Çiftlik Hayvanlarını Koruma Derneği
Recommended CharityACE proudly recommends Çiftlik Hayvanlarını Koruma Derneği (ÇHKD) as an excellent giving opportunity. They are the only organization working to improve the lives of the millions of egg-laying hens and farmed fishes that suffer in food production systems in Türkiye. ÇHKD’s programs are backed by strong logical reasoning and evidence. Our cost-effectiveness assessment of their cage-free corporate outreach indicates that they have been able to help many animals at little cost; we estimate their work positively impacts around three hens per dollar and has the potential to be even more cost-effective in the future. ÇHKD’s plans for how they’d spend additional funding across 2025 and 2026 give us confidence that they would use donations in ways that likely create the most positive change for egg-laying hens and farmed fishes.
Review Published: | 2024 |
Concrete change for animals
What does Çiftlik Hayvanlarını Koruma Derneği do?
Çiftlik Hayvanlarını Koruma Derneği (ÇHKD) is a Turkish organization that is primarily dedicated to improving farmed animal welfare standards, particularly for egg-laying hens and farmed fishes. They achieve this through outreach to corporations, individuals, and media outlets. They also engage in research, education, and capacity-building initiatives to strengthen the animal advocacy movement.
2023 revenue: $550,508
Staff size: 16 (12 full-time, 2 part-time, 2 compensated board members)
Year founded: 2020
How does ÇHKD create change for animals?
More than 109 million egg-laying hens and 680 million farmed fishes are alive in Türkiye at any given time. Evidence indicates that these animals suffer immensely. ÇHKD strategically develops programs that maximize the number of animals that can benefit by pushing for welfare improvements for egg-laying hens and farmed fishes. They do this by securing cage-free commitments from companies via corporate outreach and targeted pressure campaigns and through field research and producer outreach for farmed fishes. ÇHKD measures their program successes effectively, is transparent about risks and limitations, and collaborates with other organizations to share best practices. Their achievements, such as securing over 30 cage-free commitments since 2020, are particularly consequential because of the high rate of implementation and the large number of hens affected, demonstrating highly cost-effective work.
See more details in ÇHKD’s theory of change table and cost-effectiveness spreadsheet.
See our How We Evaluate Charities web page for information about our charity selection, evaluation methods, and decision-making process.
How is ÇHKD’s organizational health?
Our assessment indicates ÇHKD has positive staff engagement (average staff engagement survey score = 4.6/5) and is operating in ways that support their effectiveness and stability. Their Executive Director meets regularly with the board, and most internal policies are formalized and shared with all staff. Staff positively noted that they enjoy a supportive work environment and leadership team and that ÇHKD has strong employee well-being practices and remote work options. For more details, see their comprehensive review.
How will ÇHKD use your donation to help animals?
ÇHKD would prioritize media outreach to support their cage-free campaigns, adjust salaries for existing staff, and establish reserves. This will help them increase their capacity to help even more egg-laying hens and farmed fishes. We estimate that these uses of funding will be highly effective up to roughly $0.2M annually in 2025 and 2026, and that ÇHKD’s total annual funding capacity is roughly $0.7M. By supporting ÇHKD, you play a crucial role in helping them achieve their goals and create a better experience for egg-laying hens and farmed fishes in Türkiye. See more details in ÇHKD’s Financials and Future Plans spreadsheet.
This review is based on our assessment of Çiftlik Hayvanlarını Koruma Derneği’s performance on ACE’s charity evaluation criteria. For a detailed account of our evaluation methods, including how charities are selected for evaluation, please visit our How We Evaluate Charities web page.
Overall Recommendation
Çiftlik Hayvanlarını Koruma Derneği (ÇHKD) conducts programs that are supported by strong logical reasoning and evidence. They take various actions to mitigate the risks and limitations of their activities. Our cost-effectiveness assessment of ÇHKD’s cage-free corporate outreach indicates that they have executed their activities cost-effectively so far. We estimate that their work affects about three hens per dollar. ÇHKD’s future plans for how they’d spend additional funding across 2025 and 2026 give us confidence that they would use funding effectively to reduce suffering for a large number of animals. We have no major concerns about their organizational health. Overall, we expect ÇHKD to be an excellent giving opportunity for those looking to create the most positive change for animals.
To support Çiftlik Hayvanlarını Koruma Derneği, and all of ACE’s current Recommended Charities, please consider donating to our Recommended Charity Fund.
Overview of ÇHKD’s Programs
During our charity selection process, we looked at the groups of animals ÇHKD’s programs target and the countries where their work takes place. For more details about our charity selection process, visit our Evaluation Process web page.
