INDUSTRY – AGRICULTURE: ARCHIVE

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REVIEW THESE INFORMATIVE ARTICLES FROM 2019 – AND READ THOSE THAT INTEREST YOU

A commercial robotic weed-mapping service, with environment-friendly non-chemical weeding (Robotics - 2019-12 - ZDNet)

Small Robot Company is a pioneering UK-based agri-tech startup offering Farming-as-a-Service, based on a trio of lightweight robots that monitor, feed/weed and seed arable crops, directed by an AI system. The goal is to create high-resolution crop maps, enabling precision husbandry with minimal environmental impact.

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3D-printing, vertical farming, and materials science are overhauling food production (Food Production/Additive Manufacturing - 2019-10 - Singularity Hub)

The food 3D-printing industry is expected to grow at 50% annually. Today’s breakthroughs will soon allow us to boost food production by nearly 70%, using a fraction of the real estate and resources. 3D-printed meals will be customized to individual medical records. Vertical farming that relies on hydroponics and aeroponics, will allow crops to be grown with 90% less water than traditional agriculture.

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Cannabis on a blockchain: Israeli Security Matters files patent for plant tracking (Supply Chain/Robotics - 2019-09 - ZDNet)

Israeli company Security Matters’ solution can be applied to mark, track, and manage the supply chain of cannabis plants, cannabis products, and products containing cannabis-derived ingredients.

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Robots take over farms faster than expected through autonomous equipment start-ups (Farming/Robotics - 2019-05 - The Independent)

Robots are taking over farms faster than expected as the first fully autonomous farm equipment is becoming commercially available. Autonomous tractors with specialized equipment will spray, plant, plow and weed cropland. They are much more precise, saving major costs.

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Robotic apple picker trials continue in Washington (Apple Picking/Robotics - 2019-05 - Geekwire)

For the first time, some apples sold in the U.S. will be picked by a robot rather than humans. California start-up, Abundant Robotics, makes the apple harvesting machines that will be trialled in Washington State’s 2019 harvest, with an expectation of commercial availability in 2021. The robot moves down rows of orchards, using AI and LIDAR to search for ripe apples, and a robotic arm with a vacuum to gently suck the apples and deposit them into a bin.

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A robot apple-picker is now harvesting fruit in New Zealand orchards (Fruitpicking/Robotics - 2019-04 - MIT Technology Review)

One of New Zealand’s largest food producers, T&G Global, has been working with US startup Abundant Robotics to create a robot that picks fruit when ripe for picking. The robot uses lidar to navigate the rows between the trees, and machine vision to identify which apples are ripe and which aren’t. It then uses a vacuum to gently “suck” apples off the trees.

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IBM completes blockchain trial tracking a 28-ton shipment of oranges (Supply Chain - 2019-02 - Coinbase)

IBM has completed a trial of blockchain technology to track a shipment of 3,000 cartons of mandarin oranges from China to Singapore. The electronic bill of lading was recorded on a blockchain. The normal time of 5-7 days was eliminated, providing traceable and tamper-proof record storage, where 40% fraud involves documentation.

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REVIEW THESE INFORMATIVE ARTICLES FROM 2018 – AND READ THOSE THAT INTEREST YOU

How self-driving tractors, AI, and precision agriculture will save us from the impending food crisis (Agriculture- 2018-12 - ZdNet)

John Deere’s test farm has helped increase overall farm productivity. In 1940 the average American farmer fed 19 people/year; today 155 people. For individual crops, corn amd soybean yields in the US grew by 61% and 29% (1980-2015). Detailed pdf downloads available.

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First autonomous robotic farm in the US opens (Agriculture/Hydroponics- 2018 -10 - MIT Technology Review)

Iron Ox has opened its first production facility in California. The 8,000-square-foot indoor hydroponic facility will be producing leafy greens at a rate of roughly 26,000 heads a year. This is the next step in the company’s vision of a fully autonomous farm where software and robotics fill the place of human agricultural workers.

