Congrats James! By my accounting, I think there’s a pretty reasonable through line from you investigating this issue at GiveWell in late 2017 to the progress we’re seeing today. I hope you feel immensely proud of that.
Some questions I’d love to get your thoughts on:
How did you first learn about lead as an issue? I know you were looking into public health regulation broadly at that time (e.g. pesticides) and in your conversation notes from 2017 you cite various statistics (e.g. WHO statistic that 10% of children globally have >20 micrograms of lead NYU study on $1 trillion of economic costs). What first rang the alarm bells for you that this was an area worth investigating?
How was Pure Earth so far ahead of everyone on this? They published their first “World’s Most Polluted Places Report” in 2008 and wrote in it: “Relative to other public health interventions, pollution remediation can be very cost effective..… projects cost between $1 - $50 per year of life gained. This compares favorably to the $35 to $200 per year of life gained for World Bank estimates on interventions related to water supply, improved cooking stoves and malaria controls.”
Besides your $250K grant to IPEN in July 2019, why did it take you nearly four years from when you started investigating the topic in late 2017 to start funding work in the space? Relatedly, why did it take you so long to fund LEEP, and with relatively small grants to-date?
Congrats James! By my accounting, I think there’s a pretty reasonable through line from you investigating this issue at GiveWell in late 2017 to the progress we’re seeing today. I hope you feel immensely proud of that.
Some questions I’d love to get your thoughts on:
How did you first learn about lead as an issue? I know you were looking into public health regulation broadly at that time (e.g. pesticides) and in your conversation notes from 2017 you cite various statistics (e.g. WHO statistic that 10% of children globally have >20 micrograms of lead NYU study on $1 trillion of economic costs). What first rang the alarm bells for you that this was an area worth investigating?
How was Pure Earth so far ahead of everyone on this? They published their first “World’s Most Polluted Places Report” in 2008 and wrote in it: “Relative to other public health interventions, pollution remediation can be very cost effective..… projects cost between $1 - $50 per year of life gained. This compares favorably to the $35 to $200 per year of life gained for World Bank estimates on interventions related to water supply, improved cooking stoves and malaria controls.”
Besides your $250K grant to IPEN in July 2019, why did it take you nearly four years from when you started investigating the topic in late 2017 to start funding work in the space? Relatedly, why did it take you so long to fund LEEP, and with relatively small grants to-date?