The threat of tropical mosquito-borne vector diseases becoming endemic in Britain in the near future made recent headlines in the unquestioning mainstream media, with particular pride-of-place given to the revelation that London could suffer endemic dengue fever transmission by 2060. Of course, like all good sandwich-board climate scare stories, this one has been walked around the park a few times in the past. In 2013, the Guardian reported that “leading health experts” were urging the Government to take action against the growing threat of mosquito-borne diseases, since “climate change could bring malaria to the U.K.”. Back in 2001, the newspaper reported British health officials had warned that malaria could return to southern counties “within 20 years” as the climate warms.
The latest catastrophising report comes from the U.K. Government’s Health Security Agency (UKHSA), led by Dame Jenny Harries. It is highly political in tone with Professor Isabel Oliver, Chief Scientific Officer at UKHSA noting that it “demonstrates the impact that climate change could have on our society if we don’t take decisive action”. It does nothing of the sort of course because, astonishingly, the UKHSA has based many of its headline-grabbing predictions on climate models fed with a presumption that temperatures will rise by 4-5°C in less than 80 years. Since global temperatures have barely moved much more than 0.15°C in the last 25 years, this 4-5°C high emissions pathway, known as RCP8.5, is little more than a highly implausible invention.
“Climate modelling under a high emissions scenario suggests that Aedes albopictus – a mosquito species that can transmit dengue fever, chikungunya virus and zika virus – has the potential to become established in most of England by the 2040s and 2050s, while most of Wales, Northern Ireland and parts of the Scottish Lowlands could also become suitable habitats later in this century,” says the report. Dr. Lea Berrang Ford, Head of Centre for Climate and Health Security at UKHSA, added that “a child born today will be in their working-age years when health impacts may peak or accelerate further, depending on how much we decarbonise now”.
Linking public health in this way using invented future temperature rises is a disgrace. It does a grave disservice to the British public who are entitled to receive timely and realistic advice on current and future health threats, not politically-driven scare stories based on unproven science and garbage-in, garbage-out climate models.
It is particularly disappointing to see the UKHSA, an executive agency of the Department of Health, making such a play of RCP8.5. In its latest assessment report, the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change noted that “the likelihood of high emissions scenarios such as RCP8.5 or SSP5-8.5 [a later version] is considered low”. The UKHSA is using a ‘low likelihood’ prediction to make fanciful, politically-inspired claims of tropical disease epidemics to scare the young, in particular, to follow a collectivist Net Zero agenda. Regrettably, the RCP8.5 pathway is responsible for much of the ‘clickbait’ science that still dominates the mainstream media headlines, from the Gulf Stream collapsing, to all the coral suddenly dying in the oceans. For its part, the UKHSA describes RCP8.5 as a “plausible” scenario.
The science writer Roger Pielke Jnr. has long been a critic of its widespread misuse, noting that we can view it as one of the “most significant failures of scientific integrity in the 21st century so far”. His short explanation for how such an obvious corruption of the scientific process has been allowed to stand for so long is “groupthink fuelled by a misinformation campaign led by activist climate scientists”.
As I noted earlier, the vector tropical disease climate scare is dusted down at regular intervals. But the facts have refused to cooperate – since the U.K. Department of Health and the Guardian first told us in 2001 it could appear within 20 years, malaria has been keeping its long-term low profile.

In June this year, the UKHSA issued a more sober assessment of malaria in the U.K. It noted that malaria “is not currently transmitted in the U.K.”, but travel-associated cases occur in those who have returned to or arrived in the U.K. from malaria-endemic areas. The above graph shows cases of malaria reported in the U.K. from 2002 to 2021. It shows they have remained fairly constant over the last 20 years, with major drops in the travel-restricted Covid years.
Chris Morrison is the Daily Sceptic’s Environment Editor.
Hmmm, those malaria cases actually appear to be declining through the 21st century
The parasites P-Vivax and P-Falciparum also appear to be declining this century
maybe because people are being wormed more often?
Air travel declined greatly in 2020 because it was banned. It hasn’t fully recovered.
Online meetings have taken up a lot of the slack.
These claims are such nonsense. If temperatures have risen somewhat since the mid 1800s, so what? Malaria and other mosquito borne diseases were endemic in the Southern USA well into the 1900s, when temperatures were lower than today. It’s one of the reasons the CDC was set up inAtlanta. Better public health practices stopped these diseases.
Malaria in Siberia was caused there because Siberia is/was a tropical heat country ??
Yeah, historically, malaria was common in the Central Valley of California.
Siberia is lousy with swamps, yet the mosquito joke is about Urals. Maybe because in Siberia gnats often are even more of a nuisance.