Animal groups
ÇHKD’s programs focus exclusively on helping farmed animals, which we assess as a high-priority cause area. In particular, ÇHKD focuses on helping egg-laying hens and farmed fishes.
Countries
ÇHKD’s headquarters are currently located in Türkiye, where they conduct their work. We consider Türkiye a high-priority country for work targeting egg-laying hens and farmed fishes. Based on data from the Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations (FAO) and private data from an anonymous source, we estimate that there are over 109 million egg-laying hens and 680 million farmed fishes alive in Türkiye at any given time.1 Globally, Türkiye ranks 13th in terms of egg-laying hen population and 12th in terms of farmed fish population.
Interventions
ÇHKD uses different types of interventions to create change for animals, including corporate outreach for welfare improvements, producer outreach, and research. See ÇHKD’s theory of change analysis for evidence of the effectiveness of their main interventions.
Impact
What positive changes is ÇHKD creating for animals?
To assess ÇHKD’s overall positive impact on animals, we looked at two key factors: (i) the strength of their logical reasoning and evidence for how their programs create change for animals (i.e., their theory of change), and (ii) the cost-effectiveness of select programs. Charities that use logical reasoning and evidence to develop their programs are highly likely to achieve outcomes with the greatest impact for animals. Charities with cost-effective programs demonstrate that they utilize available resources in ways that likely make the biggest possible difference for animals per dollar. For more detailed information on our 2024 evaluation methods, please visit our Evaluation Criteria web page.
Assessment of ÇHKD’s impact
Based on our evaluation and consideration of the risks and limitations, there is a moderate-to-strong level of logical reasoning and evidence supporting how ÇHKD’s programs create change for animals.
We positively note that:
- ÇHKD’s programs seem strategically chosen to achieve welfare improvements for the highest number of animals possible, with Türkiye being a high-priority country for both egg-laying hens and farmed fishes.
- ÇHKD bases their programmatic choices on evidence (where possible), including conducting their own field research, which has also benefited advocates in other countries.
- ÇHKD seems aware of and is transparent about many of the risks and limitations of their work and has developed mitigating actions and strategies to address them. They are considerate of the context in which they work. They also keep in contact with the Open Wing Alliance, attend academic conferences and fairs on aquaculture and animal welfare, and share best practices and discoveries with NGOs in nearby countries that may benefit from their work.
We are particularly impressed by ÇHKD’s cage-free corporate outreach efforts through Kafessiz Türkiye (Türkiye Without Cages). As the only organization working on farmed animal welfare in Türkiye, ÇHKD has built a track record of achieving cage-free commitments over the past few years. This work seems scalable, given that ÇHKD has only covered a small percentage of Türkiye’s market to date.
We have somewhat less confidence in ÇHKD’s fish welfare work. This is due to a more limited track record of achieving welfare commitments, uncertainties around the counterfactual impact of such commitments, and an expectation of diminishing returns on fish welfare research.
Our cost-effectiveness assessment focuses on ÇHKD’s cage-free corporate outreach (Kafessiz Türkiye), which represents a limited part of the charity’s work. While our analysis includes areas of speculation, our cost-effectiveness estimate of the program we analyzed was 54 Suffering-Adjusted Days averted per dollar,2 which seems to be moderate-to-high based on Ambitious Impact’s interpretation of SADs averted per dollar.3
Our cost-effectiveness estimate for Kafessiz Türkiye has limited explanatory power. It should be interpreted with caution because the number of hens impacted by commitments is sometimes inferred based on the company’s size.
See our theory of change table for a detailed account of ÇHKD’s activities, outputs, and intended outcomes and impact. Below, we highlight the key activities that we believe are the most impactful drivers of their theory of change and give details on the reasoning and evidence base, as well as an account of risks, limitations, and mitigating actions.
Key Activity 1: Cage-free corporate outreach and targeted pressure campaigns (Kafessiz Türkiye)
Activity description: ÇHKD aims to improve the welfare standards of egg-laying hens in Türkiye by securing cage-free commitments through corporate outreach, targeted pressure campaigns, social media, traditional media, and petitions.
Supportive reasoning and evidence base
- This activity targets egg-laying hens in Türkiye. Based on data from the FAO,4 we estimate that there are over 109 million egg-laying hens alive in Türkiye at any given point. Globally, Türkiye ranks 13th in terms of their egg-laying hen population.
- ÇHKD reports having secured more than 30 cage-free commitments for egg-laying hens in Türkiye, totaling over 850,000 hens impacted since 2020, with seven of these commitments in 2023. All achieved commitments have been implemented as planned, with only one appearing at risk of potentially missing the commitment deadline.
