EA Organisation Updates thread: June 2026

By Dane Valerie @ 2026-06-08T12:48 (+13)

This is the monthly thread for EA organisations to share updates, announcements, and opportunities directly with the community.

Organisations post their own updates in the comments. Moderators may remove clearly irrelevant or off-topic content if necessary.

Quick notes

We'll keep this pinned until June 15th.


Coefficient Giving @ 2026-06-08T17:30 (+10)

Announcements:

Hiring: 

We're hiring an Operations Coordinator/Associate based in San Francisco or Washington D.C. As always, if your referral results in a hire, you'll receive $5k as a thank you.

New writing:

Opportunities:

Joseph Miller @ 2026-06-10T23:57 (+5)

PauseAI UK

Announcements:

haven @ 2026-06-10T15:45 (+5)

Fish Welfare Initiative Updates

We're hiring for a role that we think may be a great fit for some in the EA community: Director of Programs. This role will involve leading and scaling our programs, first in India and then abroad, to implement welfare improvements on thousands of farms. International applicants are welcome, though time living in India will be expected. Leadership experience required; experience running agricultural programs a huge plus.

Learn More and Apply

FWI staff observing a "harvest", in which the fishes are pulled from the water and asphyxiated to death. We are working to reform these practices with our ongoing "chill kill" project (see update from last year—we should have another update in the coming months).

Cat Kerr @ 2026-06-08T13:28 (+5)

Wild Animal Initiative’s latest research on the representation of veterinarians in wildlife research, with a special focus on wild animal welfare science, was published in Research in Veterinary Science. The lead author is WAI Research Manager Michaël Beaulieu.

The paper first establishes a baseline for the representation of veterinarians in wildlife research. Along with Michaël, 14 students from the UniLaSalle Veterinary College in France examined the educational backgrounds of the authors of more than 5,000 articles published in animal behavior, conservation, ecology, and physiology over the last 10 years. They found that the representation of veterinarians was modest in well-established wildlife research disciplines, with only 3% of articles having at least one author with veterinary training.

Following the same procedure, they also examined the representation of veterinarians in the emerging field of wild animal welfare science. They found that almost half of wild animal welfare articles in animal welfare journals included at least one veterinary author. This high representation may be a reflection of veterinary students’ early interests in animal welfare and wildlife, of the role of animal welfare in veterinary education, and of veterinarians’ belief that wild animal welfare research has practical applicability. (Note that these findings and interpretations should be read cautiously, though, since the number of wild animal welfare articles found was relatively low.)

Michael says he would have been delighted to come across a paper like this when he was a young veterinary student interested in both research and wild animals. Seeing how feasible it is for veterinarians to get involved in wildlife research would have given him confidence to take my career in an unconventional direction, which is a key part of field-building.

Despite some limitations, the article also suggests that veterinarians may be better prepared to conduct research in wild animal welfare than in any other wildlife research discipline. But if veterinarians are to come to view wild animal welfare research as a safe professional pathway, the emerging field of wild animal welfare science will need to offer them more career opportunities. And that will require growth in the field — in its community, in its activities, in its recognition, and in the resources at its disposal.

Anima International @ 2026-06-14T23:08 (+3)

Anima International updates

UK campaign to end the suffering of fast-growing chickens

In the UK, we launched a major campaign targeting Pret A Manger over its broken promise to stop selling fast-growing chickens.

The company publicly committed to drop fast-growing chicken from their products in 2018, with a 2026 deadline. But they recently published a roadmap extending breed change to 2032 – a timeline we don’t consider credible and are not endorsing, given no progress made in the past 8 years.

During the pre-public phase of the campaign, we sent 600 letters to Pret store managers, and visited 201 Pret stores across Greater London to speak with staff. We are now increasing the pressure with a dedicated mobilization website, highly visible outdoor advertising, media ads, and public stunts involving a gigantic mechanical frankenchicken sculpture. We’re prepared to maintain our actions until Pret presents a realistic plan with a near-term fulfilment deadline.

 

France – Progress towards the end of cages for hens 

In France, where we work with wholesalers and public catering companies to end the sale of eggs from caged hens, we published a report tracking their progress towards 100% cage-free egg supply.

We’re seeing promising improvements across both sectors. The market share of cage-free eggs in out-of-home foodservice rose from 33% in 2024 to 42.3% in 2025, with many individual companies showing steeper progress (Pomona – 37% to 87%, Sysco – 29.5% to 52.8%, Pro à Pro 34% to nearly 60%). Six wholesalers have published transparent roadmaps to phasing out cage eggs by 2029, with several other companies expected to follow later this year. The transition is more advanced in the collective catering sector – five of the 14 companies have already phased out caged eggs, and others made significant progress (for example Newrest, from just 7% in 2024 to 60%)

The transition of wholesalers and collective catering to cage-free eggs is essential to eliminating cage hen farming in France. Implementation of these roadmaps will affect 1.5–2M hens alive at any given time.

 

Opportunities

Conference on Animal Rights in Europe (CARE) 2026 – tickets now on sale

Tickets for CARE 2026 are now available with a 35% Early Bird discount until June 30th. This is your chance to secure your spot at the lowest price. You can also buy a CARE Supporter pass and help subsidize tickets for those who are facing financial barriers.

