After landing a job at Hawkes Bay's Plant and Food Research, Vandervoet's focus has now shifted to helping develop more effective biocontrol of the codling moth here.
Each year New Zealand exports apples worth nearly $800 million to European and Asian market - both markets with stringent residue regulations and pest-free standards.
Achieving both these in order to maintain access to these crucial markets means a need to explore newer and more effective ideas - ideas that help ensure high quality fruit with that ultra-low pesticide residues and pest-free status.
A tactic that has been refined in Hawke's Bay is the air-dropping of sterile codling moths imported from Canada.
These are drone-dropped by the thousands over demarcated orchards and disrupt mating behaviour of the moths and suppress the population.
Covid-19 has disrupted this tactic - with no flights coming in, the import of these moths from Canada has been brought to a standstill for the moment.
So it's back to simple methods. Aside from pheromone-laden traps for codling moth, Vandervoet uses simple cardboard traps for the larvae strapped around the tree trunks, offering several more data points for studying the pest population in orchards and developing more effective biocontrol strategies around this.
"Lowering toxicity, reducing the use of insecticide is obviously good for growers, the environment land and consumers," says Vandervoet.
"I'd take an NZ apple over a US apple any day," Vandervoet laughs.
"New Zealand has a very good reputation for very low residue fruit."
"What we don't want is to get on a treadmill," he said, referring to the pattern where one pest dies through once form of insecticide control but it's replaced by another, creating a never-ending insecticide dependence.
"That's what happened when BT cotton was introduced in the US and they too are moving on to lower spray."
Vandervoet feels confident that many Kiwi growers think we can achieve no-spray exports in the next two decades.
'"I'm very positive and would love to contribute to that research," he says.