- Corporate outreach for welfare improvements appears to have a solid track record of success, playing a crucial role in welfare improvements for hundreds of millions of animals. For example, the Open Wing Alliance reports that, as of May 2024, 89% of cage-free egg commitments with deadlines of 2023 or earlier have been fulfilled.5 Furthermore, Open Philanthropy reports that 220 million egg-laying hens are out of battery cages thanks to corporate welfare campaigns.6 A 2019 report by Rethink Priorities estimates that historic corporate campaigns affected nine to 120 years of chicken life per dollar spent. Still, it also notes that such work is likely subject to diminishing returns as the number of large, tractable corporations without welfare commitments decreases.7
- It appears highly likely that transitioning to cage-free systems translates to net improvements in well-being for laying hens. Negative impacts on well-being (such as the higher rate of mortality in cage-free systems, at least while farmers grow accustomed to the transition) appear to be significantly outweighed by the positive impacts (such as greater freedom to move and express natural behaviors).8
- ÇHKD has successfully mobilized public support for various pressure campaigns. In one ongoing campaign, they have collected 184,400 signatures, and supporters have sent 24,200 complaint emails. This approach has proven effective in Türkiye in the past. For example, one company stopped selling caged eggs following an email campaign by ÇHKD, while another responded to public pressure by publicizing their use of cage-free products and labeling them accordingly in stores.
- While the evidence regarding corporate welfare reforms is mixed,9 it appears likely that these reforms could increase the costs of producing animal products in the long term. Ultimately, these costs will be passed onto consumers or other stages of the supply chain. While the demand for animal products is considered relatively price inelastic, increasing the price of animal products does seem to decrease consumption, although the evidence supporting this is weak and inconsistent.10 As such, in theory, raising costs for the animal agriculture industry may make it less profitable and sustainable, especially since this industry tends to operate on very thin profit margins.
- Empirical evidence on the effects of welfare reforms on public attitudes toward animal welfare is limited. However, existing evidence suggests that such effects might be either negligible or slightly positive, i.e., tending to promote favorable attitudes toward farmed animal advocacy rather than promoting complacency.11 We note that none of this research was conducted in the Turkish context.
Risk, limitations, and mitigating factors
- Limitation: Companies may not implement their commitments, and pressure campaigns could cause some to disengage.
- Mitigating factors:
- ÇHKD publishes companies’ progress in their annual Egg Track Report and independently verifies compliance by contacting producers to check if a company has increased or decreased its ratio of cage-free egg purchases. If a company shows signs of retracting or not implementing a commitment, ÇHKD escalates the issue to relevant managers and, if necessary, to the public via digital media. The organization’s approach is to offer positive incentives for desired behavior and negative incentives for undesired behavior.
- Mitigating factors:
- Limitation: Corporate campaigns may be subject to diminishing returns as the number of large corporations with resources to implement changes without making a welfare commitment decreases.
- Limitation: There is less of a record of successful corporate campaigns outside of the U.S. and Western Europe.14 Different national contexts may make corporate campaigns less effective. For example, ÇHKD says animal welfare is not a salient issue for the public and many companies in Türkiye, and competition law and freedom-of-speech laws in the country can be restrictive, leading companies to consider legal action against campaigns.
- Mitigating factors:
- ÇHKD aims to increase issue salience by producing public-facing content and raising awareness, as well as receiving legal consultation for all campaign materials and avoiding legal gray areas that could result in lawsuits.
- Mitigating factors:
- Risk: Promoting companies for achieving incremental welfare gains could disproportionately improve their reputation among consumers and help maintain social acceptance of the consumption of animal products.
- Mitigating factors:
- As mentioned above, the available empirical evidence suggests that welfare reforms tend to promote negligible or slightly positive attitudes toward farmed animal advocacy rather than promote complacency toward animal welfare.
- ÇHKD reports that they hope that their campaigns will raise public awareness about animal welfare issues and pave the way for legislative reform in addition to the direct short-term benefits to animals.
- They also note that they expect welfare reforms to increase animal product prices, ultimately lowering consumption, although, as discussed above, empirical evidence on this effect is mixed.
- Mitigating factors:
Key activity assessment
Overall, taking into account the limitations and mitigating factors, we assess the logic and evidence of this key activity as strong. We positively note:
- ÇHKD’s track record of achieving commitments (which are then implemented) is strong.
- We think ÇHKD’s mitigating actions appropriately address risks and limitations.
- Türkiye is a high-priority country for this type of work due to the very high number of egg-laying hens farmed here.
