we will: develop new flagship campaigns to deliver more flexible funding for our work, for example the Luc Hoffmann Flyways Fund which supports our global flyways programme; implement global processes and ways of working to support the improvement of overhead rates; grow the number of active supporters though digital fundraising; and improve our story telling to engage supporters such as our new ‘We are BirdLife’ case for support.

We would like to thank all our supporters whose generosity has helped to drive forward BirdLife’s work over the past year. It’s only with your continued support that we’ll be able to protect the world we share.

BirdLife International has not engaged with third parties to raise funds and any direct approach to members of the public for funding has been limited, excepting an increase in digital fundraising. BirdLife is registered with the Fundraising Regulator, and no complaints were received in relation to BirdLife’s fundraising activities during 2022.

Auditors

Each of the persons who is a Trustee at the date when this report is approved confirms that:

Crowe U.K. LLP has expressed its willingness to continue as auditor for the next financial year.

Year End 31 December 2022

Year End 31 December 2022
UK Energyuse(kWh) 128950.089 kWh
Associated greenhouse gas
emissions
(Tonnes
CO2
equiv.(TC02e))
23.967 tCO2e
Intensity ratio emissions per
FTE(TCO2e/FTE)
0.188

Associated greenhouse gas emissions have been calculated using the greenhouse gas emissions protocol method.

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BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022

Acknowledgements

The staff of the Secretariat are very highly valued, as are all our supporters. It is through them that we can ensure that time and money are well spent towards achieving the longer-term conservation goals.

The Trustees would like to take this opportunity to thank everyone who has shown their dedication, commitment and support to BirdLife.

The Trustees' Annual Report and Strategic Report therein has been approved by the Board of Trustees on 21[st] September 2023 and signed on their behalf by:

Martin Birch Treasurer

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BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022

Independent Auditor’s Report to the Members of BirdLife International

Opinion

We have audited the consolidated financial statements of BirdLife International (‘the charitable company’) and its subsidiaries (‘the group’) for the year ended 31 December 2022 which comprise the Consolidated Statement of Financial Activities, the Group and Company Balance Sheets, the Consolidated Cash Flow Statement and notes to the financial statements, including significant accounting policies. The financial reporting framework that has been applied in their preparation is applicable law and United Kingdom Accounting Standards, including Financial Reporting Standard 102 The Financial Reporting Standard applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland (United Kingdom Generally Accepted Accounting Practice).

In our opinion the financial statements:

Basis for opinion

We conducted our audit in accordance with International Standards on Auditing (UK) (ISAs (UK)) and applicable law. Our responsibilities under those standards are further described in the Auditor’s responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements section of our report. We are independent of the group in accordance with the ethical requirements that are relevant to our audit of the financial statements in the UK, including the FRC’s Ethical Standard, and we have fulfilled our other ethical responsibilities in accordance with these requirements. We believe that the audit evidence we have obtained is sufficient and appropriate to provide a basis for our opinion.

Conclusions relating to going concern

In auditing the financial statements, we have concluded that the trustee's use of the going concern basis of accounting in the preparation of the financial statements is appropriate.

Based on the work we have performed, we have not identified any material uncertainties relating to events or conditions that, individually or collectively, may cast significant doubt on the charitable company's or the group’s ability to continue as a going concern for a period of at least twelve months from when the financial statements are authorised for issue.

Other information

The trustees are responsible for the other information contained within the annual report. The other information comprises the information included in the annual report, other than the financial statements and our auditor’s report thereon. Our opinion on the financial statements does not cover the other information and, except to the extent otherwise explicitly stated in our report, we do not express any form of assurance conclusion thereon.

Our responsibility is to read the other information and, in doing so, consider whether the other information is materially inconsistent with the financial statements or our knowledge obtained in the audit or otherwise appears to be materially misstated. If we identify such material inconsistencies or apparent material misstatements, we are required to determine whether this gives rise to a material misstatement in the financial statements themselves. If, based on the work we have performed, we conclude that there is a material misstatement of this other information, we are required to report that fact.

We have nothing to report in this regard.

Opinions on other matters prescribed by the Companies Act 2006

In our opinion based on the work undertaken in the course of our audit

Matters on which we are required to report by exception

In light of the knowledge and understanding of the group and charitable company and their environment obtained in the course of the audit, we have not identified material misstatements in the strategic report or the directors’ report included within the trustees’ report.

We have nothing to report in respect of the following matters in relation to which the Companies Act 2006 requires us to report to you if, in our opinion:

Our responsibilities and the responsibilities of the trustees with respect to going concern are described in the relevant sections of this report.

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BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022

Responsibilities of trustees

As explained more fully in the trustees’ responsibilities statement set out on page 9 , the trustees (who are also the directors of the charitable company for the purposes of company law) are responsible for the preparation of the financial statements and for being satisfied that they give a true and fair view, and for such internal control as the trustees determine is necessary to enable the preparation of financial statements that are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error.

In preparing the financial statements, the trustees are responsible for assessing the charitable company’s ability to continue as a going concern, disclosing, as applicable, matters related to going concern and using the going concern basis of accounting unless the trustees either intend to liquidate the charitable company or to cease operations, or have no realistic alternative but to do so.

Auditor’s responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements

Our objectives are to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements as a whole are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error, and to issue an auditor’s report that includes our opinion. Reasonable assurance is a high level of assurance, but is not a guarantee that an audit conducted in accordance with ISAs (UK) will always detect a material misstatement when it exists. Misstatements can arise from fraud or error and are considered material if, individually or in the aggregate, they could reasonably be expected to influence the economic decisions of users taken on the basis of these financial statements.

Details of the extent to which the audit was considered capable of detecting irregularities, including fraud and non-compliance with laws and regulations are set out below.

A further description of our responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements is located on the Financial Reporting Council’s website at: www.frc.org.uk/auditorsresponsibilities. This description forms part of our auditor’s report.

Extent to which the audit was considered capable of detecting irregularities, including fraud

Irregularities, including fraud, are instances of noncompliance with laws and regulations. We identified and assessed the risks of material misstatement of the financial statements from irregularities, whether due to fraud or error, and discussed these between our audit team members. We then designed and performed audit procedures responsive to those risks, including obtaining audit evidence sufficient and appropriate to provide a basis for our opinion.

laws and regulations we considered in this context were the Companies Act 2006 and the Charities Act 2011, together with the Charities SORP (FRS 102). We assessed the required compliance with these laws and regulations as part of our audit procedures on the related financial statement items.

In addition, we considered provisions of other laws and regulations that do not have a direct effect on the financial statements but compliance with which might be fundamental to the charitable company’s and the group’s ability to operate or to avoid a material penalty. We also considered the opportunities and incentives that may exist within the charitable company and the group for fraud. The laws and regulations we considered in this context for the UK operations were anti-fraud, bribery and corruption legislation and General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). We also considered compliance with local legislation for the group’s overseas operating segments.

Auditing standards limit the required audit procedures to identify non-compliance with these laws and regulations to enquiry of the Trustees and other management and inspection of regulatory and legal correspondence, if any.

We identified the greatest risk of material impact on the financial statements from irregularities, including fraud, to be within the timing of recognition of grant and contract income and the override of controls by management. Our audit procedures to respond to these risks included enquiries of management and the Audit Committee about their own identification and assessment of the risks of irregularities, sample testing on the posting of journals, reviewing accounting estimates and judgements for biases, reviewing regulatory correspondence with the Charity Commission, sample testing of grant and contract income, and reading minutes of meetings of those charged with governance.

Owing to the inherent limitations of an audit, there is an unavoidable risk that we may not have detected some material misstatements in the financial statements, even though we have properly planned and performed our audit in accordance with auditing standards. For example, the further removed non-compliance with laws and regulations (irregularities) is from the events and transactions reflected in the financial statements, the less likely the inherently limited procedures required by auditing standards would identify it. In addition, as with any audit, there remained a higher risk of non-detection of irregularities, as these may involve collusion, forgery, intentional omissions, misrepresentations, or the override of internal controls. We are not responsible for preventing non-compliance and cannot be expected to detect noncompliance with all laws and regulations.

We obtained an understanding of the legal and regulatory frameworks within which the charitable company and group operates, focusing on those laws and regulations that have a direct effect on the determination of material amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. The

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Use of our report

This report is made solely to the charitable company’s members, as a body, in accordance with Chapter 3 of Part 16 of the Companies Act 2006. Our audit work has been undertaken so that we might state to the charitable company’s members those matters we are required to state to them in an auditor’s report and for no other purpose. To the fullest extent permitted by law, we do not accept or assume responsibility to anyone other than the charitable company and the charitable company’s members as a body, for our audit work, for this report, or for the opinions we have formed.

