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EA - Risk Aversion in Wild Animal Welfare by Rethink Priorities
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: Risk Aversion in Wild Animal Welfare, published by Rethink Priorities on December 14, 2023 on The Effective Altruism Forum.Executive SummaryWild animals outnumber humans and captive animals by orders of magnitude. Hence, scalable interventions to improve the welfare of wild animals could have greater expected value than interventions on behalf of other groups.Yet, wild animals receive only a small share of resources earmarked for animal welfare causes. This may be because animal advocates are uncomfortable with relying on expected value maximization alone in a field beset by "complex cluelessness": There are compelling reasons for and against wild animal interventions, and none are clearly decisive.Reducing populations of fast life history strategists would likely reduce suffering. However, there is also reason to suspect fast life history strategists have enough rewarding experiences to increase aggregate welfare.Eliminating fundamental sources of suffering in natural habitats would reduce suffering. However, it could also differentially benefit species that many people believe have systematically worse lives.Prioritizing the most abundant groups of wild animals could generate the largest increases in aggregate welfare. However, the most abundant wild animals have relatively low and vague probabilities of sentience.Regardless of risk attitudes, inaction on wild animal welfare is difficult to justify.There are no areas of animal welfare with a larger scale.Even if the aggregate welfare of wild animals is net-positive, it is nevertheless almost uncertainly suboptimal.By accounting for considerations that decision-makers believe are relevant, incorporating risk aversion into expected value calculations may increase willingness to commit resources to wild animal welfare. Different types of risk aversion account for different types of uncertainty.Outcome risk aversion gives special consideration to avoiding worst-case scenarios.Difference-making risk aversion gives special consideration to ensuring that actions improve upon the status quo.Ambiguity aversion gives special consideration to reducing ignorance and choosing actions that have predictable outcomes.Different types of risk often disagree in their recommendations. A corollary is that robustness across different types of risk aversion increases choiceworthiness.Interventions that reduce suffering without altering the number or composition of wild animals have a greater probability of robustness to different types of risk aversion.Outcome risk aversion favors abundant groups of wild animals, while difference-making risk aversion favors wild animals who have a high probability of sentience.Ambiguity aversion is favorable towards research on wild animal welfare, whereas outcome and difference-making risk aversion only favor it under certain conditions.Risk aversion does not robustly favor farmed over wild animals or vice versa.Outcome risk aversion prioritizes wild animals due to their abundance.Difference-making risk aversion favors farmed animals. However, it also favors some diversification across types of animals.Ambiguity aversion favors helping farmed animals over wild animals, and basic research to help both groups.Although complex cluelessness affects many domains, wild animal welfare may be a particularly high-stakes example of it. Alternatively, moral uncertainty about the permissibility of interfering with nature may explain a reluctance to act on uncertain evidence.Read the full report on Rethink Priorities' website or download the pdf.AcknowledgmentsThe post was written by William McAuliffe. Thanks to Hayley Clatterbuck, Neil Dullaghan, Daniela Waldhorn, Bob Fischer, and Ben Stevenson for helpful feedback. The post is a project of Rethink Priorities, a global priority think-and-d...
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