A potential challenge is that ÇHKD is shifting to target larger corporations for partial commitments, a strategy for which we have less of a precedent of effectiveness.
Key Activity 2: Fish producer and retailer outreach (Future for Fish)
Activity description: ÇHKD aims to improve the welfare standards of farmed fishes in Türkiye by securing commitments from producers and retailers to maintain certain standards, notably pre-slaughter electrical stunning.
Supportive reasoning and evidence base
- This activity targets farmed fishes in Türkiye. Based on private data from an anonymous source, we estimate that there are over 680 million farmed fishes alive in Türkiye at any given point. Globally, Türkiye ranks 12th in terms of farmed fish population and 10th in offshore aquaculture. ÇHKD’s research also indicates that Türkiye exports 75% of its fish production,15 much of which is likely to countries with a greater interest in high-welfare fish.16 The most common harvesting method in the European Union and Türkiye is live chilling in ice slurry, a less humane slaughter technique where fishes are immersed in ice until death, without loss of consciousness.17
- Despite some robust evidence for the likely impact of corporate/retailer outreach for welfare improvements, there is significantly less evidence on the specific impact of producer outreach. However, ÇHKD notes that retailers have mentioned the lack of higher welfare farmed fish as a barrier to commitments, so it seems that conducting outreach efforts to actors across the supply chain is somewhat likely to increase the likelihood of securing welfare commitments and ensuring their implementation.
- Much of the reasoning and evidence that applies to cage-free corporate outreach work may apply to fish producer and retailer outreach as well, such as the potential for welfare reforms to drive up the costs of producing animal products and that the effects on public attitudes are either negligible or slightly positive (although we have less direct evidence on these effects where they pertain to fish welfare campaigns).
- In 2023, ÇHKD reported engaging with 10 producers for potential fish welfare commitments, securing one commitment and reporting that the remaining are still positively inclined.
- ÇHKD maintains a clear separation between their Kafessiz Türkiye (Türkiye Without Cages) and Future For Fish brands, ensuring that fish producers see Future for Fish as a supportive partner rather than as an adversarial entity. They report that this strategy has been effective to date, such as when a large retailer engaged with Future for Fish during an ongoing Kafessiz Türkiye campaign against them. Reports provide some evidence for taking an encouraging approach to positively shape social norms among farmers18 and exploring partnerships between farmers, researchers, and other actors.19 ÇHKD’s own research also indicates that in order to improve fish welfare, all stakeholders need to work together,20 which we independently verified with an aquaculture expert familiar with the region.
- ÇHKD’s own research in Türkiye also found that while nine out of ten companies interviewed possessed at least one electrical stunning system (the most promising method to prevent suffering during slaughter), they did not use this method for 100% of their harvest, indicating a straightforward opportunity to improve fish welfare.21 Additionally, the third-party aquaculture expert we consulted agreed that a focus on pre-slaughter electrical stunning in Türkiye is sensible as a welfare ask, given what is known about fish welfare and the relative ease of implementation compared to other possible changes.
Risks, limitations, and mitigating factors
- Limitation: Aquatic animal welfare science is a relatively young field compared to other commonly farmed animals, so there is less certainty about how changes in farming practices translate to experienced welfare improvements for the animals.
- Mitigating factors:
- ÇHKD worked with an academic aquaculture expert (Professor Deniz Çoban) to design their commitment, which requires that producers have at least one approved welfare certification, keep a maximum of 15kg per cubic meter stocking density, and use electrical stunning on all fishes. As noted in ÇHKD’s report,22 these standards are based on guidelines/recommendations from the World Organisation for Animal Health, the European Food Safety Authority, and Aquatic Life Institute.
- ÇHKD staff also attend academic conferences on aquaculture and animal welfare to stay up-to-date as new research emerges.
- Mitigating factors:
- Limitation: Producers do not have a strong incentive to commit to welfare improvements because of limited consumer demand combined with logistical difficulties, such as producers finding it difficult to install and use stunners.23
- Mitigating factor: Aside from fish welfare, the electrical stunning system can improve product quality and marketability. For example, it reduces soft tissue appearance, disintegration, bruising, and scale loss, increases retention of fish shape during storage, increases shelf life, and increases freshness.24
- Limitation: The welfare improvements achieved may be limited. ÇHKD’s own research found that Turkish sea bream producers generally already comply with some international standards regarding fish welfare, such as keeping stocking density below 15kg per cubic meter and ensuring optimum water quality, and that 40% of participating producers already use electrical stunning on more than 95% of their harvest.25
- Mitigating factors:
- ÇHKD reports that they are actively communicating with the top twelve producers, who collectively account for 75–80% of the total sea bass and sea bream production in the country. Out of these, seven use the less humane ice slurry method to varying degrees, while the remaining five use electrical stunning systems to render fishes unconscious.