Nicola May Senior Statutory Auditor For and on behalf of Crowe U.K. LLP Statutory Auditor London, UK

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BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022

Consolidated Statement of Financial Activities (incorporating income and expenditure account) For the year ended 31 December 2022

Unrestricted Restricted Endowment Total Total
funds funds Funds 2022 2021
Notes £ £ £ £ £
Income and endowments from:
Donations and legacies
Partner membership contributions 26 862,145 - - 862,145 840,989
Subscriptions 264,142 - - 264,142 161,711
Other donations and legacies 1,112,533 2,040,229 - 3,152,762 4,391,314
Other trading activities
Event income 3,675 2,595,556 - 2,599,231 181,048
Trading activities 7,303 - - 7,303 15,836
Income from investments 4 18,412 2,563 73,465 94,440 66,540
Income from charitable activities
Partner organisations 26 421,432 1,493,954 - 1,915,386 1,648,724
Governmental institutions 367,292 4,530,434 - 4,897,726 4,277,525
Trusts and foundations 404,496 21,932,830 - 22,337,326 9,879,556
Corporations - 4,296,731 - 4,296,731 2,825,892
Other income 7,550 58,485 - 66,035 24,243
__ __ __ __ __
Total income 27 3,468,980 36,950,782 73,465 40,493,227 24,313,378
__ __ __ __ __
Resources expended:
Expenditure on raising funds 5 1,258,977 605,297 41,695 1,905,969 944,551
Expenditure on charitable activities 5
Preventing Extinctions 166,399 2,828,815 - 2,995,214 2,543,397
Important Bird and Biodiversity 358,497 9,038,642 - 9,397,139 4,715,690
Migratory Birds and Flyways 109,985 2,854,613 - 2,964,598 2,357,639
Marine 184,639 1,915,967 - 2,100,606 2,550,442
Invasive Alien Species 76,804 355,715 - 432,519 374,868
Forests 382,186 4,564,807 - 4,946,993 4,430,159
Climate Change 116,570 608,644 - 725,214 597,298
Local Engagement & Empowerment 71,406 313,984 - 385,390 552,494
Capacity Development 196,946 2,123,879 - 2,320,825 2,247,148
Conservation Science 127,661 1,651,450 - 1,779,111 1,266,266
Conservation Policy 151,136 2,101,263 - 2,252,399 2,156,437
__ __ __ __ __
Total Resources Expended 5 3,201,206 28,963,076 41,695 32,205,977 24,736,389
Net gain/(loss) on investments 15 - - (292,015) (292,015) 526,334
__ __ __ __ __
Net income / (expenditure) before 267,774 7,987,706 (260,245) 7,995,235 103,323
transfers
Transfers between funds 15 - 229,862 (229,862) - -
__ __ __ __ __
Net movement in funds 267,774 8,217,568 (490,107) 7,995,235 103,323
Total funds brought forward 15 2,348,912 13,107,933 4,093,687 19,550,532 19,447,209
__ __ __ __ __
Total funds carried forward 2,616,686 21,325,501 3,603,580 27,545,767 19,550,532
__ __ __ __ __

The income and expenditure account includes only the unrestricted and restricted funds.

32

BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022 Balance Sheets

As at 31 December 2022

Company registration number: 2985746

Notes
Fixed assets
Tangible assets
10
Investments
11
Current assets
Debtors
12
Cash at bank and in hand
Creditors:Amounts falling due within one
year
13
Net current assets
Net assets
Funds
Income Funds
Restricted funds
16
Unrestricted funds
Endowment funds
Permanent endowments
15
Group Group Company
2022
2021
£
£
1,299,501
1,281,685
5,215,275
4,998,775
____
_
6,514,776
6,280,460
____
_
6,166,735
4,902,997
18,700,218
10,999,775
____
_
24,866,953
15,902,772
(3,835,962)
(2,632,700)
____
_
21,030,991
13,270,072
____
_
27,545,767
19,550,532
____
____
21,325,501
13,107,933
2,616,686
2,348,912
____
_
23,942,187
15,456,845
____
____
3,603,580
4,093,687
____
_
3,603,580
4,093,687
____
_
27,545,767
19,550,532
____
____









2022
£
1,299,501

5,215,273

_

6,514,774

_

6,166,550

18,700,405

_

24,866,955

(3,835,962)
_

21,030,993

_

27,545,767

____
21,325,501

2,616,686

_

23,942,187

____
3,603,580

_

3,603,580

_

27,545,767

____
2021
£
1,281,685
4,998,773
_
6,280,458
_
4,902,814
10,999,960
_
15,902,774
(2,632,700)
_
13,270,074
_
19,550,532
____
13,107,933
2,348,912
_
15,456,845
____
4,093,687
_
4,093,687
_
19,550,532
____











2022
£
1,299,501

5,215,275

____

6,514,776

____

6,166,735

18,700,218

____

24,866,953

(3,835,962)
____

21,030,991

____

27,545,767

____
21,325,501

2,616,686

____

23,942,187

____
3,603,580

____

3,603,580

____

27,545,767

____

The surplus/(deficit) for the financial year dealt with in the financial statements of the parent charitable company was £267,774 (2021: £103,323).

The financial statements on pages 32 to 60 were approved by the Trustees on 21[st] September 2023 and were signed on their behalf by:

Martin Birch

Treasurer

The accompanying notes form an integral part of these financial statements.

33

BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022 Consolidated Cash Flow Statement

For the year ended 31 December 2022

Notes
Net cash provided by operating activities
20
Cash flows from investing activities
Purchase of tangible fixed assets
10
Purchase of investments
11
Proceeds of realisation of investments
11
Net cash movement on investments
11
Net cash used by investing activities
(Decrease)/ Increase in cash
21
Cash and cash equivalents at the beginning of the reporting period
21
Cash and cash equivalents at the end of the reporting period
21
_
2022
£
8,501,652
____
(197,117)
(2,013,239)
1,454,666
(45,517)
____
(801,207)
____
7,700,445
____
10,999,960
____
18,700,405
___
2021
£
311,614
____
(501,955)
(1,470,253)
1,104,512
123,582
____
(744,114)
____
(432,500)
____
11,432,460
____
10,999,960
____

All activities in both years arise from continuing operations. There were no recognised gains or losses other than those shown in the statements above. The accompanying notes form an integral part of these financial statements.

34

BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022

Notes to the Financial Statements

1 Charity information

BirdLife International is a company limited by guarantee (company number 2985746) and a UK registered charity (charity number 1042125), which is incorporated and domiciled in the UK. The address of the registered office is The David Attenborough Building, Pembroke Street, Cambridge, CB2 3QZ, United Kingdom.

2 Going concern

The Trustees have assessed BirdLife’s ability to continue as a going concern. The Trustees have considered several factors when forming their conclusion as to whether the use of the going concern basis is appropriate when preparing these financial statements including a review of updated forecasts to the end of 2024 and a consideration of key risks, including COVID-19 and higher inflation, that could negatively affect the charity.

2022 has been another good year with the unrestricted reserves moving back inside the agreed range. BirdLife’s core unrestricted reserves are funded from a combination of fundraising income and programme grants, a portion of which is allocated to funding the charity’s running costs.

BirdLife continues to benefit from continued good relationships with key funders, good overall cash flow and proven ability to secure new funding. Planning processes, including financial projections, take into consideration the current economic climate and its potential impact on the various sources of income and planned expenditure, with associated mitigation plans.

The Trustees are monitoring the current financial position of the organisation very closely while reserves are just within policy levels, and in light of the current economic climate. For the period of review to 31 December 2024, cash holdings are sufficient to ensure adequate cash flow for the foreseeable future. The finances will continue to be reviewed for the medium- and longterm projections, and plans will be adjusted as necessary to ensure the organisation remains a going concern. The organisation will continue to be disciplined in managing costs. This along with an increased focus on unrestricted income fundraising will ensure the long-term financial health of the organisation and its ability to replenish reserves to policy levels over the next few years.

The Trustees therefore have a reasonable expectation that the organisation has sufficient resources to continue in operational existence for the foreseeable future and believe that there are no material uncertainties that call into doubt the ability of BirdLife International to continue as a going concern.

3 Accounting policies

The Financial Statements have been prepared in accordance with Accounting and Reporting by Charities: Statement of Recommended Practice applicable to charities preparing their accounts in accordance with the Financial Reporting Standard applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland (FRS 102) (effective 1 January 2015) - (Charities SORP (FRS 102)), the Financial Reporting Standard applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland (FRS 102) and the Companies Act 2006.

The principal accounting policies adopted in the preparation of the Financial Statements are as follows:

a) Basis of accounting

The Financial Statements are prepared under the historical cost convention with the exception of investments, which are included at market value.

b) Consolidation

The Consolidated Statement of Financial Activities, the Consolidated Balance Sheet, and the Consolidated Cash Flow statement include the Financial Statements of the company, its subsidiary (BirdLife Limited, company number 3387515) and its branches as described in note 24 for the year ended 31 December 2022. Intragroup transactions are eliminated fully on consolidation. In accordance with the exemption provided by section 408 of the Companies Act 2006, the charity has not presented its own Consolidated Statement of Financial Activities.

35

BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022 Notes to the Financial Statements

3 Accounting policies (continued)

c) Unrestricted funds

Unrestricted funds are general funds that are available for use at the discretion of the Trustees in furtherance of the objectives of the Charity and which have not been designated for other purposes.

d) Restricted funds

Restricted funds are those where a use has been specified by the donor and include grants from statutory bodies. Deficits within restricted project funds occur when income is not entitled to be recognised in the current financial period and is carried forward to the next period. Where further funding is not anticipated, a transfer is made from unrestricted funds to cover the deficit.

e) Endowment funds

Endowment funds represent assets retained for the benefit of the charity as a capital fund. Details of the nature and purpose of each endowment fund is set out in note 15. The expendable endowment fund represents a fund from which capital and interest can be drawn down for unrestricted use.

f) Incoming resources

Income is accounted for when the charity has entitlement, the receipt is probable, and the amount can be measured.

