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Biosecurity bootcamp by EffiSciences

BiosecurityGlobal catastrophic risks
🦑

Jonathan Samuel Claybrough

CompleteGrant
$1,300raised

Project summary

EffiSciences, who previously succesfully created ML4Good bootcamps upskilling in AI Safety, is now organizing a BioSecurity focused bootcamp, to upskill and enable participants towards careers reducing biorisks. This will be a 5 day in person bootcamp. The curriculum design and teaching is co-led by Dr. Erwan Sallard and Dr. Sriram Kumar, both post-doctoral researchers in virology and vaccinology, also using materials developed by EffiScience’s biorisks unit who teaches for example a yearly seminar at Ecole Normale Supérieure. More information, including a tentative program are provided at https://effisciences.org/en/events/biorisks-training-camp

What are this project's goals? How will you achieve them?

  • This project’s overall goal is to enable further work on biosecurity by bringing more students or early professionals to reorient or accelerate their careers. We achieve this goal by proposing an in person bootcamp with qualified teachers, using a similar format to the succesful ML4Good bootcamps.

  • Participants will

    • Acquire the theoretical background necessary to engage with biological risk sources as well as protection and data analysis technologies

    • Learn fundamentals on biorisk incidents, spreading, effects and cures

    • Discover governance tools and current initiatives to prevent or contain biological threats

    • Conduct group work on subjects chosen between epidemiology modelization, hazardous sequences identification in a counter-bioterrorism framework, writing reports on national pandemic preparedness plans, and more

    • Receive support in designing professional projects in the biosafety field

How will this funding be used?

We (EffiSciences) currently have commited 5k€, which currently only covers lodging, insurance and food (not including rates for a cook) for participants. We hoped to get funding from an Erasmus+ application that fell through, but would like to complete the project with higher quality.

With an extra 1000€ (minimum funding), we will be able to fund part of the travel costs of participants who couldn’t make it otherwise.
With 3000€, we can assist most participants with the travel costs, thereby ensuring they don’t drop out or face collateral damage on their career development.
With 5000€, we can compensate our cooks, organisers and teachers somewhat (this is still not close to the market price for the number of hours they have worked on this project for, but can nevertheless increase the chance they want to participate in a future such bootcamp).

Who is on your team? What's your track record on similar projects?

Dr. Erwan Sallard will be co-lead facilitator of the camp. He currently works as post-doctoral researcher on adenovirus vectorology (used as vaccines, gene therapy vectors or cancer treatments) at the Witten/Herdecke University. He has also been a member of EffiSciences since 2022 and contributed to syllabus writing for the Biorisks Seminar, wrote several popular science articles (https://legrandcontinent.eu/fr/2023/04/26/10-points-sur-lantibioresistance/) and wrote and recorded two videos of the Biorisks series. He also supervised four master students during research internships and tutored high school pupils for two years as part of the TALENS program (https://pesu.ens.fr/talens/).

Dr. Sriram Kumar will be a co-lead facilitator of the camp. He works as a postdoctoral researcher at the Institute of Virology, Münster, investigating the molecular determinants of zoonotic risk of non-human respiratory viruses, using classic reverse-genetic approaches and human-derived 3D experiment models. Dr. Kumar co-initiated and coordinated the EvoPAD Dual-Use Forum within the University of Münster, Germany. He was involved in several policy-related editorials, including the iGEM Policy Research Projects and the iGEM Governance And Policy (GAP) Newsletter. Dr. Sriram Kumar has years of sustained research and facilitation experience, specifically in educating and training youth in the context of pandemic biosecurity and dual-use research of concern.

