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Pakistan plans to convert locust swarms into fertilisers

The ministry would be the pioneer in converting the locust crisis into an opportunity by developing its bio-compost through community mobilisation.

Pakistan plans to convert locust swarms into fertilisers
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Islamabad

Pakistan has plans to convert locust swarms into fertilisers to tackle the massive pest invasion after it destroyed crops and vegetation on vast tracts of lands, which according to some reports poses a bigger threat to the country's economy than the coronavirus pandemic.

The Ministry of National Food Security and Research (NFS&R) has proposed that the locust collection would be incentivised through community mobilisation to control the menace at the grass-root level, The Express Tribune reported.

The ministry would be the pioneer in converting the locust crisis into an opportunity by developing its bio-compost through community mobilisation, the report said.

“The locust-based fertiliser will have an added advantage of more N (9pc) and P (7pc). Initially, locust will be unruffled through community mobilisation under the incentivised scheme,” the ministry said.

Professionals would also be involved from research, extension, academia and civil society in compost processing activities. Later, standard compost would be made from a mix of locust and other bio-waste material.

Pakistan had a locust attack last year that arrived from Iran, but this year's one is the most severe in three decades.

According to reports, swarms of locusts spreading across Pakistan are emerging as a bigger threat to the economy than the coronavirus pandemic, with the pests threatening farm output, livelihoods and food security.

“Marketing and distribution mechanisms will also be devised for promoting the use of compost in high value/organic agriculture. Pilot testing of the whole idea will be done in the Cholistan and the Thar Desert during next 3-4 summer reproduction months,” according to the ministry.

"Capacity building of communities will develop in trapping locust (trenching, netting, vacuum sucking etc.), it said, adding that 50 collection centres will be designated to facilitate communities.

The expected outcomes from the project would be to improve crop productivity by 10-15 per cent, reduction in the use of recommended chemical fertilisers up to 25 per cent, improve soil organic matter (SOM), soil fertility and soil health.

The ministry stated that through this scheme organic farming would be promoted in Pakistan.

The facility developed for compost production will be functional with or without locust components in the long run. Rs one billion worth of compost will be produced during the first year of the project.

“If 1 per cent of crop loss is controlled by this project, then there will be a benefit of Rs 32 billion. From 100,000 tonnes of locusts, 70,000-tonne compost will be formed. A single-family can earn Rs 6,000 on average per month. The full cost of the project will be recovered in three years,” according to the ministry.

As the ministry was chalking out a plan to use the pest for the benefit of agriculture, a lawmaker from ruling Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf suggested that the benefit of the locusts in treatment of COVID-19 should also be studied.

“I have been told that it (locust) can be useful against the coronavirus. I think we should also study this aspect of the locusts,” Riaz Fatiyana told Parliament on Wednesday.

India also faced a locust attack last month and the swarms reached Jaipur for the first time. Swarms of locusts travelled through several areas of Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra and Uttar Pradesh amid their worst invasion in years.

The swarms entered Rajasthan in April from Pakistan and then spread to areas across the western states, helped by strong winds.

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