National Post (National Edition)

Farm data firm hooks up with reinsuranc­e giant

- Postmedia News

together digital tools to provide farmers a package of real-time informatio­n, such as commodity costs, pest threats and weather data.

“We are growing really quickly,” Barnes said. “Originally we were a precision agronomy company where we did a lot of work utilizing technology in putting the right fertilizer in the right spot in fields.

“But in 2014 we started focusing more on the data. We think agricultur­e is ripe for a significan­t disruption as has happened in other industries. Farmers Edge is leading that change. Rich data leads to predictive models which then tell a farmer such things as when he might get a disease outbreak, what his future yields might be — before long we will be predicting when their equipment breaks down before it does,” he added.

Barnes believes the deal with PartnerRe will speed up the spread and acceptance of their digital tool kit, especially in those areas of the world where farmers have never taken on crop insurance nor been exposed to data analysis of their fields.

“There’s been a solid insurance product in dorth America around for a long time and that has enabled farmers to take more risk. But with the data we can provide it allows insurance to be more tailor-made and gives farmers an alert ahead of time when the crop is in danger. It is really going to help insurance companies do a better job of managing that risk and help farmers get better products from those same insurance companies,” Barnes said.

As a global reinsuranc­e company PartnerRe can provide Farmers Edge’s services to a host of separate insurers and agents who subsequent­ly deal directly with individual farmers, Barnes said. Farmers Edge expects the partnershi­p to open up major farming area globally and allow them to bring their technology to at least 20 million new acres of farmland within the four years.

Barnes has worked with farmers for more than a decade and understand­s they won’t accept new technology just for the sake of being ahead of the times.

“Farmers are pragmatic,” he said. “They want to make sure they’re not just adopting technology for the sake of adopting technology — there has to be a payback. Some of the folks coming in from Silicon Valley think they can create a neat app, but farmers are not looking for a cool app. They want technology that drives increases in productivi­ty and decreases costs. If you don’t have that, if you are not real, then they don’t have time for you.” “We wanted to join the dots for farmers,” says Winnipegba­sed Farmers Edge co-founder Wade Barnes.

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