Tim Doherty will be camp facilitator group leader for the Netherlands. Tim is in the process of earning his masters in International Relations: Global Conflict in the Modern Era at Leiden University. This is being done alongside an undergraduate degree in psychology and while being an active member in EA Leiden whose personal concern is heavily related to areas related to ethics, international security, global cooperation, and the reduction of existential threats

The organization of this bootcamp is supported by EffiSciences, notably by Antoine Sérandour who previously helped securing funding for an ML4Good bootcamp, and by Jonathan Claybrough, co-organizer and teacher at ML4Good bootcamps. We thus provide information on the track record of ML4Good. For ML4Good, we assess participant pre and post-camp, and their self-evaluation on their understanding went from 2.76 to 3.47. The average commendation note for camp participants is 9/10. ML4Good bootcamps were found cost-effective enough for OpenPhil, who decided to increase the funding for them to organize more in 2025. You can find public reports from previous ML4Good participants who decided to share about their experience.

What are the most likely causes and outcomes if this project fails?

Most likley causes of the bootcamp being worse than expected, and mitigations :

  • If our teachers are ill or have accidents and can't teach

    • In the worst case, we have other teachers in our network who can fill in

  • Accidents at the venue

    • We have experience with organizing and dealing with above issues (eg. we carry first aid kits, ...)

  • Participant selection was subpar, or too many participants are not able to come (eg. fall ill)

    • We have a waiting list and can fill in where appropriate

Outcomes if this project fails :

  • We might have been less cost effective than other interventions to reorient careers towards biorisks mitigation.

    • We still believe that experimenting with this format will be valuable information to inform future interventions towards upskilling in biorisks.

How much money have you raised in the last 12 months, and from where?

EffiSciences, from previous fundraising including personal donations, can currently commit 5000€ for this bootcamp. This is not enough for the vision we have, and we are thus fundraising to cover the gap.

Comments3Donations6Similar7
donated $700
🦑

Jonathan Samuel Claybrough

16 days ago

Final report

1. Overview and Objectives

EffiSciences organized its first Biosecurity Bootcamp (24–29 March 2025) with support from Manifund. The goal was to seed a new generation of young professionals able to tackle global catastrophic biological risks, in a context where biosecurity remains marginal in France’s research and policy ecosystems.

We hosted 14 participants (ages 22–30) from 8 countries, with diverse academic backgrounds (biology 2, policy 4, physics/AI/engineering 7, medicine 1).

Recruitment channels: EA community 9/14, universities 1/14, LinkedIn 2/14, direct outreach 2/14.

The program combined 14 h of lectures, 8 h of workshops, and 13 h of applied projects, delivered by 3 facilitators (from Oxford, Charité Berlin, EffiSciences) and 2 guest speakers.

2. Results and Key Outcomes

Immediate outcomes

  • 11/14 participants completed a mini-project with concrete outputs:

    • Quantitative framework for assessing AI-related biorisks (now a LessWrong post).

    • Vaccine supply-chain resilience model → ongoing scientific paper.

    • Contribution to NTI’s Youth for Biosecurity challenge (published definition proposal).

    • Policy analysis on antimicrobial resistance and zoonoses (Turkey).

    • Redefinition of U.S. bioterrorism deterrence framework.

  • >80 % reported intent to pursue biosecurity-related careers; 3 have already shifted academic or professional trajectories.

Post-program impact (June 2025 update)

  • One alumnus became leader of “Nordics for Biosecurity” (≈100 members), coordinating global EA-aligned initiatives and job-board curation.

  • One participant began a biosecurity PhD at King’s College London (topic: bioterrorism).

  • Two teams continue work on AI-bio convergence and vaccine logistics modeling, now mentored by EffiSciences researchers.

Community & ecosystem impact

  • The event catalyzed the first grassroots biosecurity network in France, bridging EA circles and local universities (ENS, Sorbonne, AgroParisTech).

  • Created a persistent alumni group (11/14 still active), serving as mentors for future editions.

  • The Bootcamp materials are now ready for replication in 2026 (Latin America, UK, and Francophone Africa).

3. Spending Breakdown (EUR 6 000 total)

Category Amount (€) %

Venue (Utopia Campus) 4,150 70 %

Travel subsidies 700 12 %

Speaker honoraria & materials~0 0 %

Insurance 350 6 %

Food 800 13 %

Total 6 000 € 100 %

Cost per participant: ≈ 430 €, competitive with comparable EA fellowships.