- Researchers have noted that producers often assess welfare improvements based on their feasibility. Additionally, when producers see their competitors making changes, it can create a ripple effect, encouraging even those who already use electrical stunning to make commitments, which in turn pressures others to adopt similar practices.
- Additionally, ÇHKD’s commitment increases the incentive for producers to keep their systems up-to-date as certifiers raise standards, fix stunning machines when they malfunction, and use stunning machines for their full production.
- Mitigating factors:
- Risk: Promoting producers for achieving incremental welfare gains could disproportionately improve their reputation among consumers and help maintain social acceptance of the consumption of animal products.
- Mitigating factors:
- ÇHKD believes incremental reforms to be more tractable than the abolition of the industry until there is major social awareness and interest in fish welfare.
- In the meantime, they say their work could create more competition between individual farmers to adopt higher animal welfare standards so that major retailers and foreign trading partners choose them over lower-welfare competitors.
- Mitigating factors:
- Limitation: Producers may not implement their commitments or renew their certifications over time.
- Mitigating factors:
- ÇHKD requires that the commitment be announced to the public on their website, as well as reporting to the public annually on progress in meeting the commitment.
- They also provide ongoing monitoring and support, working closely with producers to ensure that certifier welfare standards are not only met but maintained when they are updated.
- Mitigating factors:
Key activity assessment
Overall, taking into account the limitations and mitigating factors, we assess the logic and evidence of this key activity as moderate. We positively note:
- Given Türkiye’s role in global aquaculture, this activity has the potential to affect a very high number of animals.
Potential challenges include uncertainty about the tractability of achieving commitments in the future, especially those with large counterfactual impact (producers that don’t currently meet certification standards). This is largely because of limited consumer demand and logistical difficulties. While there is potentially high tractability because of the discovery that most Turkish fish producers already own stunners and just need to be taught or convinced to use them, ÇHKD does not yet have a track record of doing so. Another challenge is the uncertainty regarding which interventions are most effective in improving fish welfare, as fish welfare science is a relatively overlooked field.
Key Activity 3: Field research on fish farms and dissemination of findings
Activity description: ÇHKD aims to understand the current state of farmed fish welfare in Türkiye by conducting field research at fish farms and publishing their findings in research reports.
Supportive reasoning and evidence base
- Despite being the world’s 12th largest farmed fish producer and exporting most of its fish products, there is relatively little understanding of the current state of fish welfare in Turkish aquaculture. Without this background knowledge, it would be difficult for ÇHKD and international advocates to tailor their advocacy strategies to the specific species, production methods, and beliefs in the country.26
- ÇHKD reports having contacted more than 20 stakeholders, including academics, animal welfare researchers, and colleagues from other animal welfare organizations, to understand the research needs in the field and prioritize research questions that will lead to the most progress for fish welfare.
- Their field research27 covered 76% of Türkiye’s farmed sea bass and sea bream production, and the findings have informed ÇHKD’s fish producer and retailer outreach work. For example, their research led them to prioritize the adoption of pre-slaughter electrical stunning and international certifications.
- Several animal advocates outside of Türkiye that we spoke to have noted that ÇHKD’s research was useful for their corporate engagement work, even using it directly in conversations with retailers importing from Türkiye, and to help secure a meeting with the Turkish government. Additionally, they mentioned that they found it useful to share ÇHKD’s research with international industry stakeholders, that it shows international producers that more humane slaughter is feasible, and that it has deepened their technical expertise in electrical stunning.
Risks, limitations, and mitigating factors
- Limitation: Conducting research may not improve fish welfare if the findings do not reach the relevant stakeholders or lead to any changes in tactics or production.
- Mitigating factors:
- ÇHKD held a launch event for their research report and invited stakeholders. They also shared their report via an animal advocate mailing list, on their website, and via email with other NGOs working on sea bass and sea bream welfare.
- ÇHKD engages in outreach and support to encourage the adoption of recommended welfare practices, and research helps them identify key barriers. Their field research has also served as an entry point for engaging with producers.
- Mitigating factors:
- Limitation: Producers may be reluctant to participate due to concerns about negative exposure or interference with their operations.
- Mitigating factor:
- ÇHKD reports relying on their academic advisor’s industry connections and maintaining positive relationships with producers. They ensure that their research is presented as a collaborative effort aimed at improving industry standards rather than a critical inspection.
