The buzz stops here
The buzz stops here
Tags: Africa, Anopheles, Genetic biocontrol, Malaria, Population modification/replacementBill Gates, Gates Notes, 2025.
I’ve been working on malaria for over two decades. I’ve talked with researchers in labs and parents who’ve lost children to a mosquito bite. I’ve seen promising new tools and surprising setbacks. But I’ve rarely been as excited about a new innovation as I am about this one. In a lab in Tanzania, researchers are studying something incredible: a mosquito that can’t give you malaria. It looks and behaves like any other mosquito. It flies, bites, and breeds. But what it doesn’t do is transmit one of the deadliest diseases on the planet—which means it could save hundreds of thousands of lives a year.
This mosquito was developed in 2023 by a team of African scientists at the Ifakara Health Institute in partnership with Imperial College London. It’s the first transgenic mosquito ever created on African soil—meaning that scientists have made a small, targeted change to its DNA. It was both a major scientific milestone and a major moment of African leadership in the global health space. The project is called Transmission Zero, and its goal is as ambitious as its name: to eliminate malaria not by killing mosquitoes, but by making them unable to transmit it to humans.

