New lab will boost UN efforts to keep harmful insects at bay
25 September 2017 – The United Nations International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) today opened the doors of a new laboratory to help countries use a nuclear technique to keep harmful insects, such as
mosquitoes and fruit flies, at bay.
The modern Insect Pest Control Laboratory (IPCL), located in Seibersdorf, Austria, will boost the Agency’s ability to
assist Member States in applying the Sterile Insect Technique (SIT) to combat insect pests that spread disease and
damage crops.
“With new and modern facilities, the IPCL will in future be able to do even more to help Member States control insect
pests that endanger our crops, our livestock and our health,” IAEA Director General Yukiya Amano said during the inauguration ceremony.
The environmentally-safe SIT, a form of insect birth control, uses radiation to sterilize male insects, which are reared
in large numbers and released in a target area to mate with wild females. Since they do not produce any offspring, the
pest population is reduced over time, according to the Agency.
Along with additional space to train experts to support the transfer of SIT to countries, the new lab will facilitate
research on the application of the technique for different insects, including mosquitos that transmit malaria, Zika and
other diseases.
“The IPCL offers a very tangible example of the enormous practical benefits of nuclear science and technology,” noted
Mr. Amano.
From left to right, FAO's Ren Wang, Ambassadors Friedrich Däuble (Germany), Christine Stix-Hackl (Austria), IAEA's
Yukiya Amano, Ambassadors Darmansjah Djumala (Indonesia), and Tebogo Seokolo (South Africa), at the inauguration of new
IAEA/FAO Insect Pest Control Laboratory in Seibersdorf, Austria. Photo: S. Gas/IAEA
Earlier this year, the IAEA, in partnership with the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), assisted the Dominican Republic in using SIT to eradicate an outbreak of the Mediterranean fruit fly – one of the
most damaging agricultural pests in the world that attacks several types of fruits and vegetables.
Thanks to this assistance, the country was able to eradicate the fly within two years, and to regain access to export
markets worth $42 million a year.