Study Links Climate Change to Rising Malaria Cases in Africa

Written by on January 31, 2026

A new scientific study published in Nature indicates climate change may significantly increase malaria infections and deaths across Africa. The research, spanning over 25 years of data, suggests that extreme weather events are a primary driver of this potential increase, rather than solely rising temperatures.

The study was led by Peter Gething from the Malaria Atlas Project and combined climate information with health, socioeconomic, and malaria control records to assess disease evolution under future warming scenarios.

Projected Increase in Malaria Cases and Deaths

Researchers project that climate change could lead to 123 million additional malaria cases and more than 530,000 extra deaths between 2024 and 2050, assuming current malaria control efforts remain unchanged. The exact figures are dependent on the severity of climate change, but the overall trend points to a serious threat to progress against malaria.

Extreme Weather as the Primary Driver

This research emphasizes the role of extreme weather events, such as floods and cyclones, as the main cause of increased malaria burden. The study estimates that 79% of additional malaria cases and 93% of additional deaths could be attributed to these disruptive climate impacts.

Floods and storms can damage homes, destroy bed nets, interrupt insecticide spraying, and limit access to healthcare. Even short-term disruptions in rural and vulnerable communities can lead to surges in malaria transmission. Damage to roads and clinics can delay diagnosis and treatment, while compromised housing increases exposure to mosquitoes.

Concentration of Increases in Existing Endemic Areas

The study indicates that most of the additional malaria burden will occur in areas where the disease already exists, rather than spreading to new regions. Only a small percentage of additional cases are projected to occur outside current transmission zones.

Areas expected to experience particularly large increases include Southern and central Nigeria, the African Great Lakes region (including parts of Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda, and eastern Democratic Republic of Congo), Angola, Zambia, and cyclone-prone coastal zones of southeast Africa.

Impact on Malaria Eradication Goals

The findings are released at a time when progress in reducing malaria rates in Africa has slowed after years of decline due to insecticide-treated nets, effective drugs, and improved housing. Climate change could undermine these gains and make global eradication targets more difficult to achieve by mid-century.

Recommendations for Climate-Resilient Strategies

The authors recommend urgent investment in climate-resilient malaria control strategies. These include strengthening health and supply chain infrastructure, expanding early warning and emergency response systems, ensuring continued access to treatment during floods and disasters, and developing new tools less vulnerable to climate disruption.

The study concludes that climate change is already reshaping disease risks across Africa and that rapid action is needed to prevent malaria from becoming significantly harder to control in the coming decades.


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