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 think we’re looking for promising projects and one clear sign of that is often a track-record of success. The more challenging the proposal, the more something like this might be important. However, we’re definitely open to funding people without a long track record if there are other reasons to believe the project would be successful.
Personally, I’d say good university grades alone is probably not a strong enough signal, but running or participating in successful small projects on a campus might be particularly if the projects were similar in scope or size to what was being proposed, and/or this person had good references on their capabilities from people we trusted.
The case of a nonprofit with a suboptimal track record is harder for me in the abstract. I think it depends a lot on the group’s track record and just how promising we believe the project to be. If a group has an actively bad track record, failing to produce what they’ve been paid to do or producing work of negative value, I’d think we’d be reluctant to fund them even if they were working in an area we considered promising. If the group was middling, but working in a highly promising area, I’d guess we would be more likely to fund them. However, there is obviously much grey area between these two poles and I think it really depends on the details of the proposal and track record of the group in determining whether we’d think such a project would be worth funding.