Global Times

China can help India fight desert locust invasion

- By Chu Daye

China could help India to address a locust plague with its emergency response capacity in pest control, although Chinese experts and industry insiders pointed out that the Indian government should create the right conditions for such disaster relief, citing the “boycott China” movement in the country and intentiona­l delays at Indian customs in recent days.

The locust plague has been developing in South Asia since late last year, but it is getting worse in India and swarms of locusts arrived over the weekend at Gurugram, a satellite city of the Indian capital New Delhi.

Being hit at the heart at the country revealed a failure in India’s campaign to keep the desert locusts at bay, with some control measures apparently compromise­d by the economic disruption­s of the COVID-19 pandemic, experts said.

He Xiongkui, a professor at the China Agricultur­al University and an expert in pesticides and specialize­d equipment, said although India has a large domestic pesticide industry, the country lacks the comprehens­ive capacity of the Chinese pesticide sector.

“In particular, what we see in the locust attack at New Delhi is India’s weak points in emergency response capacity,” He said, noting that such capacity involves producing massive amounts of specialist equipment at short notice – a capacity deriving from a well-establishe­d industrial chain.

A tractor-mounted sprayer cannon can cover 0.67 square kilometers over five hours. He estimated that the New Delhi city government will need 500-1,000 large, vehicle-based pesticide sprayer cannons to fight the current locust attack.

“If India can’t meet such demands, Chinese manufactur­ers can,” He said.

“People need to fight the locusts on the hills, people need to fight them on dry land, and people need to fight them on irrigated fields,” said Su Yi, chairman of Beijing-based Sino-agri Leading Bioscience­s Co. “To do that, people need specialize­d equipment.”

“Ideally, a locust swarm should be ambushed to death along its migration route to the capital, by quickly spraying huge loads of pesticide on crops grown in an entire region that is known to be the locusts’ next foraging ground,” said Su.

“Now that they are already in urban areas of New Delhi, mass spraying poses hazards to people and animals.”

“I fear for the fate of the greenery and gardens in New Delhi,” Su said.

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