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EA - Fish Welfare Initiative and Marginal Funding by haven
Welcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: Fish Welfare Initiative and Marginal Funding, published by haven on November 21, 2023 on The Effective Altruism Forum.This post is Fish Welfare Initiative's contribution to Marginal Funding Week. To note, we're posting here in our capacities as cofounders of FWI.We're planning to post a fuller update in the coming week, but wanted to make this funding-specific post for Marginal Funding Week. Here, we discuss what we'd do with marginal funds, as well as the reasons for and against a donation to FWI.What would FWI do with marginal funds?Marginal funding right now would go to filling FWI's 2024 funding gap, which is most of our ~$750,000 annual budget. Specifically, this funding would go towards the following main outcomes:Enabling several in-field studies to test welfare improvements and interventions that have the potential to be more promising than what we are currently implementing.Implementing our current program by expanding it to another 100 fish farms and helping the animals in these farms via stocking density and/or water quality improvements.Other work we believe is useful, such as policy and stakeholder work that may later enable us to more effectively scale.All of the above work will take place in India, which, primarily for its scale and tractability, we have identified as a country with particularly large potential for reducing farmed fish suffering. We will also likely conduct further work in China next year - we intend to publish our plans for there in the coming months.You can see FWI's planned 2024 OKRs for more specific information.Reasons in favor of a donation to FWINote that this and the following section are repeated from content present on our donation page FAQ.The following are some arguments in favor of donating to FWI, roughly in descending order of our view of their significance:Reason #1: FWI's potential for impactThe scope of the problem we face is huge: Billions of farmed fishes live in our countries of operation (India and China) alone, their living conditions are often very poor, and virtually nothing has been done to address these issues so far. Furthermore, the fact that we have already had promising inroads withfarmers andother key stakeholders in these contexts suggests that we are able to make traction on these problems. Without any obvious limiting factors here then, we believe that, once at scale, our programming does have the potential to improve the lives of hundreds of millions, or even a billion, fishes. (Note though that our avenue to reach scale is still unclear - see reasons against below.)Reason #2: FWI's current impactWe currentlyestimate that we've improved the lives of over 1 million fishes. This makes FWI one of the most promising avenues in the world to reduce farmed fish suffering, and likely the most promising avenue in the world to reduce the suffering of farmed Indian major carp, one of the largest and most neglected species groups of farmed fishes.Reason #3: FWI is addressing some of the animal movement's hardest questionsIf we are ever going to bring about a world that is truly humane, we will need to address the more neglected groups in animal farming, particularly including farmed fishes and animals farmed in informal economies. We believe that FWI's work is demonstrating some avenues of helping these groups, and will thus enable other organizations to work more effectively on them.Sustainable Shrimp Farmers of India.Reason #4: Animal movement-building in AsiaAlmost90% of farmed fishes, as well as the majority of farmed terrestrial animals, are in Asia. We thus believe it is critical to launch movements in Asian countries to address the suffering facing these animals, and to expand the animal movement by bringing in new people. We are proud to have hired a local team of about 17 full-t...
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