Incoming resources are deferred only when the donor has imposed preconditions on the expenditure of resources. Income from government and other grants, is recognised when the charity has entitlement to the funds, any performance conditions attached to the grants have been met, it is probable that the income will be received, and the amount can be measured reliably and is not deferred.

g) Legacy income

Legacy income is recognised in the Consolidated Statement of Financial Activities when the charity has entitlement to the income, the receipt is considered probable and amounts receivable can be measured with sufficient reliability. Income from pecuniary interests is recognised when probate has been granted and we have been advised of the amount stipulated in the will. Income from residuary interests is recognised when probate has been granted and a reliable estimate of the amount receivable can be made.

h) Resources expended and cost allocation

Expenditure, inclusive of an element of non-reclaimable VAT, is charged on an accruals basis.

Resources expended are disclosed under the following headings: cost of generating funds, charitable expenditure and governance costs. Charitable expenditure is further analysed, based on the judgement of BirdLife International management into:

These categories follow the categories of policy and review of BirdLife International activities as set out and discussed within the Trustees’ Report. Support activities include day-to-day operational management and have been allocated across the above categories following guidance provided in the Charity SORP (FRS 102); that is, they have been allocated between the Charitable Expenditure headings. This has been done on the basis of percentage of direct costs charged to these headings. The cost allocation includes an element of judgement and BirdLife International has had to consider the cost benefit of detailed calculations and record keeping. Governance costs include those activities relating to the governance and strategic management of the charity.

Grants and awards made in furtherance of BirdLife’s charitable objectives are accrued when terms have been agreed with the beneficiary. Grants and awards where the beneficiary has not been informed or has to meet certain conditions before the release of funds, are not accrued, but noted as financial commitments.

36

BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022 Notes to the Financial Statements

3 Accounting policies (continued)

i) Employee information

Staff employed in the day-to-day operational running of the charity (which includes financial and support staff who are involved in project activities) are classified within the charitable activities, generating funds or support activities functions as indicated in note 8. The management and administration function includes only the role of, and support to, the Chief Executive.

j) Pension costs

The company operates defined contribution pension schemes. The assets of the schemes are held separately from those of the company in independently administered funds. The pension cost charge represents contributions payable by the company to the schemes. Under the Ecuadorian Labour code, employers are required to pay a pension to employees upon reaching 25 years of service. Under FRS 102 the pension is considered to be a defined benefit scheme. As any provision required under FRS 102 is not material, no liability has been recognised in the financial statements.

k) Operating leases

Costs in respect of operating leases are charged on a straight-line basis over the lease term.

l) Foreign currencies

Assets and liabilities denominated in foreign currencies are retranslated at the rates of exchange ruling at the balance sheet date. Profits and losses arising on retranslation are taken to the Consolidated Statement of Financial Activities. Transactions in the period are translated at the rate of exchange ruling at the time of the transaction.

m) Tangible fixed assets and depreciation

Fixed assets purchased for on-going use are capitalised, where cost exceeds £500 and disclosed at cost less depreciation. Depreciation is charged at a rate calculated to write off the cost of the asset (less residual value) over its expected economic life and is classified as support activities expenditure. Depreciation is written off on a straight-line basis at the following rates per annum:

Improvements to leasehold property are written off over the length of the lease, based on the earliest determinable date of the lease.

Equipment purchased using restricted funds are not capitalised but charged in full to “Resources expended” when purchased. This is because the expected useful life is significantly reduced in such programmes and is often less than one year for the majority of these assets. Where equipment is purchased with restricted funds, it is common that the equipment reverts to the funder on completion of the project.

n) Investments

Investments are stated at market value at the balance sheet date. The Consolidated Statement of Financial Activities includes the net gains and losses arising on revaluations and disposals throughout the year.

o) Financial activities of the holding company

There is no difference between the net movement in funds for the company and the group. Therefore, the directors have taken advantage of the exemptions available and not disclosed a separate statement of financial activities or income and expenditure account for the company.

37

BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022 Notes to the Financial Statements

3 Accounting policies (continued)

p) Financial instruments

The charity has financial assets and financial liabilities of a kind that qualify as basic financial instruments. Basic financial instruments are initially recognised at transaction value and subsequently measured at the present value of future cash flows (amortised cost). Financial assets held at amortised cost comprise cash at bank and in hand, short term cash deposits and the group’s debtors excluding prepayments. Financial liabilities held at amortised cost comprise the group’s short- and long-term creditors excluding deferred income and taxation payable. No discounting has been applied to these financial instruments on the basis that the periods over which amounts will be settled are such that any discounting would be immaterial.

Investments, including bonds and cash held as part of the investment portfolio, are held at fair value at the Balance Sheet date, with gains and losses being recognised within income and expenditure. Investments in subsidiary undertakings are held at cost less impairment.

q) Cash at bank and in hand

Cash at bank and cash in hand includes cash and short term highly liquid investments with a maturity of three months or less from the date of acquisition or opening of the deposit or similar account.

r) Critical judgements and estimations

In the application of the charity’s accounting policies, Trustees are required to make judgements, estimates, and assumptions about the carrying values of assets and liabilities that are not readily apparent from other sources. The estimates and underlying assumptions are based on historical experience and other factors that are considered to be relevant. Actual results may differ from these estimates.

The estimates and underlying assumptions are reviewed on an on-going basis. Revisions to accounting estimates are recognised in the period in which the estimate is revised if the revision affects only that period or in the period of the revision and future periods if the revision affects the current and future periods.

In the view of the Trustees, no assumptions concerning the future or estimation uncertainty affecting assets and liabilities at the balance sheet date are likely to result in a material adjustment to their carrying amounts in the next financial year.

38

BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022

Notes to the Financial Statements

4 Investment income

Income from fixed asset investments
Income from other restricted fund bank accounts
Interest from unrestricted fund bank accounts
This can be analysed as follows:
Harapan Fund
Other endowment funds
Other restricted funds
Unrestricted funds
2022
£
73,465
2,563
18,412
____
94,440
____
2022
£
65,533
7,932
2,563
18,412
____
94,440
____
2021
£
64,389
83
2,068
____
66,540
____
2021
£
56,303
8,086
83
2,068
____
66,540
____

This can be analysed as follows:

The investment portfolio is predominantly held in European, North American, United Kingdom and Socially Responsible investment trusts (see note 11).

5 Analysis of total resources expended

Expenditure on raising funds
Expenditure on charitable activities
Preventing Extinctions
Important Bird and Biodiversity Areas
Migratory Birds and Flyways
Marine
Invasive Alien Species
Forests
Climate Change
Local Engagement & Empowerment
Capacity Development
Conservation Science
Conservation Policy
Total resources expended
Direct
Costs
£
1,655,564
1,057,132
3,357,838
1,546,691
939,478
165,591
1,461,670
203,187
191,066
1,448,648
1,105,327
763,356
____
13,895,548
____
Grant
Costs
£
-
1,551,595
5,102,408
1,035,104
882,286
188,802
2,891,643
408,682
121,869
566,837
213,708
1,191,936
____
14,154,870
____
Support Governance
Costs
Costs
£
£
220,755
29,650
356,837
29,650
907,243
29,650
353,153
29,650
249,192
29,650
48,476
29,650
564,030
29,650
83,695
29,650
42,805
29,650
275,690
29,650
430,426
29,650
267,457
29,650
_
_
3,799,759
355,800
____
____*
2022
Total
£
1,905,969
2,995,214
9,397,139
2,964,598
2,100,606
432,519
4,946,993
725,214
385,390
2,320,825
1,779,111
2,252,399
____
32,205,977
____
2021
Total
£
944,551
2,543,397
4,715,690
2,357,639
2,550,442
374,868
4,430,159
597,298
552,494
2,247,148
1,266,266
2,156,437
____
24,736,389
____

Programme areas are highly diverse, and most projects overlap the different programme areas.

*Governance costs are allocated evenly to each activity and includes elements of direct and support costs.

39

BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022 Notes to the Financial Statements

Analysis of expenditure by cost type

Staff costs
Support grants

Travel & conferences
Professional services
Office accommodation
Equipment & supplies
Communications
Event costs
Audit
Foreign exchange (gain) / loss
Other costs
Total
Direct
Costs
£
8,464,748
14,154,871
1,069,993
3,590,751
120,844
115,244
281,962
804,431
28,336
(580,763)
1
___
28,050,418
___
Regional
Support
£
464,502
-
38,260
433,657
226,382
17,894
45,494
10,415
19,586
466,109
1,100
___
1,723,399
___
Global
Governance
Support
Costs
£
£
1,363,315
267,209

-
-

12,326
74,164
455,604
9,524
276,054
-
53,835
-
82,320
4,903
-
-
41,250
-
(516,217)
-
307,873
-
___
___
2,076,360
355,800
___
___
Total
2022
£
10,559,774
14,154,871
1,194,743
4,489,536
623,280
186,973
414,679
814,846
89,172
(630,871)
308,974
___
32,205,977
___
Total
2021
£
9,658,313
8,834,866
448,605
3,911,764
636,768
167,491
401,517
27,901
72,531
265,168
311,465
___
24,736,389
___

Support Costs are included in the expenditure reported in the Consolidated Statement of Financial Activities and have been allocated between the Charitable Expenditure headings on the basis of percentage of direct costs charged to these headings. The cost allocation includes an element of judgement and BirdLife International has had to consider the cost benefit of detailed calculations and record keeping. Regional support costs relate to Secretariat office bases outside the UK. Global support costs relate to the UK headquarters.