Get your tickets here

We hope you can join us in Warsaw, September 17–20 along with hundreds of other animal advocates and organizations working to improve the world for animals. If you can’t make it in person, join us online via Swapcard from wherever you are.



Action in Brussels to push for an EU-wide ban on cages for farmed animals

On June 30, Anima International, on behalf of the End the Cage Age coalition, is staging a visual action in Brussels to mark five years since the European Commission committed to proposing legislation banning cages for farmed animals. The commitment came in response to the End the Cage Age European Citizens' Initiative signed by 1.4 million Europeans. It was one of the largest ECI ever submitted, but the legislation still hasn't been proposed.

The action will feature a large cage installation outside the Commission building, with actors styled as Commission staff sitting at a boardroom table inside. Members of the European Parliament from several member countries confirmed their attendance. The action will highlight the Commission’s democratic failure and urge them to deliver on their commitment to European citizens and millions of animals suffering in cages.

If you’re in Brussels, feel free to join us between 10:30 and 12:30 in front of the European Commission building.

madeleinenasta @ 2026-06-10T01:14 (+3)

Evidence Action's Organization Updates:

Hiring:

GiveWell @ 2026-06-10T19:40 (+2)

GiveWell Updates

Read More

 

Listen Here: Expanding Our Search for Cost-Effective Ways to Reduce Poverty

 

Learn More + Apply

 

Read More: Growing GiveWell’s Largest Research Area

 

Listen Here: What a Decade of Iron Funding Has Taught Us
Wandia Musyimi @ 2026-06-10T14:08 (+2)

Impact Ops provides finance, recruitment, entity setup, due diligence, ops audits and systems support to high-impact nonprofits. We're a remote-first team supporting ~40 organisations across the US and UK in global health, animal welfare, AI safety and climate.

We're currently running hiring rounds for a number of roles on behalf of our clients and two roles on our own team. Several close in late June, so early applications are encouraged.
 

The Good Food Institute APAC (GFI APAC) (a network of nonprofit think tanks advancing alternative proteins — plant-based, fermentation, cultivated)

Apply now!

Simon Institute for Longterm Governance (SI) (Geneva-based nonprofit working at the intersection of frontier AI diplomacy and international governance)

Apply now!

LEEP (working to end childhood lead poisoning; programmes in 40+ countries)

Apply now!

ERA (Cambridge-based talent organisation working to mitigate risks from frontier AI)

Apply now!

Principles of Intelligence (PrincInt / PIBBSS) (nonprofit advancing AI interpretability and safety)

Apply now!

We’re also hiring! 

Join our team!

Happy to answer questions about any of these. Drop a comment or reach us at hello@impact-ops.org.

NataliaFA @ 2026-06-18T15:37 (+1)

Cooperative AI Foundation

FINAL WEEK TO APPLY:  We're Hiring an Administration Associate!

You’ll play a vital, behind-the-scenes role in a range of activities - from helping deliver our PhD Fellows programme to managing end-to-end logistics for our events. If you bring strong administrative or operations experience, thrive on bringing order to complexity, take pride in getting the details right, and want your work to matter, we'd love to hear from you.

Location: Remote, with opportunities to meet the team every few months. We're expecting to appoint someone based in the UK.

Salary: We expect salaries offered to be between £50,000 and £55,000.

Find out more and apply: https://www.cooperativeai.com/job-listing/administration-associate

 

Niklas Lauffer will talk at the Cooperative AI Foundation's next ‘Fellows’ Spotlight’. He recently completed his PhD at UC Berkeley and will be joining Google DeepMind as a research scientist.

JLRiedi @ 2026-06-16T16:05 (+1)

News from Faunalytics: 

Welcoming Our Newest Faunalyst, Priscilla

Faunalytics is thrilled to welcome Priscilla Boadi as our new Community & Research Coordinator. Priscilla brings over seven years of experience in research, community engagement, and program management, with a remarkable track record spanning academia, government, and international development across Canada, Ghana, and West Africa. Priscilla holds a PhD in Human Nutrition from McGill University, where her research focused on food and agriculture policy in Ghana. A skilled communicator and connector, Priscilla excels at translating complex research into clear, actionable resources, and at building the relationships that put that evidence to work. Learn more about Priscilla and the rest of our team by clicking below.

 

Join Us For Fauna Connections 2026

Faunalytics can’t wait to host our fifth annual Fauna Connections symposium — a free, virtual event designed for animal advocates — on September 10, 2026. Hear from leading researchers in the social and behavioral sciences as they share original studies, expert overviews, and meta-analyses with direct relevance to advocacy work. The event features short, impactful presentations with Q&As, interactive breakout sessions, a Faunalytics research presentation, and a keynote by Taylison Santos with Fórum Nacional de Proteção e Defesa Animal. Register today!

 

AVA Summit

Last month, several members of the Faunalytics team traveled to Toronto, Canada, to attend the Animal & Vegan Advocacy (AVA) Summit. It was a wonderful opportunity to connect with fellow advocates and contribute to the broader conversation about how research can strengthen the movement. Four of our team members gave presentations and sat on panels, sharing insights on how data can inform more effective advocacy strategies. We’re so grateful for the thoughtful discussions and the chance to learn from advocates doing incredible work across the globe. If you didn’t have a chance to chat with us at the event, don’t forget that you can always reach out to our free Office Hours for all your research-related questions.