- Mitigating factor:
Key activity assessment
Overall, taking into account the limitations and mitigating factors, we assess the logic and evidence of this key activity as moderate. We positively note:
- The report ÇHKD wrote based on the field research was high quality and insightful to their and other charities’ work.
A potential challenge is that we are uncertain about the effectiveness of future research, given that some fundamental questions about Turkish aquaculture have already been answered and that ÇHKD is not currently planning to write additional reports.
Additional Considerations
- Overall, ÇHKD makes a commendable effort to use evidence-based tactics, including conducting their own field research to inform their work.
- Throughout our evaluation, we made attempts to independently verify the information we received from ÇHKD, especially when assessing cruxes and assumptions in the logic of their theory of change. For example, we spoke with external experts to verify the conclusions of ÇHKD’s fish welfare report. All of the information we selected for verification was fully verified.
See ÇHKD’s cost-effectiveness spreadsheet for a detailed account of the data and calculations that went into our cost-effectiveness analysis.
We focused our analysis on one program: cage-free corporate outreach (Kafessiz Türkiye), which accounts for 79% of ÇHKD’s charitable expenditure. We attempted to quantify the impact of their fish producer outreach (Future For Fish) work as well, but due to the highly speculative nature of key inputs, we were unable to produce reliable estimates of Suffering-Adjusted Days (SADs) averted per dollar. Additionally, we did not attempt to quantify the benefits of their fish research because of the complexity of estimating the impact of research disseminated to other organizations.
Program 1: Cage-free corporate outreach
- We estimate that the cost-effectiveness of this program is 3.1 (lower bound: 0.4, upper bound: 6.6) hens affected per dollar or 54 (lower bound: 6.4, lower bound: 115.9) Suffering Adjusted Days (SADs)28 averted per dollar. These estimates are based on the cage-free commitments made by seven companies in 2023.
- According to Ambitious Impact’s benchmark, a program with less than 10 SADs averted per dollar has low cost-effectiveness, 10–30 SADs averted per dollar has moderate cost-effectiveness, 30–100 SADs averted per dollar has moderate-high cost-effectiveness, and greater than 100 SADs averted per dollar has very high cost-effectiveness.
- The SADs estimate only quantifies the direct effects of the cage-free commitments on egg-laying hens, excluding indirect effects such as increased public awareness or decreased consumption of animal products because of campaign actions.
- This is potentially an underestimate for several reasons. First, although we took the average of the upper and lower bounds, the “# years commitments brought forward” value may be closer to the upper bound in Türkiye, where a full cage ban is expected to be further in the future relative to many European countries. Second, ÇHKD has started targeting larger companies now that they have more expertise and confidence in campaigning, so future commitments they win have the potential to be much larger. For example, winning their ongoing Migros campaign would affect five million hens per year, which is an order of magnitude larger than their past wins.
Room For More Funding
How much additional money can ÇHKD effectively use in the next two years?
With this criterion, we investigate whether ÇHKD would be able to absorb the funding that a renewed recommendation from ACE may bring. We also investigate the extent to which we believe that their future uses of funding will be as effective as their past work. All descriptive data and estimations for this criterion can be found in the Financials and Future Plans spreadsheet. For more detailed information on our 2024 evaluation methods, please visit our Evaluation Criteria web page.
Our Assessment of ÇHKD’s Room For More Funding
Based on our assessment of their future plans, we believe that ÇHKD could effectively use revenue of up to roughly $0.7M annually in 2025 and 2026, and their annual room for more funding is roughly $0.2M. With additional funding, they would prioritize media outreach to support their cage-free campaigns, a salary adjustment for existing staff, and establishing reserves. Overall, we expect these plans will be similarly effective as ÇHKD’s past work.
To support Çiftlik Hayvanlarını Koruma Derneği, and all of ACE’s current Recommended Charities, please consider donating to our Recommended Charity Fund.
If ÇHKD were to find additional revenue to expand their organization, they would prioritize using the money to support their cage-free campaigns, a salary adjustment for existing staff, and establishing reserves. We found their focus on their cage-free campaigns to be sensible since they don’t believe that their fish welfare program has additional room for funding. We have confidence that these uses of funding will be as effective as their past work up to a total annual revenue level of $725,000, which we refer to as their funding capacity.
The chart below shows ÇHKD’s revenues from 2021–2023, their projected revenue for 2024, and their funding capacity for 2025 and 2026.
Figure 2: Revenue (2021–2024) and Funding Capacity (2025/2026)
A more detailed summary of their future plans and the reasoning behind our assessments can be found in the “Future Plans” tab of their Financials and Future Plans spreadsheet.
Organizational Health
Are there any management issues substantial enough to affect ÇHKD’s effectiveness and stability?