6 Net incoming resources

The net incoming resources to funds is stated after charging:

Net incoming resources
The net incoming resources to funds is stated after charging:
2022 2021
£ £
Auditors’ remuneration:
UK charity audit 41,250 38,850
Over accrued in prior year - (7,050)
Grant funder audits 28,335 19,482
International offices* 19,586 21,249
Depreciation of tangible fixed assets 120,998 40,076

*Paid to firms other than Crowe U.K. LLP

7 Trustees' remuneration and related party transactions

The trustees received £Nil remuneration (2021: £Nil) except for the reimbursement of certain travel and subsistence costs to attend Board meetings and committee meetings. The total amount reimbursed was £12,590 to 7 trustees (2021: £Nil).

In total trustees made donations of £18,255 during the year (2021: £18,574).

40

BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022

Notes to the Financial Statements

8 Employee information

The average monthly number of persons employed by the group during the year was:

Analysed by primary function
Charitable activities
Generating funds
Support activities
Management and administration of charity
Analysed by geographical region
Africa
Americas
Asia
Europe
Japan
Middle East
Pacific
The costs for employing staff were:
Wages and salaries
Social security costs
Pension costs (see note 18)
2022
Number
159
23
42
3
___
227
____
2022
Number
39
11
8
140
12
7
10
____
227
____
2022
£
8,468,600
846,879
788,723
____
10,104,202
____
2021
Number
192
22
38
3
___
255
____
2021
Number
41
8
39
138
11
8
10
____
255
____
2021
£
8,100,799
763,994
642,681
____
9,507,474
____

41

BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022

Notes to the Financial Statements

8 Employee information (continued)

The number of employees who received aggregate emoluments within the following ranges were:

£60,000 to £69,999
£70,000 to £79,999
£80,000 to £89,999
£90,000 to £99,999
£100,000 to £109,999
£110,000 to £119,999
£120,000 to £129,999
£130,000 to £139,999
£140,000 to £149,999
£150,000 and over
2022
Number
4
10
1
1
1
3
-
-
-
2
____
22
____
2021
Number
5
4
3
-
1
1
-
1
-
1
____
16
____

22 employees earning more than £60,000 were members of the defined contribution pension scheme; employer’s contributions payable during the year in respect to these 22 employees amounted to £185,477 (2021: 16 employees £113,719).

Key management personnel as defined by the Trustees are the Chief Executive and the management team. The total cost of key management personnel during the year was £1,538,439 for 15 employees (2021: 16 employees £1,390,836).

Termination payments amounting to £Nil (2021: £Nil) were made during the period.

42

BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022 Notes to the Financial Statements

9 Grants and awards

Grants and awards to the value of £14,154,872 (2021: £8,834,866) were given to other organisations during the year, for work directly supporting BirdLife’s charitable activities. Individual organisations are disclosed where total grants paid are over £100,000 in either year.

2022 2021
£ £
American Bird Conservancy (ABC)* 1,046,464 -
Asity Madagascar* 207,551 153,168
Asociación Civil Armonía (ACA)* 244,844 -
Asociaciόn Calidris* 169,363 82,168
Aves Argentinas (AOP)* 209,869 220,833
Aves y Conservación* 101,878 12,018
Biosfera 1 – Associação Para a Defesa do Meio Ambiente* 91,197 139,643
Bird Protection and Study Society of Serbia (BPSSS)* 135,487 40,134
BirdLife Cyprus* 174,239 89,400
Birdlife South Africa (BLSA)* 286,920 188,002
Birds Canada* 2,519 151,549
Burung Indonesia* 551,857 537,144
Conservation Society of Sierra Leone (CSSL)* 315,927 265,513
ECOAN–Asociación Ecosistemas Andinos 251,253 -
Fundacion Jocotoco 143,990 -
Global Initiative for Food Security and Ecosystem Preservation (GIFSEP) 109,530 -
Guyra Paraguay (GP)* 267,092 313,238
Haribon Foundation* 7,376 111,762
Hellenic Ornithological Society (HOS)* 140,531 111,029
Instituto de Investigación de Recursos Biológicos Alexander Von Humboldt 150,827 -
Lega Italiana Protezione Uccelli (LIPU)* 128,758 165,549
Ligue pour la Protection des Oiseaux (LPO)* 43,280 120,529
Malaysian Nature Society (MNS)* 60,794 139,104
Missouri Botanic Gardens (MBG) 143,957 -
National Audubon Society* 2,307,484 -
Nature Conservation Egypt (NCE)* 113,836 175,118
NatureLife Cambodia* 323,138 84,376
Naturschutzbund Deutschland e.V (NABU)* 98,654 125,299
Nigerian Conservation Foundation (NCF)* 147,142 55,643
Oikos 15,968 168,430
Polish Society for the Protection of Birds (OTOP)* 113,811 90,252
Royal Society for the Conservation of Nature (RSCN)* 148,161 126,534
Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB)* 739,518 259,289
SAVE Brasil* 264,998 368,682
Sociedad Española de Ornitologia (SEO)* 62,245 149,230
Society for Nature Conservation (SABUKO)* 717,172 86,072
Society for the Conservation of Nature in Liberia (SCNL)* 316,607 214,292
The Society for the Conservation of Nature in Liberia (SPNL)* 19,121 115,282
University of East Anglia (UEA) - 321,476
Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) 479,097 214,187
WWF- Democratic Republic of Congo 171,536 -
Other Institutions 2,958,686 3,302,175
Other Individuals 172,195 137,746
____ ____
14,154,872 8,834,866
A full list of grants and awards is available at BirdLife’s registered office. ____ ____
*Grants and Awards paid to BirdLife Partners

43

BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022 Notes to the Financial Statements

10 Tangible fixed assets – group and company

Cost
At 1 January 2022
Additions
Disposals

At 31 December 2022

Depreciation
At 1 January 2022
Disposals
Charge

At 31 December 2022

Net book value
At 31 December 2022
At 31 December 2021
Land
£
283,453
-
-
____

283,453
____

-
-
-
____

-
____

283,453
____
283,453
____
Buildings
Equipment
£
£
-
237,247
136,432
20,430
-
(4,941)
____
____

136,432
252,736
____
____

-
138,380
-
(2,970)
-
42,087
____
____

-
177,497
____
____

136,432
75,239
____
____
-
98,867
____
____
ERP and
Website
£
905,635
40,255
(56,332)
____

889,558
____

6,270
-
78,911
____

85,181
____

804,377
____
899,365
____
Total
£
1,426,335
197,117
(61,273)
____
1,562,179
____
144,650
(2,970)
120,998
____
262,678
____
1,299,501
____
1,281,685
____

Cousin Island, is a BirdLife owned, nature reserve in the Seychelles. This granitic island and surrounding sea area was made a nature reserve when it was bought in 1968 by the International Council for Bird Preservation (now BirdLife International) in order to protect the last tiny population of a near extinct endemic bird species, the Seychelles warbler (Acrocephalus seychellensis). The entire island, including the 400 metres of water surrounding the island, was also declared a ‘Special Reserve’ by the Seychelles Government in 1975. The island has been managed by Nature Seychelles, the BirdLife Partner in Seychelles, since 1998. The warbler was reclassified as “Near Threatened” from “Critically Endangered” in the Red List in 2015.

44

BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022

Notes to the Financial Statements

11 Investments

1 Investments
Market value at 1 January
Additions at cost
Disposals proceeds
Investment income
Management charges
Movement in cash
Net gains / (losses) arising on revaluations during year
Market value at 31 December: Group
Add: Shares in subsidiary undertaking
Total market value at 31 December: Company
Analysis of investments:
Investments managed from UK
Investments managed from Japan
Groupand company
2022
2021
£
£
4,998,773
4,071,856
2,013,239
1,470,253
(1,454,666)
(1,104,512)
73,465
64,389
(41,695)
(25,520)
45,517
(123,582)
(419,360)
645,890
____
____
5,215,273
4,998,773
2
2
____
____
5,215,275
4,998,775
____
____
3,925,539
4,355,146
1,289,734
643,627
____
____
5,215,273
4,998,773
____
____
2022
£
4,998,773

2,013,239

(1,454,666)
73,465

(41,695)
45,517

(419,360)

____
5,215,273
2
____
5,215,275
____
3,925,539
1,289,734
____
5,215,273
____
Shares in group undertaking
Other investments
Group Group Company Company
2022
£
-
5,215,273
____
5,215,273
____
2021
£
-
4,998,773
____
4,998,773
____
2022
£
2
5,215,273
____
5,215,275
____
2021
£
2
4,998,773
____
4,998,775
____

The shares in the group undertaking are the holding in the 100% owned subsidiary BirdLife Limited and are included at cost. Further information is in note 23.

45

BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022 Notes to the Financial Statements

11 Investments (continued)

Other investments consist of the investment portfolio which is invested as follows:

Main Portfolio: GBP denominated
- Equities
- Bonds
- Alternatives
- Cash
Harapan Endowment: USD denominated
- Equities
- Bonds
- Alternatives
- Cash
Japanese Portfolio: YEN denominated
- Equities
Total
2022 2021
£
352,851
46,065
48,671
24,663
472,250
2,117,605
679,368
431,873
224,443
3,453,289
1,289,734
1,289,734
5,215,273
%
74.7
9.8
10.3
5.2
100
61.3
19.7
12.5
6.5
100
100
100
£
371,365
58,622
52,194
28,018
510,199
2,582,259
614,311
472,807
175,570
3,844,947
643,627
643,627
4,998,773
%
72.8
11.5
10.2
5.5
100
67.2
16.0
12.3
4.5
100
100
100

12 Debtors

2 Debtors
Amounts owed by group undertaking
Amounts due from funders
Other debtors
Prepayments
Other taxation & social security
Group Company
2022
£
-
5,912,723
34,260
213,844
5,723
____
6,166,550
____
2021
£
-
4,272,468
375,820
223,348
31,178
____
4,902,814
____
2022
£
183
5,912,725
34,260
213,844
5,723
____
6,166,735
____
2021
£
183
4,272,468
375,820
223,348
31,178
____
4,902,997
____

Amounts due from funders:

Much of BirdLife’s work is funded through project or programme funding under various types of grants or other agreements. The above relates to balances which are recoverable under funding agreements.

