TLDR: If you're an EA-minded animal funder donating $200K/year or more, we'd love to connect with you about several exciting initiatives that AIM is launching over the next several months.
AIM (formerly Charity Entrepreneurship) has a history of incubating and supporting highly effective charities across various cause areas. We have also launched a variety of additional programs aiming at other impactful sectors, from philanthropy to research to local effective giving. We have noticed through engaging on these different levels of impact that animal welfare seems particularly impactful and particularly neglected, even amongst a crop of already impactful and neglected cause areas.We believe that there are several opportunities to meaningfully impact animal welfare through donor collaboration and programming. To that end, we’re launching a few exciting initiatives over the coming months.Specifically, we are excited about two projects that are launching soon:
- An animal-focused Foundation Program round, where we'll be supporting a cohort of ambitious founders as they develop their philanthropic strategy. This cohort begins April 15.
- An animal-focused funding circle, bringing funders together to strategically deploy capital to the most promising animal charities. This will likely launch mid-summer.
We believe these initiatives will offer ambitious funders unique opportunities for increased impact. If you're an EA-minded animal funder who donates $200K or more per year, please don’t hesitate to reach out.
I'm not sure if this really explains much or if the funders were acting rationally if it did. As one of its main interventions, SWP is currently buying and giving out electric stunners for free, which is essentially a subsidy in kind. SWP is supported by Open Phil, ACE and seems popular in the broad EA community among animal charities (I'd guess even just for the direct provision of stunners, not any legislative/corporate policy work to leverage it later), but maybe not (?) in the animal community outside of EA.
But maybe shrimp stunning looked better ex ante, given the number of shrimp it could affect per $ and better evidence supporting stunning than feed fortification for keel bone fractures. In fact, HH's feed fortification trial actually made things worse for hens. SWP is already past a billion shrimp helped in expectation (maybe not just with stunners?). SWP had to get some evidence for the success of the intervention before scaling, but someone had to pay for that and the stunning trial.
If people are hesitant to subsidize the industry, maybe the benefits to animals vs money to industry ratio just looked much better for SWP than HH, and good enough to be worth supporting SWP stunner work but not HH.
FWIW, I think it's worth doing more hen feed fortification trials, with different supplements or given on different schedules or doses, given the scale and severity of keel bone fractures (WFP), as well as the possibility that cage-free could be worse if and because it increases keel bone fractures.