With this criterion, we assess whether any aspects of ALI’s governance or work environment pose a risk to its effectiveness or stability, thereby reducing its potential to help animals. Bad actors and toxic practices may also negatively affect the reputation of the broader animal advocacy movement, which is highly relevant for a growing social movement, as well as advocates’ wellbeing and willingness to remain in the movement.29 For more detailed information on our 2024 evaluation methods, please visit our Evaluation Criteria web page.
Our Assessment of ÇHKD’s Organizational Health
We did not detect any concerns in ÇHKD’s leadership and organizational health. We positively note that their Executive Director meets regularly with the board, and most internal policies are formalized and shared with all staff. In the staff engagement survey, employees positively noted that they enjoy a supportive work environment and leadership team, that ÇHKD has strong employee wellbeing practices, and there are remote work options. An area for improvement is ensuring future financial stability by growing reserves and recurring revenue.
People, Policies, and Processes
The policies that the charity reported having in place are listed below.30
Has policy | Partial / informal policy | No policy |
COMPENSATION | |
Paid time off | |
Paid sick days | |
Paid medical leave | |
Paid family and caregiver leave | |
Compensation strategy (i.e., a policy detailing how an organization determines staff’s pay and benefits in a standardized manner) | |
WORKPLACE SAFETY | |
A simple and transparent written procedure for filing complaints | |
An anti-retaliation policy protecting whistleblowers and those who report grievances | |
A clearly written workplace code of ethics or conduct | |
A written statement that the organization does not tolerate discrimination on the basis of race, gender, sexual orientation, disability status, or other irrelevant characteristics | |
Mandatory reporting of harassment and discrimination through all levels, up to and including the board of directors | |
Explicit protocols for addressing concerns or allegations of harassment or discrimination | |
Documentation of all reported instances of harassment or discrimination, along with the outcomes of each case | |
Conflict of interest policy | |
Training on topics of harassment and discrimination in the workplace | |
CLARITY, TRANSPARENCY, AND BIAS MITIGATION | |
Clearly defined responsibilities for all positions, preferably with written job descriptions | |
Clear organizational goals and/or priorities communicated to all employees | |
New hire onboarding or orientation process | |
Structured hiring, assessing all candidates using the same process | |
Standardized process for employment termination decisions | |
Process to evaluate leadership performance | |
Performance evaluation process based on predefined objectives and expectations | |
Two or more decision-makers for all hiring, promotion, and termination decisions | |
Process to attract a diverse candidate pool | |
ORGANIZATIONAL STABILITY AND PROGRESS | |
Documentation of all key knowledge and information necessary to fulfill the needs of the organization | |
Board meeting minutes | |
Records retention and destruction policy | |
Systems in place for continuously learning from the past (e.g., feedback norms, retrospectives) | |
Recurring (e.g., weekly or every two weeks) 1-on-1s focused on alignment and development | |
ASSESSMENTS | |
Annual (or more frequent) performance evaluations for all paid roles | |
Annual (or more frequent) process to measure employee engagement or satisfaction | |
A process in place to support performance improvement in instances of underperformance |
Transparency
ÇHKD was transparent with ACE throughout the evaluation process. All of the information we required for our evaluation of organizational health is made available on ÇHKD’s website. This includes: a list of board members; a list of key staff members; information about the organization’s key accomplishments; the organization’s mission, vision, and theory of change; and financial statements.
ÇHKD is also transparent with both the public and their own staff. For example, all policies are shared with staff and publicly on their website.
Leadership and Board Governance
- Executive Director (ED): Emre Kaplan, who has been involved in the organization for six years.
- Number of board members: five members, including Executive Director, Emre Kaplan, who is a voting board member.
We found that the charity’s board fully aligns with our understanding of best practices. Board meetings occur at least four times per year, and ÇHKD has a policy that non-independent board members cannot vote on performance evaluation or level of responsibilities.
Ninety-two percent of staff respondents to our engagement survey agree they have confidence in ÇHKD’s leadership team.
Financial Health
Reserves
With 0% of their current annual expenditures held in reserves (as reported by ÇHKD for 2024), we believe that they could benefit from prioritizing having a larger amount of reserves. This would provide them with financial stability during periods of unexpected income shortfalls or sudden increases in expenses, allowing them to continue their operations and programs without interruption.
Recurring Revenue
Two percent of ÇHKD’s revenue is recurring (e.g., from recurring donors or ongoing long-term grant commitments).31
Liabilities to Assets Ratio
ÇHKD’s liabilities-to-assets ratio did not exceed 50% or pose a risk to operations at the time of assessment.
