In a development that will surprise few who follow the arc of British biosecurity, the UK has dispatched a specialist team of scientists, sniffer dogs and sterile flies to the United States to combat an outbreak of the New World screwworm. This parasitic menace, which lays its eggs in the open wounds of livestock and occasionally humans, has resurfaced in Florida for the first time in decades. The response from Her Majesty’s Government is characteristically low-key but lethally effective. The British team is deploying a weaponised version of the ‘sterile insect technique’ that has become the country’s signature biosecurity export.
Let us be clear: this is not a story about cute dogs or helpful insects. This is a story about capital. Biosecurity is a multi-billion pound industry, and the UK is its undisputed market leader. The global trade in live animals, meat and dairy products runs to hundreds of billions. A single screwworm outbreak can shut down entire export markets overnight. The 2016 outbreak in Florida cost the US livestock industry an estimated $1 billion. This time, the Americans have called in the British.
Consider the economics. The sterile insect technique relies on flooding a region with millions of irradiated male flies. These males mate with wild females but produce no offspring. Over successive generations, the population collapses. It is a textbook example of market intervention: the government provides a public good (eradication) that private individuals cannot achieve through individual action. But it is heavily subsidised. The UK government has invested heavily in rearing facilities and research. The question is whether the returns justify the cost.
The British biosecurity sector is a rare example of public expenditure that generates measurable economic returns. The UK’s Animal and Plant Health Agency (APHA) estimates that every £1 spent on biosecurity saves £10 in potential outbreak costs. That is a return that would make most hedge fund managers blush. But the model relies on maintaining a state-run monopoly on expertise. Private sector firms have struggled to replicate the scale and reliability of APHA’s sterile fly production. The Americans, for all their free-market zeal, have consistently outsourced this work to the British.
There is a diplomatic bottom line here. The UK’s willingness to deploy these resources strengthens our negotiating position in trade talks. The US is a net importer of certain British livestock genetics and veterinary products. A favourably resolved screwworm crisis could tilt the terms of trade in our favour. It is the kind of hard-nosed calculation that never makes the press release but always appears in the finance ministry’s spreadsheets.
Of course, the purists will object. Environmental campaigners worry about the impact of releasing millions of non-native insects into an ecosystem. Animal rights groups question the use of live animals in detection teams. These are valid concerns, but they are secondary to the cold calculus of economic risk. The cost of inaction is orders of magnitude greater than the cost of intervention. The market has spoken.
Inflation watchers might also take note. A major livestock disease outbreak in the US would spike global meat prices, feeding through to UK food inflation. The Bank of England would face renewed pressure to raise rates. That is a scenario the Treasury is desperate to avoid. So when you see headlines about British dogs sniffing out screwworm larvae or planes releasing sterile flies over Florida, remember: this is not altruism. This is risk management. And if the bond market is any guide, it is a sound investment.