4. Changes from Original Plan

  • Scope expanded to include AI–bio risk interfaces following recent discourse shifts.

  • One facilitator dropped out (replaced internally).

  • Participant diversity lower than planned (2 women / 14; 9 EA-affiliated). Future editions will target under-represented backgrounds via university partnerships.

5. Marginal Impact and Next Steps

Given the absence of pre-existing French biosecurity training, the Bootcamp generated high marginal returns per euro:

  • Created ≈ 10 new early-career trajectories toward biosecurity.

  • Built the only French-speaking EA-aligned biosecurity cluster.

  • Produced replicable curricula and open materials, enabling international diffusion.

Next steps (2026–27):

  • Scale to 3 regional editions with alumni as co-facilitators.

  • Formalize mentorship network and publish project outputs.

  • Seek co-funding (≈ 12 k€) to double participant count and gender diversity.

6. Funding and Counterfactual Impact of Manifund’s Contribution

This project would not have reached its current scale or quality without Manifund’s decisive support. EffiSciences had initially secured only €5 000, covering minimal lodging and food costs, but leaving travel assistance and teaching compensation unfunded after an Erasmus+ grant fell through. The €1 000 complement from Manifund directly enabled 8 participants from low-income or distant regions (Eastern Europe, Turkey, North Africa) to attend by subsidizing their travel. Without this, at least 5 confirmed participants (≈35 %) would have withdrawn, substantially reducing both diversity and critical-mass effects.

Beyond direct participation, Manifund’s endorsement served as a credibility signal that unlocked further in-kind contributions (venue discount ≈ €400, volunteer teaching ≈ 40 h) and raised the visibility of biosecurity within the French EA and university ecosystems. In total, Manifund’s marginal funding increased the number of completed projects per € spent by ~40 %, and effectively converted sunk preparation efforts into a full-scale bootcamp rather than a reduced pilot. The intervention thus achieved an estimated cost-per-career-trajectory of €200–€250, comparing favorably with prior ML4Good benchmarks and demonstrating the high leverage of small, well-timed grants in emerging regional fields like biosecurity.

Contact: Erwan Sallard — EffiSciences Biosecurity Program
Website: www.effisciences.org

donated $700
🦑

Jonathan Samuel Claybrough

4 days ago

(The above final report was posted before a collaborator had the chance to give their input, please take into account the following addendum for a more up to date understanding and full view). Any contradicting information here takes precedence over information above.
Addendum – Biosecurity Bootcamp Impact Review (updated October 2025)

  • Facilitation: 2 facilitators (from Charité Berlin and Oxford) + EffiSciences coordination.

  • Mini-project completion: 9/14 participants completed a project with concrete outputs, including:

    • 2nd place at NTI’s Youth for Biosecurity Challenge (redefinition of the Biological Weapons Convention).

    • Scientific review & policy analysis on antimicrobial resistance and zoonoses in Turkey (under submission).

    • Redefinition of the U.S. bioterrorism deterrence framework.

    • Founding of Biodefenders, an African youth-led biosecurity organization.

  • Career outcomes: 80 % (11/14) intend to pursue biosecurity careers; 2 already reoriented.

  • Post-program impact (Oct 2025):

    • 2 alumni are now preparing to co-organize future editions as facilitators.

    • Persistent alumni group: 9/14 still active.

  • Replication plans: content ready for 2026 editions in Latin America, UK, and French-speaking Africa.

  • Participant diversity: 4 women out of 14 participants.

  • Career impact: estimated 5–10 new early-career trajectories in biosecurity.

  • Marginal impact of Manifund: without this funding, half the food budget would have been missing, and the bootcamp would likely have been downsized or cancelled.

  • Content creation effort: ≈ 120 hours of curriculum design, editing, and teaching preparation.

  • Revised cost-effectiveness estimate: €200–€400 per new career trajectory (vs prior €100–250).

Austin avatar

Austin Chen

9 months ago

Approving this grant! Effisciences has a track record with AI safety field-building in France; I'm wishing them luck as they scale this up towards teaching on biorisk.