(The fauna of the Urals is very rich. More than 15,000 species of animals live here. For example, the mosquito alone is represented by 14,500 species)
the old british “ague” was most likely malaria and it stopped when they drained wet areas
Do you mean that the disease mostly disappeared when they drained the swamp?
That’s it in one.
Re ‘Better public health practices’: True for malaria and true for the dengue group viruses. Although the latter Aedes mosquito vectors breed in stagnant water mostly around human habitations, and not mostly in swampy areas as in Anopheles. If a dengue outbreak did occur in the UK, then it would have nothing to do with rising temperatures and everything to do with a failed public health system.
Based on the statements by U.K. Government’s Health Security Agency ‘leader’ and Chief Scientific Officer, I would say that the citizens of the UK need to be worried – their health security agency appears to be run by people ignorant of the basics of mosquito-borne disease.
Well, they may just be total political hacks who don’t really care about health security and are on the ‘Narrative’, but you cannot expect competent leadership in a health crisis from such people.
Drainage and DDT stopped these diseases.
Of course, drainage is now a pipedream in USA, seeing how repair of the Anderson Memorial Bridge (built in 11 months and visible from Harvard) could not even start for years. And DDT was found harmful to the Vegans, like CFCs.
RHS pointed this out yesterday.
The whole “peer-reviewed” report is based on RCP8.5 so it’s complete and utter BS.
Coming from the UK government it’s propaganda.
“. . . a mosquito species that can transmit dengue fever . . . .”
This scare tactic has been around for years in the US. I think athlete’s foot is more deadly in the US.
New name….
Same old nonsense
Why would anyone take this crap seriously. I mean almost all of those countries are allowing persons from undeveloped nations where various vector borne diseases are endemic flood into their countries without any health screening at all!
From what I’ve read it appears that the recent outbreak of Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever out west here in the US is thought to be the result of carriers flooding in from south of the border.
I was at a meeting of conservationists of all sorts here in Wokeachusetts a few years ago and got talking to a guy who turned out to be the current chief of the state’s fish and wildlife agency. He managed to get RMSP while in the state as he hadn’t been out west recently. And yes, this state has open borders- in the sense of inviting everyone and anyone to come here- with lots of benefits for everyone- other than nobody can afford housing, which problem is getting worse with all the “migrants” (nobody here dares call them illegal aliens)- so now the state is going to spend a ton of money to build low income housing for them- and it wants to change the zoning codes in the state to allow everyone to add tiny apartments to their homes- not a popular idea among “the masses”. I like the fact that real estate values are shooting up fast- as my home is my only asset with any value- the higher the better! If some people can’t afford a home here- or find a job here- well, they can move away! I hear there are lots of jobs in other parts of America and homes are much cheaper in some areas.
Migrants ‘displacing’ military families for Army-Navy game (americanmilitarynews.com)
Not impossible, but as Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever is endemic in the ticks in the Western US I’m not sure how they would tell? Is this report based on genotyping of a Central American biotype of the rickettsia?
Seems more likely that an increase in tick populations is to blame, but not impossible that infected migrants are infecting more ticks, especially dog ticks.
If infected migrants are selling their blood, and screening for spotted fever rickettsiae is not effective, then, that would be a worry.
Deadly Rocky Mountain spotted fever outbreak in California likely came from Mexico, CDC says (msn.com)
I followed up on this, but all I could find was a CDC and a Daily Mail report:
“All five cases of the tickborne disease were identified in Southern California and involved people who had been to Tecate, Baja California, in the previous two weeks.”
So, if this is the what you are referring to, then the infections are inferred to have been acquired south of the Border.
I’ll be 150 in 80 years, so I will worry about it then.
Yes. Nobody makes predictions that happen during my own life anymore.
Skeeters in London be damned! I’ve got more important lunar pursuits to worry about now with catastrophic regolith dooming–
The moon has entered a new epoch – and it’s all humanity’s fault (msn.com)
“Humans have changed the lunar surface to such an extent”
How much stuff do these people think we’ve left up there? I doubt it would be more than a molecule (relatively) in a 10 acre plot, but that’s enough to enter a new epoch for the lunar surface?
Oh dear. Morons being moronic in public – it’s all very sad to see such humiliating attention-seeking behaviour.
My (new) little house is about ½mile from River Nene as it runs north from the town of Wisbech. It fascinates me, not least at 12 miles inland it is tidal and when it’s running backwards …. just wow, The Power of that thing!
But how it got there (‘bech’ = beach so Wisbech was a seaside town 200+yrs ago) was that a significant team of ‘navvies’ created the so-called ‘Nene Cut’ which gave the river a clear run out into The Wash (North Sea)
The water is typically 50 metres wide, of unknown depth and runs straight as an arrow from where the Port of Wisbech is in the town centre.
The banks of this ‘cut’ are perfectly engineered (wag) 40 degree slopes into the water all the way. (Reinforced with sizeable lumps of limestone to make an impromptu ‘wall’ for the last couple of miles)
Using shovels, spades, wheelbarrows and horse/carts, they did it inside 2 years
They had to to be quick because, nearly as fast as new navvies could be found/coerced/co-opted/bribed/railroaded, the ones doing the job were ‘dropping like flies’ from some mysterious insect borne ‘Fen Fever’
Immense numbers died.
I ain’t investigated much but what I undesrtand is that no-one really knew what Fen Fever was (they didn’t want to know any more than they wanted to catch it) BUT……
Nobody nowadays gets Fen Fever
‘climate’…
Question 1:
a/ Did ‘fossil fuels’ eradicate Fen Fever and if so how, OR,
b/ Did the (successful) drainage of 95,000 acres of salty/fresh/tidal swampland get rid of Fen Fever?
Question 2: Which would have had a bigger effect on the Climate of the Town of Wisbech?
a/ Fossil Fuels and if so how
b/ That Wisbech effectively moved 12 miles inland and ceased to be an island within that swamp, not least considering the relentlessly frigid nature of The North Sea
Today’s brainache: Would the ‘successful drainage’ of Other Places affect their local climate as it did Wisbech and if this drainage extended over entire states/countries/continents, would that affect Global Climate?
wasn’t that a sweet little coincidence, that during the idyllic Roman Warm Period, entire towns and sea-ports magically moved that many miles inland……..
My go to response to these recurring stories is that we’re in more danger from environmentalists.
Mossquitoes breed in still and stagnant water. What are we doing at these people’s behest? Creating hectares of still water, wetlands for wading birds, restoring peat bogs reintroducing beavers. What’s going come as part of the package, insects that breed in water.
Indigenous people…. (Cop 28)
I’m indigenous and I can tell PHE now U.K. Health Security Agency that there’s no chance unless of course mosquitoes thrive at refrigerator temperatures
there are cold wet rainforests with lotsa mozzies
think Tasmania for one place
They have lots of midges in Scotland.
Mosquitoes, such as you encounter in Southern Europe, are going nowhere.
Maybe in time they’ll blame the jetsream for their failed projections.
Speculating- but I should think diseases and nasty insects can migrate to the UK and other areas without climate change because of trade and everyone zipping around on jets.
“trade and everyone zipping around “
Cast your mind back to the late 14th century… or 1348 to 1350 to be precise…
“Black women most likely to die in medieval plague”https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-67472933
History – as viewed through woke tinted glasses.
Only Hollywood believes that Medaeval England was full of black people, plus the BBC and a few left-wing academics. There is currently a thriving industry pushing the idea that England has always had a significant black population. The above ‘research’ I believe identified plague victim remains as ‘black’ based on skeletal dimensions. What has this got to do with climate change? There is a willingness to believe in some things despite scant evidence, as Douglas Murray has observed, it’s always the same people…
The latest catastrophising report comes from the U.K. Government’s Health Security Agency (UKHSA), led by Dame Jenny Harries. It is highly political in tone with Professor Isabel Oliver, Chief Scientific Officer at UKHSA…
Dr. Lea Berrang Ford, Head of Centre for Climate and Health Security at UKHSA…...
Then there were the three female Presidents of US Universities who were unable to say that calls for genocide contravened their universities’ code of conduct.
We had the female head of a UK bank having to resign because of the stance her bank took towards Nigel Farage.
We had the female head of the Metropolitan Police resigning because of criticism over the quality of her leadership.
We now have the female head of insurance firm Aviva saying that she vets every white male recruit to her business.
Is there a trend here? Are too many females of a certain type being promoted beyond their competence, just because of diversity, inclusion and equality?
“Is there a trend here?”
It’s the woke mind virus. Some of these women are transmaids
A seemingly reasonable hypothesis, but more likely ‘the females of a certain type’ are a subset of those that meet DIE criteria – those unscrupulous women who will do anything to obtain power.
They are hired and promoted because they adhere to the Narrative. Any who don’t parrot the Narrative would not be hired, irrespective of sex, race, ethnicity. Once in a position of power, they surround themselves with like-minded sociopaths.
This is what happens when politics infects every level of society and a sure road to massive incompetence at every level. We just had a demonstration of how very bad government can be when everyone is forced to adhere to a Narrative with that virus thing that everyone is trying to pretend didn’t happen.
More RCP8.5 hoohaw
Scary prediction….hmmm…let me see. Oh, yes – RCP8.5. Garbage.
This serves the dual purpose of looking busy and getting brownie points with advocacy armies. Just don’t call it public service.
The History of Malaria explains that “Malaria was commonplace beside the river Thames then [Shakespeare’s day] and even into the mid-Victorian era.”
Mosquitos are not responsible for malaria. Humans are the disease reservoir of malaria — no malarial humans — no spread of malaria.
With the modern medical practice of isolating malaria patients in advanced countries like the UK, it is impossible for malaria to become endemic.
Kip => With a functioning public health system, I think you are correct, but given the statements quoted above, it seems those running the public health system in the UK are either incompetent or political hacks.
In Australia we eliminated malaria in the 1980s and had has essentially eradicated the vector of Dengue viruses, Aedes aegypti, through an aggressive public health campaign.
We occasionally get small outbreaks of malaria when a traveller or recent immigrant infects a population of Anopheles, but so far we seem to have been on the ball enough to stop it quickly.
Not the same for Dengue, though. It is now endemic in parts of North Queensland and around Darwin. The public health authorities have failed to eliminate the reintroduced populations of Aedes aegypti and have allowed the mozzie to spread south. A couple of years ago it was found breeding in rainwater tanks only about 100 km north of where I live in SE Queensland.
There doesn’t seem to be the political will to eliminate the Dengue vector any longer. ‘It can’t happen here’ is probably part of the problem, but there seems to be a general and rather rapid decline in the quality of the government regulatory bodies and university researchers.
Three other quick examples: (1) Fire Ant had been corralled around Brisbane for 20 years, but they seem to have given up and decided to let it rip – it’s now shown up in NSW. (2) Myrtle Rust somehow made it here about a decade ago and is considered a major threat to Australian forests (largely members of the Myrtaceae) and especially to some rainforest trees. They decided there was nothing they can do. (3) Varroa had been successfully excluded from Australia – but this last year it became
established near Sydney in NSW – and they seem to have given up trying to eliminate the infestation. They blame the bee keepers and their queen trading, rather than pursuing an aggressive elimination policy.
So, this is my very long winded way of saying I think you are being too optimistic.
macromite ==> Dengue is harder to eliminate than malaria — people can get it without being terribly sick and thus act as a reservoir for the illness. And the dengue mosquitos can breed in a tin can or used tire of water,. I have helped knock out a dengue epidemic in the Dominican Republic — but as it is truly endemic on the island, it hasn’t been eliminated.
Malaria however has been successfully eliminated in the entire USA – on the East Coast, it was endemic from NY City to the tip of Florida at one time.
A great deal of the problem is folks complaining when the health departments insist on vector control– mosquito spraying. The mosquitos responsible for transferring the diseases must be knocked back until there are no onger any active cases in the human population. Once that it done (usually several times, as some cases are always missed) then the disease is gone — and can be kept that way.
The USA always gets a few malaria cases that come in from travelers and dengue also (especially along the southern borders), but surveillance and isolation keep the diseases from becoming established.
What is most important now is to understand that most of the public agencies who claim to be protecting us from harm and ensuring our future are completely off the rails and cannot be relied on to do anything other than waste our time, resources and future potential on imagined threats and boondoggles. The age of thinking for ourselves is upon us. We will meet the challenge or lose our way depending on our own thoughts and actions, most importantly when we vote.
You still believe in this magick? Even after 2020?
“The latest catastrophising report comes from the U.K. Government’s …”
These folks are {me, being polite} propagandizing, and they wonder why citizens don’t trust them.
“unquestioning mainstream media”
Behavior of professionals begging to be replaced by AI. Where we s the value add?
a presumption that temperatures will rise by 4-5°C in less than 80 years. Since global temperatures have barely moved much more than 0.15°C in the last 25 years, this 4-5°C high emissions pathway, known as RCP8.5, is little more than a highly implausible invention.
It’s not just highly implausible. It’s completely ridiculous and always has been from the moment it was first announced decades ago; so ridiculous that even the more rational of the climate zealots are admitting now that it’s “unlikely”. Even when first presented, RCP8.5 required such a drastic acceleration in global temperatures and sea level rise that it was obvious that it had no connection to the real world. And as you noted, it has been repudiated by observations, but every academic paper, however remotely related to
climate changeglobal warming, still uses RCP8.5 as the basis for its future projections. All of those papers and their conclusions—every single one of them—can be summarily rejected as nonsense, which is almost all of them.Whenever someone reports a claim made by a paper about global warming, do a quick scan of the paper and see if it uses RCP8.5 (it will), and let the climate zealots know that RCP8.5 is a thoroughly discredited fantasy with no connection to science and therefore so is the paper based on it. And, incidentally, the same goes for RCP6, RCP4.5, and RCP3.4, just not quite as wildly off as RCP8.5. Only RCP2.6 comes close to observations. It’s also the one that assumes the whole world works in concert to stop CO2 emissions by 2020 (whoops!) and they decline from 2020 onward.
RCP8.5 is the gift that keeps on giving because it’s so easily discredited and so widely used.
RCP8.5 projected temperature trend: range of 2.6 to 4.8 C per century, mean of 3.7
RCP2.6 projected temperature trend: range of 0.3 to 1.7 C per century, mean of 1.0
UAH measured temperature trend: 1.4 C per century
RCP8.5 project temperature trend: range of 0.45 to 0.82 meters per century, mean of 0.63
RCP2.6 project temperature trend: range of 0.26 to 0.55 meters per century, mean of 0.40
Satellite measured sea level trend: 0.35 meters per century
RCP4.5 (Scenario B) may not be far off the mark for the surface temperature data sets at this stage.
I don’t think so. Look at sea level rise and notice the big disparity.
UAH temperature trend is currently 1.4 C per century due to an unusually warm 2023. Go back a few months, and for most of the last few years, and it’s been 1.3 C.
RCP4.5 projected temperature trend: range of 1.1 to 2.6 C per century, mean of 1.8
UAH measured temperature trend: 1.4 C per century
RCP2.6 project temperature trend: range of 0.32 to 0.63 meters per century, mean of 0.47
Satellite measured sea level trend: 0.35 meters per century
They all lumped in too many factors, with no way of isolating the effects of each. Check out the projected CO2, CH4 and CFC concentrations from Hansen and the RFCs. CO2 emissions seem along the lines of Scenario A / RCP8.5, while concentrations aren’t far off Scenario B / RCP4.5. CFCs almost disappeared and CH4 is in Scenario C / RCP 2.6 territory.
Surface temperature trends are steeper than UAH for whatever reason.
Some of the sea level rises appear to involve stuff which Timothy Leary could only have dreamed of.
btw, the time series of temperature is a dubious way of looking at it compared to T vs ln(CO2) That seems to have a reasonable correlation above 320 ppm (1965)
More importantly, RCP2.6 is based on the assumption that global atmospheric CO2 starts declining by 2020. RCP8.5 is based on CO2 declining by 2045. Instead, CO2 levels are increasing according to the RCP8.5 “business as usual” scenario, but maddeningly (for the alarmists), temperatures and sea level rise refuse to comply. Clearly, all the scenarios are wrong, as are their assumptions about how much CO2 affects global temperature and sea level rise.
How do these knuckleheads keep their jobs? They should be fired immediately.
I don’t suppose they would start spraying for mosquitoes, would they?
We built the Rideau Canal in eastern Ontario after the War of 1812 with the US (i.e during the LIA when it was a degree or more colder than today). The canal builders contracted malaria and yellow fever working through the sloughs along the right away. How did we get rid of it? First, we drained the swamps and ultimately we sprayed the hell out it! With the real threat to our wellbeing, which is the dumbing down of education to the point where this history is no longer taught.
So you see Dr. Lea Berrang Ford, Head of Centre for Climate and Health Security at UKHSA, your joke of an education conceals the fact from you that even if the temperature drops a degree or so, you could still get invaded by “tropical” diseases. But don’t alarm your clients. Spray the hell out of the mosquitoes if the happen to appear.
Same thing in Ohio. There was plenty of Malaria in Russia too. Malaria is not a disease of warm weather. It is a disease of poor drainage. When the Romans ran Italy, they drained the Po river valley and it was very productive. after the Empire collapsed the drainage works decayed and the area was malarial. The Italians drained the valley in the 20th Century, malaria disappeared and it was productive farmland again.
The Health Service suffered considerable reputational damage during the pandemic, and its management even more so, with SAGE at the apex of bodies to be distrusted. Dishonesty was built in to the idea that anyone who died within 28 days of a covid diagnosis was given covid as cause of death. Many of the measures that were introduced were spurious attempts to enforce control of the people with little to no health justification. Meanwhile, treatment of normal diseases and illnesses went by the wayside, leading to early deaths.
There is now a huge backlog for treatment, made worse by strikes. More and more, people distrust the health service, which is not to their own good: they fail to report symptoms because they feel they will be ignored, and because they do not trust the diagnoses and treatments offered.
Adding more credulous nonsense will only make that situation worse. You have to ask – is that the intention?