46

BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022 Notes to the Financial Statements

13 Creditors: amounts falling due within one year – group and company.

Trade creditors
Other taxation and social security
Other creditors
Accruals
Deferred income
Deferred income is analysed as follows:
Balance at 1 January
Amount released to incoming resources
Amount deferred in the year
Balance at 31 December
14 Financial instruments
Financial assets measured at amortised cost
Financial liabilities measured at amortised cost
Financial assets at fair value
_
2022
£
564,115
135,646
252,099
2,668,839
215,263
____
3,835,962
____
2022
£
223,765
(223,765)
215,263
___
215,263
___
2022
£
5,912,725
564,115
5,216,093
_
2021
£
259,301
100,478
265,754
1,783,401
223,765
____
2,632,700
____
2021
£
4,886
(4,886)
223,765
___
223,765
___
2021
£
4,272,468
259,301
4,998,773
_

47

BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022

Notes to the Financial Statements

15 Capital funds – group and company

Balance at
1 January
2022
£
Permanent endowment funds:
Harapan Fund
3,599,993
Sundry Funds
493,694
___
Total
4,093,687
___
Net gains and transfers are represented above by:
Transfer to restricted income funds
Gain on revaluation of investments
Total
Incoming
resources
£
65,533
7,932
-
___
73,465
___
Gains/(losses)
Balance at
Resources
and
31 December
expended
transfers
2022
£
£
£
(267,043)
(267,973)
3,130,510
(4,514)
(24,042)
473,071
-
-
-
___
___
___
(271,557)
-292,015
3,603,581
___
___
___
£
-
(292,015)
____
(292,015)
____

Net gains and transfers are represented above by:

Harapan Fund – A permanent endowment fund, from which a sustainable return can be drawn down for use on the Harapan Rainforest Initiative.

Sundry funds include:

The Helmut Sick and Sumatra permanent endowment funds work on the basis of total return policies as agreed at the establishment of each fund. All investment income and capital value changes aggregate in the funds, and the maximum permitted drawdown is 5% of a rolling 5-year average fund value.

48

BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022

Notes to the Financial Statements

15 Capital funds – group and company (continued)

Total return disclosure for investment of permanent endowments 2022


Harapan Fund
Trust for
investment
Unapplied
Total Return
Total
Endowment

Harapan Fund
Trust for
investment
Unapplied
Total Return
Total
Endowment
Helmut Sick Fund
Trust for
investment
Unapplied
Total
Return
Total
Endowment
Helmut Sick Fund
Trust for
investment
Unapplied
Total
Return
Total
Endowment
Sumatra Fund
Trust for
investment
Unapplied
Total
Return
Total
Endowment
£
£
£
£
£
£
£
£
£
At beginning of the reporting period:
Gift component of the permanent endowment 2,250,563
-
2,250,563
30,280
-
30,280
187,612
-
187,612

Unapplied total return
-
1,349,430
1,349,430
-
171,913
171,913
-
103,890
103,890
Total 2,250,563
1,349,430
3,599,993
30,280
171,913
202,193
187,612
103,890
291,502
Movements in the reporting period:

Exchange gains/losses
243,410
-
243,410
1,475
-
1,475
(13,809)
-
(13,809)

Investment return: dividends & interest
-
65,533
65,533
-
3,244
3,244
-
4,688
4,688
Investment return: realised & unrealised gains & (losses) -
(511,383)
(511,383)
-
(11,580)
(11,580)
-
(128)
(128)

Less: Investment management costs
-
(37,181)
(37,181)
-
(1,846)
(1,846)
-
(2,668)
(2,668)
Total 243,410
(483,031)
(239,621)
-
1,475
(10,182)
(8,707)
-
(13,809)
1,892
(11,917)
Unapplied total return allocated to income -
(229,862)
(229,862)
-
-
-
-
-
-
Net movements in reporting period -
(229,862)
(229,862)
-
-
-
-
-
-
At end of the reporting period:

Gift component of the permanent endowment
2,493,973
-
2,493,973
31,754
-
31,754
173,803
-
173,803

Unapplied total return
-
636,537
636,537
-
161,732
161,732
-
105,782
105,782
Total 2,493,973
636,537
3,130,510
31,754
161,732
193,486
173,803
105,782
279,585

49

BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022

Notes to the Financial Statements

15 Capital funds – group and company (continued)

Total return disclosure for investment of permanent endowments 2021


Harapan Fund
Trust for
investment
Unapplied
Total Return
Total
Endowment

Harapan Fund
Trust for
investment
Unapplied
Total Return
Total
Endowment
Helmut Sick Fund
Trust for
investment
Unapplied
Total Return
Total
Endowment
Helmut Sick Fund
Trust for
investment
Unapplied
Total Return
Total
Endowment
Sumatra Fund
Trust for
investment
Unapplied
Total Return
Total
Endowment
£
£
£
£
£
£
£
£
£
At beginning of the reporting period: 2,194,747
-
2,194,747
32,036
-
32,036
Gift component of the permanent endowment 174,551
-
174,551
Unapplied total return -
967,988
967,988
-
143,248
143,248
-
78,067
78,067
Total 2,194,747
967,988
3,162,735
32,036
143,248
175,284
174,551
78,067
252,618
Movements in the reporting period:
Exchange gains/losses 55,816
-
55,816
(1,756)
-
(1,756)
13,061
-
13,061

Investment return: dividends & interest
-
56,303
56,303
-
3,307
3,307
-
4,779
4,779
Investment return: realised & unrealised gains & (losses) -
408,489
408,489
-
27,126
27,126
-
23,598
23,598

Less: Investment management costs
-
(21,198)
(21,198)
-
(1,768)
(1,768)
-
(2,554)
(2,554)
Total 55,816
443,594
499,410
(1,756)
28,665
26,909
13,061
25,823
38,884
Unapplied total return allocated to income -
(62,152)
(62,152)
-
-
-
-
-
-
Net movements in reporting period -
(62,152)
(62,152)
2,250,563
-
2,250,563
-
-
-
30,280
-
30,280
-
-
-
At end of the reporting period:
Gift component of the permanent endowment 187,612
-
187,612
Unapplied total return -
1,349,430
1,349,430
-
171,913
171,913
-
103,890
103,890
Total 2,250,563
1,349,430
3,599,993
30,280
171,913
202,193
187,612
103,890
291,502

50

BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022

Notes to the Financial Statements

16 Restricted income funds – group and company

The income funds of the charity can be analysed as follows:

Global and Multi-Regional Programmes
Preventing Extinctions
Important Bird and Biodiversity Areas
Forests
Marine
Migratory Birds and Flyways
Conservation Science
Climate Change
Capacity Development
Fundraising
Global and Multi-Regional Programmes - Other
Africa
Preventing Extinctions
Important Bird and Biodiversity Areas
Forests
Marine
Migratory Birds and Flyways
Capacity Development
Africa – Other
Americas
Important Bird and Biodiversity Areas
Migratory Birds and Flyways
Forests
Americas - Other
Asia
Preventing Extinctions
Migratory Birds and Flyways
Asia – Other
Japan
Preventing Extinctions
Forests
Conservation Science
Japan - Other
Europe & Central Asia
Preventing Extinctions
Marine
Conservation Policy
Europe & Central Asia - Other
Middle East
Migratory Birds and Flyways
Middle East - Other
Pacific
Important Bird and Biodiversity Areas
Invasive Alien Species
Marine
Pacific – Other
BirdLife total
Balance at
01-Jan 2022
£

627,857

1,519,745
1,977,477
1,083,911
348,552
102,726
277,786
352,862
429,389
40,533
6,760,838