Staff engagement and satisfaction
ÇHKD has 16 staff members (full-time, part-time, and contractors), including the Executive Director. Thirteen staff members responded to our staff engagement survey, yielding a response rate of 87%—the Executive Director was asked not to take the survey.
ÇHKD has an informal compensation plan to determine staff salaries. Of the staff that responded to our survey, 69% reported that they were satisfied with their wage. ÇHKD offers paid vacation and sick days. All staff report that they are satisfied with the benefits provided. This suggests that, on average, staff exhibit high satisfaction with wages and benefits.
The average score among our staff engagement survey questions was 4.6 (on a 1–5 scale), suggesting that, on average, staff exhibit very high engagement.
Harassment and Discrimination
ACE has a process separate from the engagement survey for receiving serious claims about harassment and discrimination, and all ÇHKD staff were made aware of this option. If staff or any party external to the organization have claims of this nature, we encourage them to read ACE’s Third-Party Whistleblower Policy and fill out our claimant form. We have received no such claims regarding ÇHKD.
To view all of the sources cited in this review, see the reference list.
To support Çiftlik Hayvanlarını Koruma Derneği, and all of ACE’s current Recommended Charities, please consider donating to our Recommended Charity Fund.
See our spreadsheet for ÇHKD with all country-level data on numbers of farmed egg-laying hens and farmed fishes, as well as tractability indicators.
For our cost-effectiveness assessments, we aimed to use Ambitious Impact’s new internal system of estimating Suffering-Adjusted Days (SADs) for making quantitative decisions on animal welfare ideas. SADs roughly represent the number of days of intense pain felt by each animal. They are essentially a measure of days in pain with various adjustments for the intensity of pain, sentience, and welfare range (i.e., their relative capacity to experience pain and pleasure, in accordance with Rethink Priorities’ Welfare Ranges report). SADs are adjusted to “disabling” levels of pain on the Welfare Footprint pain scale. So one day spent in disabling pain for one human would be equal to one SAD. A program with fewer than 10 SADs averted per dollar has low cost-effectiveness, 10–30 SADs averted per dollar has moderate cost-effectiveness, 30–100 SADs averted per dollar has moderate-high cost-effectiveness, and greater than 100 SADs averted per dollar has a very high cost-effectiveness.
Ambitious Impact considers 10–30 SADs averted per dollar to be their bar for a cost-effective intervention.
See for example reports by Harris et al. (2022) and Anderson & Lenton (2019), and an evidence summary by Sentience Institute (Anthis, 2020).
ÇHKD says this is because they don’t expect to be able to win full commitments from large retailers that cover all of their stores.
E.g., Simçikas (2019)
For example: Schyns & Schilling (2013) report that poor leadership practices result in counterproductive employee behavior, stress, negative attitudes toward the entire company, lower job satisfaction, and higher intention to quit. Waldman et al. (2012) report that effective leadership predicts lower turnover and reduced intention to quit. Wang (2021) reports that organizational commitment among nonprofit employees is positively related to engaged leadership, community engagement effort, the degree of formalization in daily operations, and perceived intangible support for employees. Gorski et al. (2018) report that all of the activists they interviewed attributed their burnout in part to negative organizational and movement cultures, including a culture of martyrdom, exhaustion/overwork, the taboo of discussing burnout, and financial strain. A meta-analysis by Harter et al. (2002) indicates that employee satisfaction and engagement are correlated with reduced employee turnover and accidents and increased customer satisfaction, productivity, and profit.
Policies in bold text in the table are those that organizational consultancy Scarlet Spark recommends as highest priority.
Based on an external consultation with Scarlet Spark, we find this to be a low proportion of recurring revenue (the ideal being 25% or higher); however, the 25% target is dependent on the context for each charity, so while we have noted this information here, it did not influence our recommendation decision.
ÇHKD’s Achievements
Recent Achievements
- ÇHKD has secured over 30 cage-free commitments in Türkiye since 2020, impacting an estimated 850,000 egg-laying hens annually.
- They published a comprehensive report following field research with major fish producers in Türkiye, contributing to the international knowledge base for fish welfare organizations.
- They secured a key welfare commitment from a major Turkish sea bass and sea bream producer at the end of 2023.
Future Outlook
With your help, ÇHKD will be able to secure more cage-free commitments, strengthen their campaigns, and mobilize greater public support to drive Türkiye toward a cage-free future. Your contribution is crucial in amplifying their reach, empowering them to influence more corporations, and building widespread backing for animal welfare. By expanding media outreach, enhancing staff capabilities, and ensuring financial stability, your support will sustain and grow the movement in Türkiye for lasting change.