Organic agriculture is faced with a lot of problems for its inability to use potentially harmful, yet effective pesticides. To target this, Denmark may wage a biological warfare on vermin by using drones to deploy predatory insects to its vulnerable organic fields.
Once a field is labeled organic, it becomes a daunting challenge to fight pests like mites and aphids without using chemicals. A new research project, backed by Denmark's Environment and Food Ministry, is developing a drone which is intended to be used for spreading ladybugs and other predatory insects to exterminate all vermin which threaten organic crops, the tabloid newspaper BT reported.
The project, which has been granted 8.3 million kroner (roughly 1.5 million dollars) by the Environment and Food Ministry represents a joint venture between the Danish tech company Ecobotix, Aarhus University and the University of Southern Denmark and is expected to curtail pesticide use in Danish agriculture by 3.4 percent.
One of the reasons for the costly investment is that Denmark is one of the world's leading consumers of organic food: 8.4 percent of the food consumed in Denmark is organic, making Danes the leading consumers of organic food in the world, per capita. The nation of 5 million is also home to 2,557 organic farmers.
Recently, the Food and Agriculture Ministry announced plans to launch Europe's first organic food business group to assist the Danish government in boosting the sector and strengthen the Danes' reputation as world's most pro-organic consumers.
The debate on organic food has been seething over the past decade, with its devotees claiming significant health and environment benefits, whereas supporters of "conventional" food argue organic products are simply overpriced, with little evidence to back their advantage.