Lethbridge Herald

Telus Agricultur­e aims to bring cutting-edge tech to food chain

- David Paddon THE CANADIAN PRESS – TORONTO

Telus Corp. launched a new agricultur­e division Thursday, saying it wants to use communicat­ions, data collection and artificial intelligen­ce to bring more efficiency to the world's food industry.

Chief executive Darren Entwistle said the new entity, called Telus Agricultur­e, can help improve decision making along the food chain from producers through to consumers.

“Indeed, consumers are increasing­ly concerned about food origin, food safety and quality - and the global health emergency has amplified this attention on the stability of our food supply,“Entwistle said in a Thursday webcast.

The closure of processing plants and restrictio­ns on domestic and foreign farm workers exposed the vulnerabil­ities of the food supply chain, he said.

Entwistle, who has headed Telus for 20 years, said it has been methodical­ly moving on several fronts to use technology to make better use of informatio­n.

It's important to make the food supply chain more efficient because demand is expected to grow by 70 per cent by 2050, he said.

“Telus Agricultur­e will promote a better yield of food supply, that is sustainabl­e and more environmen­tally friendly,” Entwistle said.

One example he provided was tracking the temperatur­e of foods as they go through the supply chain system in order to reduce perishable food waste and reduce the spread of foodborne illnesses.

Telus, which identified agtech as a growth opportunit­y about two years ago, said Telus Agricultur­e already has customers in more than 50 countries.

It also works with more than 1,200 experts in Canada, the United

States, Mexico and other countries.

Telus Agricultur­e will also add Florida-based AFS Technologi­es and California-based Agrian to its holdings.

They are the latest in a series of acquisitio­ns made by Telus over the past year, mostly in the United States and

Canada.

Francois Gratton, an executive vice-president of Telus and chair of Telus Agricultur­e, said they think their collection of assets is “unmatched.”

“In addition to the agtech assets we hold, we also have extensive network infrastruc­ture and global internet-ofthings (IoT) capabiliti­es that will help improve connectivi­ty in remote and rural regions ... far from urban centres,” Gratton said.

“Thanks to global IoT capabiliti­es, producers and ranchers can use robots, drones and remote sensors, combined with machinelea­rning capabiliti­es, to monitor crops, survey and map fields for better farm management.”

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