345,624
54,721
623,341
114,845
154,174
302,165
47,408
1,642,278
208,848
298,932
35,846
60,746
604,372
233,725
473,789
221,081
928,595
104,152
222,699
1,327,852
94,560
1,749,263
102,126
155,320
354,962
154,481
766,888
61,863
30,269
92,132
141,216
378,480
7,803
36,068
563,567
13,107,933
Incoming
resources
£
1,096,008
6,424,110
993,695
655,897
5,186,844
1,106,943
147,005
1,607,053
93,043
921,502
18,232,100
566,125
666,345
1,176,930
1,030,676
304,726
305,393
44,849
4,095,044
3,232,872
1,121,525
865,238
454,271
5,673,906
336,299
217,687
319,380
872,366
215,659
45,013
2,380,556
187,098
2,828,326
402,148
388,628
1,797,965
1,145,344
3,734,084
270,652
255,087
525,739
161,903
554,949
218,556
52,808
988,216
36,950,782
Expenditure,
gains/(losses)
and transfers
£
( 1,215,052 )
( 4,438,487 )
( 1,673,693 )
( 907,120 )
( 802,865 )
( 1,029,428 )
( 164,855 )
( 1,503,200 )
( 286,200 )
(798,659)
(12,819,559)
( 560,102 )
( 598,392 )
( 1,700,237 )
( 571,073 )
( 194,318 )
( 426,161 )
(72,543)
(4,122,826)
(3,178,600)
(1,061,714)
(803,557)
(577,742)
(5,621,613)
(172,264)
(231,561)
(399,476)
(803,301)
(175,664)
(34,965)
(456,783)
(129,025)
(796,437)
(186,762)
(454,414)
(1,606,116)
(1,161,496)
(3,408,787)
(301,160)
(275,446)
(576,606)
(241,290)
(252,776)
(40,963)
(49,055)
(584,084)
(28,733,214)
Balance at
31-Dec 2022
£
508,813
3,505,368
1,297,479
832,688
4,732,531
180,241
259,936
456,715
236,232
163,376
12,173,379
351,647
122,674
100,034
574,448
264,582
181,397
19,714
1,614,496
263,120
358,743
97,527
(62,725)
656,665
397,760
459,915
140,985
998,660
144,147
232,747
3,251,625
152,633
3,781,152
317,512
89,534
546,810
138,329
1,092,185
31,355
9,910
41,265
61,829
680,653
185,396
39,821
967,699
21,325,501

Where it is judged that the terms of the grants have been sufficiently fulfilled to establish the entitlement to funding, income is accrued, and any balance included under Amounts due from funders in note 12.

Included in the expenditure column are transfers, these relate to unrestricted staff time and overheads being charged to restricted funds.

51

BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022

Notes to the Financial Statements

17 Analysis of net assets between funds

Tangible
Net current
fixed assets
Investments
assets
£
£
£
Endowment funds
Helmut Sick Fund
-
193,486
-
Sumatra Fund
-
279,585
-
Harapan Fund
-
3,130,510
-
Restricted funds
-
1,289,734
20,035,767

Unrestricted funds
1,299,501
321,958
995,227
___-
___-
___-
1,299,501
5,215,273
21,030,994

___
___
___
2022
Tangible
Net current
Total
fixed assets
Investments
assets
£
£
£
£
193,486
-
202,192
-
279,585
-
291,502
-
3,130,510
-
3,599,993
-
21,325,501
-
-
13,107,933
2,616,686
1,281,685
905,086
162,141
___
___
___
27,545,768
1,281,685
4,998,773
13,270,074
___
___
___
___
2021
Total
£
202,192
291,502
3,599,993
13,107,933
2,348,912
___
19,550,532
___

The analysis of net assets between funds for the company would be exactly the same as above, except for;

52

BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022

Notes to the Financial Statements

18 Pension obligations

The company operates defined contribution pension schemes. The assets of the schemes are held separately from those of the company in independently administered funds. The pension cost charge represents contributions payable by the company to the funds and amounted to £788,723 (2021: £642,681). Pension contributions payable to the funds at the year-end were £Nil (2021: £Nil).

19 Indemnity insurance

An indemnity insurance premium amounting to £3,961 (2021: £1,840) was paid for the year. The insurance indemnifies:

20 Reconciliation of changes in resources to net cash flow from operating activities

Net income / (expenditure) for the reporting period (as per the Consolidated
Statement of Financial Activities)
Adjustments for:
Depreciation on tangible fixed assets
Losses on disposal of tangible fixed assets
(Increase)/Decrease in debtors
Increase/(Decrease) in creditors
Loss/(Gain) on investments
Net cash inflow/(outflow) from operating activities
1 Analysis of net funds and reconciliation of net cash flow to movement in net funds
Group
Net funds, being cash at bank and in hand, at 1 January
Increase/(Decrease) in cash in the year
Net funds, being cash at bank and in hand, at 31 December
2022
£
7,966,420
120,998
87,118
(1,263,737)
1,203,263
387,590
____
8,501,652
____
2022
£
10,999,960
7,700,445
____
18,700,405
____
2021
£
103,323
40,425
327
410,167
442,131
(684,759)
____
311,614
____
2021
£
11,432,460
(432,500)
____
10,999,960
____

21 Analysis of net funds and reconciliation of net cash flow to movement in net funds

22 Operating lease commitments

BirdLife International has commitments under non-cancellable operating leases for land and buildings as follows:

2022 2021
£ £
Commitments expiring within one year 260,666 286,026
Commitments expiring in 2 – 5 years 313,449 499,333
Commitments expiring after 5 years - -

Of the above commitments £346,170 (2021: £461,560) relates to the lease of the Head Office premises in Cambridge (UK) due to expire within 5 years.

53

BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022

Notes to the Financial Statements

23 Trading subsidiary

The Secretariat to the BirdLife International Partnership (BirdLife International, the UK registered Charity and Company) operates across all continents. In order to do this, it has branches which are controlled and managed by BirdLife International. In certain countries, where it has been necessary, branches of the Secretariat have been set up and locally registered. These branches, as with all other Secretariat branches are not treated as separate from the main charity for the purposes of these financial statements. The results contributing to the results of BirdLife International are summarised in note 24. These are all fully integrated into the main charity financial statements.

The charity also has one wholly owned subsidiary which is registered in England and Wales. BirdLife Services Limited formerly acted as the trading subsidiary of BirdLife International, and last traded in 2001. The entity continued to be dormant in the year ended 31 December 2022, but changed its name on 11 May 2018 to BirdLife Limited. The net assets of BirdLife Limited at the year-end were £2.

24 BirdLife International branches

Stichting BirdLife Europe is a registered entity in the Netherlands. It comprises activities of the Secretariat’s European and Central Asia Division, which primarily operates from an office in Belgium. It is controlled by the board of Stichting BirdLife Europe who are employees of BirdLife International.

Ippan Shadan Houjin BirdLife International Tokyo is an association registered in Japan. It is controlled by a Board comprising staff of BirdLife International. Senior staff are employed by BirdLife International.

BirdLife International (Asia) Limited is a registered company limited by guarantee and a charity in Singapore. The majority of the Board are staff of BirdLife International.

BirdLife International is a registered entity in Kenya. BirdLife International (UK) is a member of the board along with various African BirdLife Partners.

Entity Income (£’000) Net Assets/(Liabilities) (£’000)
Stichting BirdLife Europe 1,597,733 2,621,794
2,988,928 3,781,101
Ippan Shadan Houjin BirdLife International Tokyo
BirdLife International (Asia) Limited 774,068 (2,062,015)
2,270,023 532,151
BirdLife International (Kenya)

25 Connected organisations

Friends of BirdLife International Inc. (Formerly American Friends of BirdLife International Inc.) is a tax-exempt organisation incorporated in the USA. Its objectives are in support of the objectives of the BirdLife International Partnership. Two staff members of BirdLife International serve on the board of directors of the organisation. Its name was changed in 2021 to Friends of BirdLife International Inc.

Yayasan Konservasi Ekosistem Hutan Indonesia (Yayasan) is an Indonesian charitable foundation. Its objectives are in furtherance of conservation of biodiversity in Indonesia. A former Trustee of BirdLife International acts on the board of directors of the organisation.

26 Contributions from and payments to BirdLife Partners

BirdLife International acts as an umbrella organisation for entities with similar objectives throughout the world. These Partner organisations provide funding for projects and maintenance of the Secretariat. The Secretariat works closely with Partners on project activities and co-ordination. It also sub-contracts work to, and obtains funding for, Partner organisations. Although the Partners do not necessarily constitute related parties, as defined within FRS 102, disclosure of transactions with the Partners is made on the basis that the information is of interest to the Partnership. The tables on pages 55 to 59 show the levels of contributions to the Secretariat from various Partners, and payments from the Secretariat to the Partners.

