To evaluate the classification of environmental NGOs, it is important to consider these five factors : • geopolitical origins, • political ideology, • size, • level of political focus, • funding sources. Main goals of environmental NGOs include but are not limited to : • creating relationships with the government and other organizations, • offering training and assistance in agricultural conservation to maximize the use of localresources, • establishing environmental solutions, and managing projects implemented to address issues affecting a particular area. To fully understand the social, economic, and environmental effects that the organization can have on a region, it is also important to note that the organization can act outside the formal processes what state governments and other government institutions must comply with.
Funding
Environmental NGOs are organizations that are not run by federal or state governments, therefore they receive funds from private donors, corporations, and other institutions. With political backup, environmental NGOs also receive considerable amounts of assets and resources through government sponsors such as the United Nations Environment Programme and the Commission on Sustainable Development who supersede environmental policies. The funds issued by various parties inevitably influence the way their efforts will be put out, the different kinds of environmental policy-making, and the activities pursued to challenge and put pressure on the states to cooperate in environmental protection. It is clear that private and non-private funding influences and affects the way environmental NGOs view and report environmental conditions.
Approaches
The concept of local is also crucial to the kinds of efforts and objectives what environmental NGOs will carry out. This aim is going to aid how environmental NGOs will “facilitate, fund, promote, and provide planning and organizational assistance to so-called grassroots organizations". Their efforts come in many forms such as: launching campaigns against nuclear weapons testing, protesting whale hunting, and "international campaigns against the degradation of environmental goods caused by practices like "clearing of timber, and criticize states for their ineffective policies or transnational corporations for environmentally damaging production".
Challenges
• Environmental NGOs have become increasingly aware of the loss of biodiversity in Africa and operate on conserving wild and domesticated animals and plants. By the 1980s, most of Zimbabwe's best land had been taken control of by European settlers which have been divided into categories of " large-scale commercial farmland. resettlement areas, communal lands, national parks and safari areas, forest lands, and urban land" which is owned and operated by the state. Environmental problems there are defined as "a change in the physical environment brought about by human interferences which are perceived by people to be unacceptable with respect to a particular set of commonly shared norms".