The  two  grapevine moths Lobesia  botrana  and Eupoecilia  ambiguella  are major viticultural  pests,  which  are  today  controlled  by  mating  disruption  all  over  Europe.  Until recently mating disruption relied on passive-release dispensers, deployed at high densities of 200  to  500  dispensers/ha. With  the  authorisation  of  active  aerosol  emitters  more  and  more winegrowers  switch  to  this  less  labour-intensive  control  method  requiring  only  2  to  5 emitters/ha. We were  therefore  interested  to study  if these new aerosol emitters provide a similar protection to vineyards than the original method for mating disruption. Since 2019, we find  no  evidence  that  the  novel  active-release  emitters  CheckMate®  Puffer  LB/EA  are  less effective than the classical passive-release dispensers of the type Isonet® or RAK®. Damages by grapevine moths remained for both types of pheromone emission stable and at a very low level. Infestation was also in both systems considerably lower than in the monitored references. Overall, our observations  confirm that  the deployment  of  less  sex pheromone sources per area by  the installation of active-release emitters does not reduce the efficacy of mating disruption at low pest population  densities.  It  can  therefore  be  an  interesting  alternative  to  conventional  mating disruption.