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Software that optimizes seed selection, reduces fertilizer use, and detects early signs of disease is revolutionizing agriculture (Agriculture/Productivity- 2018-09 - MIT Technology Review)

The Climate Corporation is gathering information from sensors on farming equipment and in the field, which is analyzed in the cloud. The company is building increasingly sophisticated models that help farmers understand which crop hybrids will produce greater yields under certain weather and soil conditions, or what fertilizer levels will be optimal in a particular setting – helping farmers produce 8 additional bushels of crops per acre.

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Harvesting marijuana with robots is hard (Agriculture/Marijuana- 2018-09 - ZDNet)

Boston-area Bloom Automation will deploy smart robots that can harvest the sensitive marijuana crop at twice the efficiency of human harvesters. The robotic harvester uses machine vision and path planning algorithms to isolate clusters of flowers, segmenting the plant into the flower, branch, and leaf for clipping effectiveness.

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Robot picks nearly-ripe bell peppers (Agriculture/Vegetable Picking- 2018-09 - Wired)

Researchers in Israel and Europe have developed a robot (‘Sweeper’) that autonomously roams a greenhouse, finding peppers ready to be cut, saws them off the plant, and places them in a basket.

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AI-powered drones increase efficiency, reduce cost, spotting problems humans might miss (Agriculture - 2018-06 - TechRepublic)

Drones monitor construction sites, farms, and critical infrastructure, sending back real-time data, which is subjected to AI analysis to spot problems. This increases efficiency, reduces costs, and may spot problems humans might miss.

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AI-powered weed hunters could soon reduce the need for herbicides and genetically modified crops (Robotics - 2018-05 - MIT Technology Review)

Robots, like the one created by ecoRobotix, will be able to roll through fields, using computer vision to target and spray individual weeds as they go. EcoRobotix claims its robo-brigade will decrease total herbicide use by a factor of 20.

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Tiny drones replacing bees as pollinators (Drones/Bees - 2018-03 - TechRepublic)

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev is developing a small, artificial bee, currently in the format of a drone. Some plants can pollinate, only if there’s enough wind. Some plants need a current location of the pollination onto the flower itself. We are currently creating enough wind.

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Use of Robotics to handle labour shortage on the farm (Robotics/Farmwork&Bees - 2018-03 - TechRepublic)

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev has a long history of robotics research, with a fast-growing area being agriculture. Projects include a calibrated, intelligent sprayer that can identify grapes and leaves, applying sprays accurately; A small drone to pollinate flowers, and tomato flowers; and a sweet pepper harvesting-robot.

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Robots could replace human crop pickers (Robotics/Farmwork - 2018-03 - ZDNet)

Researchers from the University of Plymouth have created GummiArm, a soft robot capable of crop picking, which has two arms and soft joints. Cameras and sensors built into the robot’s ‘hands’ produce 3D models of objects in real-time, allowing the robot to assess which produce — such as cauliflower, cabbage, or broccoli — to pick or to leave. Soft joints and appendages backed up by robotic materials can provide the strength to pick without damaging crops. Commercialization is expected in the next two to three years.

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Drone technologies could increase farmers' productivity by 500 percent (Drone/Farming - 2018-02 - TechRepublic)

Drones are being used across the world, with the help of DroneDeploy software, to enable field surveillance, and detect issues (relating for example to weed detection and planting needs,), and provide farm equipment with the data to fix the issues. Drones only cost about $1,000, and the software another $1,000.

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REVIEW THESE INFORMATIVE ARTICLES FROM 2017 – AND READ THOSE THAT INTEREST YOU

Smartphone ap identifies diseases in cassava plants (AI/DiseaseDetection - 2017-10 - The Download)

Wired reports that researchers have developed a lightweight image-recognition AI that uses transfer learning to identify diseases in the cassava plant based on just 2,756 pictures of cassava leaves. It can reliably identify three crop diseases and two types of pest damage, including discerning brown leaf spot with 98 percent accuracy. The app can operate on a smartphone and doesn’t need to send data to the cloud for processing.