54

Contributions from BirdLife Partners 2022 2021
Unrestricted Restricted Total Unrestricted Restricted Total
Country/Territory Partner £ £ £ £ £ £
Argentina Aves Argentinas (AOP) 2,488 - 2,488 1,934 - 1,934
Australia* BirdLife Australia 9,290 - 9,290 13,898 - 13,898
Austria BirdLife Austria 7,481 3,381 10,862 3,077 5,189 8,266
Azerbaijan Azerbaijan Ornithological Society (AOS) - - - (366) - (366)
Bahamas Bahamas National Trust (BNT) 1,847 - 1,847 - - -
Belarus Akhova Ptushak Belarusi (APB) - - - 455 - 455
Belgium* Natuurpunt 81,556 - 81,556 76,821 - 76,821
Belgium* Natagora 20,734 - 20,734 15,787 - 15,787
Belize* Belize Audubon Society (BAS) 411 - 411 305 - 305
Bhutan Royal Society for the Protection of Nature (RSPN) 461 - 461 422 - 422
Bolivia* Asociación Civil Armonía (ACA) 461 - 461 330 - 330
Botswana BirdLife Botswana (BLB) 402 - 402 350 - 350
Brazil SAVE Brasil 372 - 372 336 - 336
Bulgaria Bulgarian Society for the Protection of Birds (BSPB) 705 438,764 439,469 935 197,474 198,409
Burkina Faso Fondation des Amis de la Nature (NATURAMA) 743 - 743 346 - 346
Burundi Association Burundaise pour la Protection de la Nature (ABN) 374 - 374 - - -
Cambodia Nature Life Cambodia 433 - 433 - 20,928 20,928
Canada Nature Canada (NC) 3,034 - 3,034 2,825 42,724 45,549
Canada* Bird Studies Canada (BSC) 5,931 - 5,931 8,670 - 8,670
Cape Verde Biosfera 380 - 380 - - -
Chile Comité Nacional Pro Defensa de la Flora y Fauna (CODEFF) (369) - (369) 364 - 364
Colombia Asociaciόn Calidris 365 - 365 358 - 358
Cook Islands Te Ipukarea Society (TIS) 380 - 380 336 - 336
Croatia Association BIOM 633 9,066 9,699 617 342 959
Cyprus BirdLife Cyprus 675 4,227 4,901 658 - 658
Czechia Czech Society for Ornithology (CSO) 4,661 - 4,661 4,436 8,055 12,491
Denmark Dansk Ornitologisk Forening (DOF) 16,818 - 16,818 15,599 - 15,599
Dominican Republic
Grupo Jaragua
396 - 396 347 - 347
Ecuador Aves y Conservación - - - - - -
Egypt Nature Conservation Egypt (NCE) 415 - 415 361 - 361
Estonia Eesti Ornitoloogiauhing (EOU) 755 - 755 749 - 749
Ethiopia Ethiopian Wildlife & Natural History Society (EWNHS) 416 - 416 353 - 353
Falkland Islands Falklands Conservation 380 - 380 353 25,632 25,985
Fiji* Nature Fiji-MareqetiViti 418 - 418 793 2,948 3,741
Finland* BirdLife Suomi–Finland 17,933 2,113 20,046 19,626 - 19,626
France Ligue pour la Protection des Oiseaux (LPO) 59,454 - 59,454 73,165 - 73,165
French Polynesia Societe’ d’Ornithologie de Polynesie “Manu” 380 - 380 364 - 364
Georgia Society for Nature Conservation (SABUKO) 380 - 380 353 - 353
Germany Nature and Biodiversity Conservation Union (NABU) 157,607 73,229 230,836 100,469 22,265 122,734
Ghana Ghana Wildlife Society (GWS) 374 - 374 365 - 365
Gibraltar Gibraltar Ornithological and Natural History Society (GONHS) 380 - 380 353 - 353
Greece Hellenic Ornithological Society (HOS) 1,342 - 1,342 1,298 - 1,298

55

Contributions from BirdLife Partners (continued)

2022 2021
Unrestricted Restricted Total Unrestricted Restricted Total
Country/Territory Partner £ £ £ £ £ £
Guinea Guinee-Ecologie 374 - 374 - -
Hong Kong (China) Hong Kong Birdwatching Society (HKBWS) 1,438 - 1,438 1,322 3,453 4,775
Hungary* Hungarian Ornithological and Nature Conservation Society (MME) 5,208 2,530 7,738 5,176 5,189 10,365
Iceland Fuglavernd – BirdLife Iceland (ISPB) 880 - 880 819 - 819
India Bombay Natural History Society (BNHS) 3,409 - 3,409 2,533 - 2,533
Indonesia* Burung Indonesia 402 - 402 364 - 364
Iraq Nature Iraq (NI) - - - - 477 477
Ireland BirdWatch Ireland 3,432 - 3,432 7,997 - 7,997
Italy Lega Italiana Protezione Uccelli (LIPU) 23,332 8,432 31,764 22,803 - 22,803
Japan Wild Bird Society of Japan (WBSJ) 1,520 - 1,520 1,433 - 1,433
Jordan* Royal Society for the Conservation of Nature (RSCN) 415 - 415 356 - 356
Kazakhstan* Association for the Conservation of Biodiversity of Kazakhstan (ACBK) 380 - 380 364 - 364
Kenya Nature Kenya (EANHS) 374 2,551 2,925 459 - 459
Latvia Latvijas Ornitologijas Biedriba (LOB) 659 - 659 921 - 921
Lebanon* Society for the Protection of Nature in Lebanon (SPNL) 380 - 380 353 - 353
Liberia The Society fort he Conservation of Nature in Liberia (SCNL) 1,084 - 1,084 886 - 886
Lithuania Lithuanian Ornithological Society (LOD) 652 - 652 376 - 376
Luxembourg natur&emwelt a.s.b.l 4,893 - 4,893 4,413 - 4,413
North Macedonia Macedonian Ecological Society (MES) 380 - 380 394 - 394
Madagascar Asity Madagascar 416 - 416 364 - 364
Malaysia Malaysian Nature Society (MNS) 1,292 - 1,292 1,267 - 1,267
Malta BirdLife Malta 1,557 38,282 39,839 804 - 804
Mauritania Nature Mauritanie (369) - (369) 369 - 369
Mauritius* Mauritian Wildlife Foundation 380 - 380 353 - 353
Montenegro Center for Protection and Research of Birds of Montenegro (CZIP) 380 832 1,212 347 - 347
Morocco* GREPOM/BirdLife Morocco 456 - 456 369 - 369
Myanmar Biodiversity and Nature Conservation Association (BANCA) 380 - 380 353 - 353
Nepal* Bird Conservation Nepal (BCN) 679 - 679 650 - 650
Netherlands Vogelbescherming Nederland (VBN) 141,531 223,012 364,543 129,198 285,787 414,985
Nigeria* Nigerian Conservation Foundation (NCF) 1,229 - 1,229 1,177 - 1,177
Norway* Norsk Ornitologisk Forening (NOF) 7,944 - 7,944 7,481 - 7,481
Palau Palau Conservation Society (PCS) 380 - 380 340 - 340
State of Palestine* Palestine Wildlife Society (PWLS) 462 - 462 369 - 369
Panama* Sociedad Audubon de Panama (PAS) 369 - 369 381 - 381
Paraguay Guyra Paraguay (GP) 922 - 922 716 - 716
Philippines Haribon Foundation (HF) 421 - 421 336 - 336
Poland Polish Society for the Protection of Birds (OTOP) 1,624 - 1,624 2,555 4,000 6,555
Portugal Sociedade Portuguesa para o Estudo das Aves (SPEA) 2,001 - 2,001 2,972 - 2,972

56

Contributions from BirdLife Partners (continued)

Unrestricted
Country/Territory
Partner
£
Romania
Romanian Ornithological Society (SOR)
(3,530)
Senegal
Nature-Communautés-Développement (NCD)
413
Serbia
Bird Protection and Study Society of Serbia (BPSSS)
658
Seychelles
Nature Seychelles
380
Sierra Leone
Conservation Society of Sierra Leone (CSSL)
463
Singapore

Nature Society (Singapore)
813
Slovakia
Slovak Ornithological Society / BirdLife Slovakia (SOS)
800
Slovenia
Drustvo Za Opazovanje in Proucevanje Ptic Slovenije (DOPPS)
791
South Africa
BirdLife South Africa (BLSA)
905
Spain
Sociedad Española de Ornitología (SEO)
12,526
Sri Lanka
Field Ornithology Group of Sri Lanka (FOGSL)
416
Sweden
Sveriges Ornitologiska Förening (SOF)
19,497
Switzerland
Schweizer Vogelschutz (SVS)
53,329
Thailand
Bird Conservation Society of Thailand (BCST)
402
Tunisia

Association Les Amis des Oiseaux (AAO)
417
Turkey
Doga Dernegi
376
Uganda
Nature Uganda (NU)
433
UK

Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB)
450,351
Ukraine
Ukrainian Society for the Protection of Birds (USPB)
-
Uruguay
Aves Uruguay (GUPECA)
463
USA
American Bird Conservancy (ABC)
6,058
USA
National Audubon Society
124,699
Zambia
BirdWatch Zambia
380
Zimbabwe
BirdLife Zimbabwe (BLZ)
380
___
1,283,577
___
2022
Restricted
£
-
-
-
-
-
-
832
-
-
(877)
-
5,712
21,133
-
-
-
-
490,983
-
-
54,235
118,048
-
-
___
1,493,954
___
Total
Unrestricted
£
£
(3,530)
640
413
-
658
349
380
-
463
401
813
743
1,632
867
791
801
905
992
11,648
13,462
416
330
25,209
20,436
74,461
71,443
402
353
417
364
376
369
433
353
941,334
250,819
-
358
463
369
60,293
5,814
242,747
107,447
380
364
380
360
___
___
2,777,531
1,026,246
___
___
2021
Restricted
£
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
5,144
43,244
-
-
-
-
662,326
-
-
13,794
101,716
-
12,780
___
1,463,467
___
Total
£
640
-
349
-
401
743
867
801
992
13,462
330
25,580
114,687
353
364
369
353
913,145
358
369
19,608
209,163
364
13,140
___
2,483,713
___
*Unrestricted contributions from BirdLife Partners were made up of:
Partner membership contributions 862,145
Other Income from Partners 421,432
Total 1,283,577

