Prosopis juliflora is an invasive alien plant species belonging to the Fabaceae family. It is a thorny shrub or small tree, commonly known in India as vilayati babul, vilayati kikar, gando baval, seemai karuvelam and Bellary jaali.
It is native to Mexico, South America and the Caribbean, but was introduced in many arid and semi-arid regions of the world for afforestation, fuelwood and soil stabilisation.
Why It Was Introduced
Prosopis juliflora was introduced because it can survive in very harsh conditions.
It was valued for:
- drought tolerance
- fast growth
- fuelwood supply
- ability to grow on degraded land
- soil stabilisation in dry areas
- use as fencing due to thorny branches
In India, it was introduced in several dry regions, including Delhi, Gujarat, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu and parts of the Deccan, but it later became highly invasive.
Invasive Nature
Prosopis juliflora spreads aggressively and outcompetes native vegetation.
Its invasive success comes from:
- deep root system
- high drought resistance
- rapid seed dispersal through animals
- ability to grow in saline and degraded soils
- dense thickets that prevent other plants from growing
- possible allelopathic effects that suppress nearby vegetation
Because of this, it has become one of the most problematic invasive plants in arid and semi-arid ecosystems.
Ecological Impact
Prosopis juliflora causes serious ecological damage.
- It replaces native grasses and shrubs.
- It reduces biodiversity in grasslands and scrublands.
- It affects grazing lands by reducing fodder availability.
- It lowers groundwater availability due to deep roots.
- It changes local habitat structure.
- It creates dense thorny thickets that restrict movement of people and livestock.
- It affects pastoral livelihoods.
In Delhi’s Ridge, for example, Prosopis juliflora, locally called vilayati kikar, has dominated large parts of the landscape and suppressed native species. Recent restoration efforts are trying to reduce its dominance and revive native biodiversity.
Impact on Banni Grasslands
Prosopis juliflora is a major ecological concern in the Banni Grasslands of Kutch, Gujarat.
Banni is one of India’s important grassland ecosystems and supports pastoral communities such as the Maldharis. The spread of Prosopis juliflora has reduced open grassland area, affected native grasses and changed pastoral livelihoods.
This is why recent efforts to use Prosopis juliflora as a feedstock for green methanol are significant: they attempt to convert an invasive biomass problem into a clean-fuel opportunity. A May 2026 update noted that the invasive shrub threatening Kutch’s Banni Grasslands is being repurposed as feedstock for India’s first green methanol production plant.
Latest Context
Prosopis juliflora entered recent current affairs because India is planning to use it for green methanol production.
The proposed project at Kandla/Deendayal Port in Gujarat aims to convert Prosopis juliflora biomass into green methanol for clean maritime fuel. This links three policy areas:
- invasive species management
- clean fuel production
- green shipping transition
This is important because removing Prosopis from ecologically sensitive regions can help restore grasslands, while its biomass can be used for low-carbon fuel production.
Uses
Despite its invasive nature, Prosopis juliflora has some economic uses.
- fuelwood
- charcoal production
- fencing
- biomass feedstock
- soil stabilisation in degraded areas
- limited use as animal fodder through pods, though safety and nutrition issues exist
- potential feedstock for bioenergy and green methanol
The policy challenge is to use its biomass without encouraging its further spread.
Control Measures
Control of Prosopis juliflora is difficult because it regenerates quickly.
Common methods include:
- mechanical removal
- uprooting of root systems
- controlled cutting with follow-up treatment
- restoration with native species
- use of biomass for fuel or industrial feedstock
- long-term monitoring to prevent regrowth
Simply cutting the plant is usually not enough because it can resprout. Seeds and seedlings also need to be controlled.
In Tamil Nadu, the Madras High Court launched a major initiative in March 2026 against Seemai Karuvelam, the local name for Prosopis juliflora, showing how serious the invasion has become in the state.
Concerns
- Removal is expensive and labour-intensive.
- If biomass gains commercial value, people may unintentionally encourage its cultivation.
- Mechanical removal can disturb soil if not carefully managed.
- Native vegetation must be restored after removal; otherwise the area may be reinvaded.
- Invasive species control needs long-term monitoring, not one-time clearance.
- Local communities depending on fuelwood or charcoal may resist sudden removal without alternative livelihood support.
Way Forward
Prosopis juliflora should be managed through an ecological restoration approach, not only removal.
Priority should be:
- mapping invaded areas
- removing the plant from ecologically sensitive grasslands, wetlands and protected landscapes
- using removed biomass for controlled industrial purposes such as bioenergy or green methanol
- preventing fresh plantation or spread
- restoring native grasses and trees
- involving local communities and pastoral groups
- ensuring long-term monitoring
In places like Banni Grasslands, removal must be linked with grassland restoration and pastoral livelihood support.
Conclusion
Prosopis juliflora is a classic example of an introduced species that initially appeared useful but later became a serious invasive threat. It survives in harsh conditions, but its aggressive spread damages native biodiversity, grasslands, groundwater systems and pastoral livelihoods.
The recent green methanol initiative in Gujarat shows a new approach: turning invasive biomass into clean fuel. However, this must be handled carefully so that economic use does not become an excuse to preserve or spread the invasive species.



