Hi all,
Managers of the EA Animal Welfare Fund will be available for an Ask Me Anything session on Friday, 14 May. We'll start early that morning and try to finish up by early that afternoon PST, so ideally please try to get your questions in on Wednesday or Thursday. Included below is some information that could be helpful for questions.
Our latest grant round comprised a new set of highs for the fund, which included:
- A new high of 96 applications for funding (upping last round’s previous high by 20%). We then desk-rejected 11 of those, and evaluated the remaining 85 applications.
- We selected 18 of those for funding (upping last round’s previous high by 20%), granted out most of the available balance (which at ~$2.7M at payout date was also a new high), with a total grant volume of ~$1.5M for the round (another new high, and ~100% increase on the previous round).
- We significantly increased our grantmaking capacity through increasing the number of fund managers (recently increased to six from four), implementing a new evaluation system, and significantly increasing the time commitment per fund manager.
Here’s a list of grantees' names, a very brief description of what the grant is for, and grant amounts from our first payout round of 2021:
- Wild Animal Initiative, research and advocacy for wild animals, $360,000
- Rethink Priorities, research to inform effective animal advocacy, $225,000
- Sinergia Animal, Farmed animals in neglected regions, $165,000
- Insect Welfare Project, mitigate problems associated with insect farming, $135,000
- The Humane League UK, campaign work on broilers and layer hens, $120,000
- Global Food Partners, expedite the shift to cage-free egg production in China, $75,000
- Fish Welfare Initiative, Improving the lives of farmed fish in India, $70,000
- Federation of Indian Animal Protection Organizations, policy work on fish in India: $50,000
- OBRAZ, general support for promising farmed animal group in Czechia, $50,000
- Vegans of Shanghai/xiaobuVEGAN, restaurant and public outreach in China, $50,000
- Animal Rights Center Japan, cage-free work in Japan, $45,000
- Coalition of African Animal Welfare Organizations, influencing South African farmed fish legislation, $40,000
- Institute of Animal Law of Asia, supporting a new group on Asian farmed animal law, $30,000
- Modern Agriculture Foundation, promoting plant-based alternatives co-manufacturing site, $30,000
- Education for African Animal Welfare, expanding the cage-free movement in Tanzania, $26,000
- Jah Ying Chung, assessing the viability of an industry tracker for alt-proteins in China, $20,000
- WellBeing International, academic review of invertebrate sentience, $15,000
- Daniel Grimwade & Mark Borthwick, researching how to reduce the number of fish and insects killed for fish feed, $12,000
The full payout report will be published soon.
And here’s an updated request for proposals which we will be using to help solicit proposals for our second round of 2021. The application deadline for that round will be the 13th of June.
Ask any questions you like; we'll respond to as many as we can.
EDIT: Thanks for the great questions everyone! We are going to call it for the day. Hope to return next week in case there is anything outstanding.
I've recently become more skeptical of the value of diet change (including from increasing the availabiliy of alternative proteins), due to uncertainty/cluelessness about the effects on wild animals (including wild fishes, but generally through effects on environments and even climate change), especially population effects, and especially from a roughly negative utilitarian point of view. This gets even trickier if we include invertebrates, to whom EAAs are granting more and more concern.
I worry (although don't specifically expect) that diet change may cause more harm than good and those harms won't be made up for any increased concern for the welfare of wild animals due to diet change, because of anti-interventionism that will be too difficult to address. There seems to be considerable support for some interventions, but these interventions seem pretty modest (although potentially a foot in the door), and if we want to have enough impact to compete with the indirect effects of diet, we may need to radically change wild animal populations, either by changing the number of individuals of different species or modifying the species themselves, because that's what diet change does. It seems more likely than not to me that diet change has larger in magnitude aggregate welfare effects on wild animals (weighted by moral value) per $ spent to support it than could pretty much any other intervention we could work on that doesn't radically change habitats/environments, and interventions that do radically change habitats/environments other than land use change for human benefit might run into significant anti-interventionism (or backfire).
As a result, my current career and donation plans are to focus on farm animal welfare interventions I expect to have smaller effects on wild animals and EAA research generally.
What is your thinking on the effects of diet on wild animals, in the short term and longer (medium) term? Is this something that should factor into decisions about interventions that affect diet? How?
Do you think we should prioritize this question?
Oh ya, you would probably have been aware of fishes caught for feed, but a recent estimate for their numbers is surprisingly huge (to me), to the extent that fish farming's welfare effects could pretty plausibly be dominated by the effects on wild fishes (and other wild aquatic animals). From the Aquatic Life Institute:
... (read more)