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Autonomous robots plant, tend, and harvest entire crop of barley (AI/AutonomousVehicles - 2017-09 - IEEE Spectrum)

Harper Adams University (UK) researchers have managed to plant, tend, and harvest 1.5 acres of barley using only autonomous vehicles and drones. No human set foot on the field, although remote management was required. Person-free precision farming seems like an increasingly viable way to help keep the world fed.

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A robot could replace traditional strawberry farming and harvesting - and that of other fruits and vegetables (AI/FruitPicking - 2017-09 - FastCompany)

Octinion, the Belgium R&D company, is building a robot that could replace traditional strawberry farming and harvesting. The robot is designed to work with the trending “tabletop” growing systems, where strawberries are grown in trays. The small robot moves through rows of strawberries, using machine vision to locate ripe, flawless berries, then reaching up with a 3D-printed hand to gently pluck each berry and place it in a basket for sale. If it feels that a berry isn’t ready for harvest, the robot estimates the date it will be ready for it to return and pick it. Pilot testing will begin with strawberry farmers in 2018, with sales expected in 2019. Plans are to adapt the robot to pick other produce like peppers, tomatoes, and cucumbers.

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Myanmar is using drones to plant a forest (Drone/Forestry - 2017-08 - FastCompany)

For the past 5 years, villagers in the Irrawaddy River delta in Myanmar have manually planted 2.7 million mangrove trees trying to restore an ecosystem that has been disappearing for decades. Drones, from startup BioCarbon Engineering, can plant up to 100,000 trees in a day, leaving the villagers to focus on care for the young trees. The drone technology involves a first pass to map the topography and soil quality, leading to a second pass to plant the best species in the best locations by firing seed pods to penetrate the soil.

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Using precision agriculture to control herbicide-resistant weeds in Brazil (AI/PrecisionAgriculture - 2017-07 - PrecisionAg.com)

Multiple species of Glyphosate-resistant weeds are spreading in the main producing regions of Brazil, mainly where glyphosate-resistant crops, such as soybean, corn, and cotton, have been cultivated. Real-time localized weed spraying is based on plant identification by the sensor, and instant application of herbicide only on the target, working 24-hours/day. Critical is the extremely fast speed of the nozzle control valves.

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Robots wielding water knives are the future of farming (Robotics/Farming - 2017-05 - Wired)

Robots roll through a fields spitting clouds of vapor while cutting lettuce heads with water knives – super-high-pressure beams – and gobbling up the produce. The heads roll up its mouth and onto a conveyor belt, where workers in hoodies and aprons grab the lettuce and tear off the loose leaves. California farms are facing a serious labor shortage of perhaps 20%. Robots pick up the slack, and jobs are not lost. Choice of lettuce types is adapted to the robot’s design.

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Automated apple picking in 2018 (Robotics/FruitPicking - 2017-05 - Scientific American)

Abundant Robotics in California has built an automated apple picker, that recognizes ripe apples and uses a vacuum system to suck them off of the trees.

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Robot on guy-wire swings over crops (Robotics/CropMonitoring - 2017-04 - MIT Technology Review)

The robot’s onboard cameras keep a watchful eye on crops so that large fields needn’t be constantly tended by farmers. It swings its arms to traverse a guy-wire strung up across a patch of land in a motion modeled after energy-efficient sloths.

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Legal cannabis market to create 300,000 US jobs by 2020 (General/Marijuana - 2017-02 - Forbes)

New Frontier Data’s annual overview of the cannabis industry found that the legal weed market will create close to 300,000 jobs by 2020. Forbes magazine reported that the market for legal cannabis, currently estimated at $7.2 billion, is projected to grow at a 17% annual rate.

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