Jamaica Gleaner

The second Green Revolution will be digitised

- Maximo Torero is chief economist of the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on of the United Nations. © Project Syndicate 2023 www.project-syndicate.org

FARMING IS one of the world’s oldest and most farreachin­g endeavours. Meeting the growing food demands of the global population – projected to reach ten billion by 2050 – amid accelerati­ng climate change presents an unpreceden­ted highwire act that requires human ingenuity, good governance, and technology.

The last time the agricultur­e sector went through a seismic shift like this was when new technologi­es, such as high-yielding wheat and rice seeds, chemical fertiliser­s, and irrigation technologi­es, kicked off the Green Revolution in the 1960s. In the following three decades, cereal production in famine-prone Asia doubled, and wheat and rice became cheaper, even though the population increased by 60 per cent during this period.

Unfortunat­ely, the Green Revolution brought with it a host of environmen­tal costs. Lax regulation­s and generous subsidies made fertiliser­s and pesticides cheap, and farmers, with no training, used them excessivel­y, leaving soil damaged and waterways polluted. As new crops took over, traditiona­l plant varieties were lost, contributi­ng to biodiversi­ty loss.

The rise of robotics and artificial intelligen­ce may help usher in a second, even greener, Green Revolution. Robots are already harvesting crops, weeding, and collecting data to improve soil management. Soon, they will be as common in farm pastures and greenhouse­s as they are in medical labs or Amazon warehouses. The hope is that AI can help meet food and climate goals by adding more precision to agricultur­e, thus allowing farmers to grow more and waste less.

ADVISE FARMERS

AI-powered programmes, like IBM’s Watson, combine data on weather patterns, crop yields, and market prices to advise farmers regarding the best time to plant, the precise amount of fertiliser­s to use and when to harvest for peak ripeness. Researcher­s at Microsoft and Wageningen University in the Netherland­s are growing cucumbers with the help of algorithms, combining the efforts of humans and AI to boost yields while using fewer natural resources.

In California, a state that grows irrigated fruits and vegetables on a large scale, such technologi­es mean real savings in seasonal labour requiremen­ts. For example, a US$150,000 “grape-gobbling robot” can sort two tons of grapes in 12 minutes, replacing 15 human workers – as well as reducing the use of fertiliser­s, pesticides, and water while producing higher yields.

In the past, agricultur­al automation was characteri­sed by large industrial farms using heavy machinery to boost yields. Mechanisat­ion on this scale increased producers’ dependence on fossil fuels and the unbridled use of chemicals. The steep cost also meant that small farmers, especially in poorer countries, lacked access, creating an uneven playing field.

Digital technologi­es are changing this to benefit both large-scale and small-scale farms. Farmers have taken a page from ride-sharing apps like Uber, using GPS tracking devices and fleet management software that allows small producers to share assets required for agricultur­al mechanisat­ion. Some companies, like TROTRO Tractor in Ghana and Tun Yat in Myanmar, allow small farmers to share the cost of renting a tractor they could not afford alone.

Digital support can also upgrade traditiona­l mechanisat­ion, even if it is not advanced technology. For example, GPS devices that track cattle (‘smart collars’) and transmit data about animals’ health and movements can determine the amount of feed to dispense and automate the feeding process, improving productivi­ty.

GREAT ADVENTURE

The great advantage of robotics is its potential for cost-effectiven­ess, allowing small farmers to compete with their larger counterpar­ts. Like computers and smartphone­s, these machines, once manufactur­ed in large volumes, should become much less expensive, thus paving the way for wider use.

But robotics and AI-based tools, which favour highly skilled farmers over low-skilled ones, have the potential to deepen existing inequality. They could further alienate the world’s poorest people, especially those who live in rural areas and eke out a living on a small plot of land without access to markets or financial services.

To ensure that agricultur­al automation, from tractors to drones, is inclusive, government­s should invest in essential infrastruc­ture, including electricit­y and broadband connectivi­ty in rural areas. They should also provide training on these digital tools to create a new class of skilled farmers who can operate more advanced technologi­es – and can create new, high-skill opportunit­ies for rural youth.

To be sure, technology alone will not right the world’s wrongs when it comes to delivering food more sustainabl­y or making farming more efficient and equitable. Nor can it transform agricultur­e overnight. From California to Kenya, robotics and AI are still expensive and tend to favour larger farms over smaller ones.

Moreover, greater use of robotics could encourage the expansion of monocultur­e farming systems, as robotic machines require uniformity to function efficientl­y. That would lead to a loss of genetic diversity.

Robotics and AI in agricultur­e are still at an early stage of developmen­t. Thoughtful policy and rigorous impact assessment­s of its adoption are required to realise the Second Green Revolution’s full potential.

Robots are not substitute­s for human farmers. But in a future with billions of extra mouths to feed, they can make food more sustainabl­e, available, and cheaper to produce. It is high time to give machines a chance.

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Maximo Torero GUEST COLUMNIST
Maximo Torero GUEST COLUMNIST

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica