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DDT had come under fire from larger corporations and environmentalists. But it is saving lives in Southern Africa.
This week's UN Environment Program meeting on insecticide use will surely be enlivened by the Southern African Development Community's recent decision to start producing DDT to combat malarial mosquitoes.
Environmental policies that banned the only viable form of protection against locusts have caused direct harm in Niger.
Leadership is a wonderful thing, but it is truly found when it is tested, and on that count malaria leadership has failed.
AEI's Roger Bate highlights a peer-reviewed paper in Research and Reports in Tropical Medicine which exposes false claims about an insecticide-free malaria control project in Mexico and Central America.
Activist groups should join together in support of an anti-malaria insecticide that could save millions of lives.
It is the world's most successful public health insecticide, saving millions upon millions of lives from insect-borne diseases. Yet DDT remains the world's most misunderstood chemical.
A recent article by leading malaria scientists should set the record straight that malaria growth has not been caused by climate change.





