Business of Agriculture March April 2019 Edition | Page 17

Smart Farm Machinery: Smart farm machinery allows farmers to produce more with less. The backbone of such machinery is technology like machine vision and GPS. Smart farm machinery includes driverless tractors that can till the land without a human driver. This technology will not only will save labour, but it will also give time to farmers to pursue more essential activities. Smart tractors will even be able to use big data to judge the best time to work on a field without human intervention. Another advantage is that with this machinery they can work at any time of day, meaning a farm can be productive even when its owners are asleep. Other equipment like seeding machinery makes farms smarter. While older seeding equipment can seed a large area faster than humans, they tend to waste seeds. Newer precision seeding machines are more effective because they’re able to plant seeds at an optimal depth and distance from other seeds. Gradually precision seeding machines and tractors will be able to farm an entire field autonomously. A farmer overseeing the field will be fed real-time data which they can use to optimise the process when needed. The work being done on the farms is changing and will change drastically in the near future when automated farm machinery will become more affordable. Granular Information on Each Orchid Tree: Farmers cherish their relationship with their land. The most skilled farmers have a bond with their crops and trees. There are start-ups today designing orchid management software that gives farmers detailed information about the size of a single tree and the diameter of its trunk. Farmers who have orchids spread over hundreds of acres get granular information about each tree. This allows farmers to monitor the health of trees and develop better farming techniques. Such software also strengthens the bond that farmers have with trees. Farmers cherish their relationship with their land. The most skilled farmers have a bond with their crops and trees most farmers were dependent on animals or human labours to plough and harvest. Today innovations in agriculture are also the reason why more people die of obesity than malnutrition. A single farmer today produces enough food to feed hundreds of people while before innovations in agriculture, most farmers practised subsistence farming. Techniques like smart crop rotation and no-till farming allow resources to be used as efficiently as possible. There are 7.7 billion people on Earth today, by 2050 there will be 9.8 billion and the amount of arable will remain nearly the same. This isn’t a reason to panic because innovations in agriculture will mean that in 2050, obesity will still be a greater health risk than malnutrition. A few innovations will ensure that there will be ample food for billions of people; some examples of such innovations are elaborated below: Crops to Grow between Rotations: Smart crop rotation is important to ensure soil fertility and to retain the balance of resources in the soil. A start-up has created a cash crop that can be planted between Business of Agriculture | March-April 2019 • Vol. V • Issue 2 17