57

Payments to BirdLife Partners 2022 2021
Country/Territory Partner £ £
Argentina Aves Argentinas (AOP) 209,869 220,833
Austria BirdLife Austria 1,724 -
Belgium* Natuurpunt 1,724 -
Belgium* Natagora 2,011 -
Belize* Belize Audubon Society (BAS) - 120
Bhutan Royal Society for Protection of Nature (RSPN) - 462
Bolivia* Asociación Civil Armonía (ACA) 244,844 -
Botswana BirdLife Botswana (BLB) 7,013 14,795
Brazil SAVE Brazil 264,998 368,682
Bulgaria Bulgarian Society for the Protection of Birds (BSPB) 174 675
Burkina Faso Fondation des Amis de la Nature (NATURAMA) - 4,288
Burundi Association Burundaise pour la Protection de la Nature (ABN) - 8,575
Cabo Verde Biosfera I 91,197 139,643
Cambodia Nature Life Cambodia 323,138 78,203
Canada* Bird Studies Canada 2,519 151,549
Colombia Asociación Calidris 169,363 82,168
Cook Islands Te Ipukarea Society (TIS) 7,623 1,510
Croatia Association BIOM 53,416 50,637
Cyprus BirdLife Cyprus 174,239 48,825
Czechia Czech Society for Ornithology (CSO) 10,660 13,620
Denmark Dansk Ornitologisk Forening (DOF) 27,062 -
Ecuador Aves y Conservacion (CECIA) 101,878 12,018
Egypt Nature Conservation Egypt (NCE) 120,415 175,118
Ethiopia Ethiopian Wildlife & Natural History Society (EWNHS) 4,389 95,260
Fiji* Nature Fiji-MareqetiViti 4,025 -
Finland* BirdLife Suomi–Finland 7,723 -
France Ligue pour La Protection des Oiseaux (LPO) 43,280 120,529
French Polynesia Societe d’Ornithologie de Polynesie “Manu” 74,879 70,118
Georgia SABUKO - Society for Nature Conservation 717,172 86,072
Germany Nature and Biodiversity Conservation Union (NABU) 98,654 125,299
Ghana Ghana Wildlife Society (GWS) - 1,841
Greece Hellenic Ornithological Society (HOS) 140,531 111,029
Guinea Guinee Ecologie 5,914 15,862
Hong Kong (China) Hong Kong Bird Watching Society (HKBWS) 11,352 3,516
Hungary* Hungarian Ornithological and Nature Conservation Society (MME) 2,011 675
Iceland Fuglavernd – BirdLife Iceland (ISPB) 27,061 -
India Bombay Natural History Society (BNHS) 38,853 45,624
Indonesia* Burung Indonesia 551,857 537,144
Iraq Nature Iraq 6,057 499
Ireland BirdWatch Ireland 1,724 -
Italy Lega Italiana Protezione Uccelli (LIPU) 128,758 165,549
Jordan* Royal Society for the Conservation of Nature (RSCN) 148,161 126,534
Kazakhstan* Association for the Conservation of Biodiversity of Kazakhstan (ACBK) 10,665 4,902
Kenya Nature Kenya (EANHS) 53,899 99,373
Latvia Latvia Ornithological Society (LOB) 12,210 7,767
Lebanon* Society for the Protection of Nature in Lebanon (SPNL) 19,121 115,282
Liberia The Society for Conservation of Nature in Liberia (SCNL) 316,607 214,292
Lithuania Lithuanian Ornithological Society (LOD) - 16,087
North Macedonia Macedonian Ecological Society (MES) 2,351 4,803
Madagascar Asity Madagascar 207,551 153,168
Malawi Wildlife and Environmental Society of Malawi (WESM) 8,410 9,705
Malaysia Malaysian Nature Society (MNS) 60,794 139,104
Malta BirdLife Malta 39,819 37,181
Mauritania Nature Mauritanie 5,242 18,949
Montenegro Center for Protection and Research of birds of Montenegro (CZIP) 13,423 22,169
Morocco* GREPOM/BirdLife Morocco 33,517 40,000
Myanmar Biodiversity and Nature Conservation Association (BANCA) 5,051 26,691
Nepal* Bird Conservation Nepal 4,829 10,473
Netherlands Vogelbescherming Nederland (VBN) 6,035 -
Nigeria* Nigerian Conservation Foundation (NCF) 147,142 55,644
Norway Norsk Ornitologisk Forening (NOF) - 1,564
State of Palestine* Palestine Wildlife Society (PWLS) 2,390 19,339

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58

BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022

Notes to the Financial Statements

Payments to BirdLife Partners (Continued)
Country/Territory Partner
Paraguay
Guyra Paraguay (GP)
Panama
Sociedad Audubon de Panama (PAS)
Peru
Asociación Ecosistemas Andinos (ECOAN)
Philippines
Haribon Foundation (HF)
Poland
Polish Society for the Protection of Birds (OTOP)
Portugal
Sociedade Portuguesa para o Estudo das Aves (SPEA)
Romania
Romanian Ornithological Society (SOR)
Senegal
Nature-Communautés-Développement (NCD)
Serbia
Bird Protection and Study Society of Serbia (BPSSS)
Seychelles
Nature Seychelles
Sierra Leone

Conservation Society of Sierra Leone (CSSL)
Slovakia
Slovak Ornithological Society / BirdLife Slovakia (SOS)
Slovenia
Drustvo Za Opazovanje in Proucevanje Ptic Slovenije (DOPPS)
South Africa
BirdLife South Africa (BLSA)
Spain
Sociedad Española de Ornitología (SEO)
Sweden
Sveriges Ornitologiska Förening (SOF)
Switzerland
Schweizer Vogelschutz (SVS)
Syria
The Syrian Society for the Conservation of Wildlife (SSCW)
Tanzania
Nature Tanzania
Thailand
Bird Conservation Society of Thailand
Tunisia
Associacion “Les Amis des Oiseaux”
Turkey
Doga Dernegi
Uganda

Nature Uganda (NU)
UK
Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB)
Ukraine
Ukrainian Society for the Protection of Birds (USPB
)*
Uruguay
Aves Uruguay
USA
American Bird Conservancy (ABC)
USA
National Audubon Society
Zambia
BirdWatch Zambia
Zimbabwe
BirdLife Zimbabwe (BLZ)
2022
£
267,092
2,240
90,881
7,376
113,811
21,579
-
44,632
135,487
-
315,927
1,724
35,548
286,920
62,245
8,621
-
30,701
55,304
37,653
43,624
81,504
31,512
739,518
55,955
8,425
1,046,464
2,307,484
10,608
30,249
___
10,648,408
___
2021
£
313,238
-
-
111,762
91,120
65,462
5,137
13,141
40,134
8,576
265,513
-
38,684
188,002
149,230
-
4,265
49,862
-
29,000
73,103
75,735
-
259,289
-
11,640
-
-
38,839
63,262
___
5,768,759
___

*Partner organisations that had representatives on the board of directors of BirdLife International during 2022. The above relate to contributions received and payments made to further the cause of conservation programmes in the country of the Partner, and/or for activities of BirdLife International programmes.

www.birdlife.org

59

BirdLife International Trustees’ Report and Financial Statements 2022 Notes to the Financial Statements

27 Consolidated Statement of Financial Activities Comparatives for the year ended 31 December 2021

Unrestricted Restricted Endowment Total
funds funds Funds 2021
Notes £ £ £ £
Income and endowments from:
Donations and legacies
Partner membership contributions 26 840,989 - - 840,989
Subscriptions 161,711 - - 161,711
Other donations and legacies 1,066,352 3,324,962 - 4,391,314
Other trading activities
Event income - 181,048 - 181,048
Trading activities 15,836 - - 15,836
Income from investments 4 2,068 83 64,389 66,540
Income from charitable activities
Partner organisations 26 185,257 1,463,467 - 1,648,724
Governmental institutions 3,026 4,274,499 - 4,277,525
Trusts and foundations 633,482 9,246,074 - 9,879,556
Corporations - 2,825,892 - 2,825,892
Other income 533 23,710 - 24,243
__ __ __ __
Total income 27 2,909,254 21,339,735 64,389 24,313,378
__ __ __ __
Resources expended:
Expenditure on raising funds 5 840,390 78,641 25,520 944,551
Expenditure on charitable activities 5
Preventing Extinctions 126,719 2,416,678 - 2,543,397
Important Bird and Biodiversity 280,995 4,434,695 - 4,715,690
Migratory Birds and Flyways 15,339 2,342,300 - 2,357,639
Marine 174,202 2,376,240 - 2,550,442
Invasive Alien Species 55,996 318,872 - 374,868
Forests 421,510 4,008,649 - 4,430,159
Climate Change 72,687 524,611 - 597,298
Local Engagement & Empowerment 112,581 439,913 - 552,494
Capacity Development 253,791 1,993,357 - 2,247,148
Conservation Science 83,399 1,182,867 - 1,266,266
Conservation Policy 80,299 2,076,138 - 2,156,437
__ __ __ __
Total Resources Expended 5 2,517,908 22,192,961 25,520 24,736,389
Net gains on investments 15 - - 526,334 526,334
__ __ __ __
Net income / (expenditure) before 391,346 (853,226) 565,203 103,323
Transfers between funds 15 - 62,152 (62,152) -
__ __ __ __
Net movement in funds 391,346 (791,074) 503,051 103,323
Total funds brought forward 15 1,957,566 13,899,007 3,590,636 19,447,209
__ __ __ __
Total funds carried forward 2,348,912 13,107,933 4,093,687 19,550,532
__ __ __ __

Commitments for capital expenditure as at 31 December 2022 not provided for in the accounts was £Nil (2021 £Nil).

28 Capital commitments

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60

In 100 years of our history, we’ve never needed your help more.

This decade is a tipping point for nature; it’s now or never for tackling biodiversity loss and climate change. With nations’ governments coming together on commitments including protecting and managing 30% of the Earth’s land, freshwater and ocean by 2030, we have an opportunity we can’t afford to miss.

Including a gift in your will to BirdLife International is one of the most effective ways to preserve the future of both birds and nature. By acting now you can be sure that whatever problems birds may face in the future, BirdLife will be there to help, and so future generations can continue to be inspired as you have been in your lifetime.

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