Adrian Macey

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Adrian Macey, (b. 6 December 1948), New Zealand diplomat and currently Ambassador for Climate Change.

Macey was educated at the University of Canterbury, where he received an MA in French, the Ecole Nationale d’Administration, where he received a Maitrise de Lettres Tours, and the University of Otago, where he received a PhD in French for his thesis on the 18th century philosopher Denis Diderot.

From 1977-1981, Macey was New Zealand’s deputy permanent delegate to UNESCO in Paris. In 1985, he was appointed Official Secretary to the Government of Tokelau. In 1987, be became Counsellor (economic) and Consul-General at New Zealand’s embassy in Geneva, where he was a New Zealand negotiator in the Uruguay Round for dispute settlement. Apart from Macey’s WTO responsibilities, he also represented New Zealand at the International Labor Organisation.

In 1991, Macey returned to Wellington to the position of director of personnel, responsible for human resource management issues in the Ministry. In 1996, he was appointed New Zealand’s Ambassador to Bangkok. In 2000, Macey became New Zealand’s principal trade negotiator, responsible for managing all New Zealand’s WTO negotiations.

In 2002, Macey became New Zealand’s Ambassador to France and Permanent Representative to the OECD. While posted in France, Macey played a key role in the return of the unknown warrior to New Zealand. In 2006, Foreign Minister Winston Peters appointed Macey to the new post of Climate Change Ambassador, where he coordinates New Zealand's international negotiations on climate change, and assists the Government make an effective contribution to international efforts. He attended the Climate Change Conference in Nairobi, after which he climbed Mt Kenya.