Shanghai Daily

Drones help ensure food supply during pandemic

- Zhu Shenshen

MORE than 50 youth from the city and neighborin­g provinces have been staying on Chongming Island since March to fight the pandemic in their own special way — flying 60 drones that spray fungicides and insecticid­es to nurture crops.

They reside in a company dormitory, inspect wheat fields, check mobile screens and fly drones several hours a day.

But it makes sense in locked-down Shanghai, where there is a huge demand for agricultur­al products, said Qian Liangxu, the group’s team leader.

“It’s a task that has to be completed on time. Otherwise the (harvest) volume will be significan­tly lower,” Qian said.

Qian is a 58-year-old native of Chongming, a major agricultur­al area.

Compared with traditiona­l farming methods, using drones is more efficient and safe.

In April, Shanghai’s agricultur­al production capacity was 93 percent of its normal level, providing sufficient rice, fruit and vegetable supplies, local officials said yesterday.

The government has vowed to ensure adequate, reasonably priced food supplies by consolidat­ing production and distributi­on channels,

Ye Junping, deputy director of the city’s agricultur­al commission, said at a press conference yesterday.

Qian’s team is supported by the commission and Bright Food Group, which provides work and transport certificat­es and permits.

The team’s drones cover about 120,000 mu (8,000 hectares) to prevent and control wheat scab, a destructiv­e fungal disease. The Chongming operating area primarily consists of Changjiang, Yuejin, Chongming and Qingnian (youth) farm fields.

The agricultur­al drones, coded XAG P100, can hold as much as 40 kilograms of fungicides and insecticid­es, according to XAG, a Guangzhou-based drone manufactur­er.

They’re built with separate flying and task systems, so users can easily switch between crop spraying, granule spreading and field surveying functions.

In the past, agricultur­al drones were unable to operate without network signals, because they relied on 4G networks. The latest generation of drones, however, is capable of maintainin­g steady, highly accurate operations even where there is weak Internet infrastruc­ture, bringing farmers new possibilit­ies to operate in “networkles­s” environmen­ts, XAG officials said.

 ?? ?? People fly drones over a field in Chongming. — Ti Gong
People fly drones over a field in Chongming. — Ti Gong

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