The Borneo Post

Wanted: high-tech grads to work with Aussie farmers

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SYDNEY: Parts of Australia’s farming industry are rushing to recruit a new generation of techsavvy graduates as the sector swaps its bucolic past for a future of drones, robots and automated sensors.

The push comes as cuttingedg­e machinery is used to plug a labour shortage on the nation’s remote farms that threatens to derail its ambitions to become Asia’s food bowl.

“For the first time in many years, we’re finding it easier to attract graduates because agricultur­e, par t icularly technology in agricultur­e, is back on the radar,” said Felicity Hennessy, general manager of innovation at agribusine­ss Ruralco.

For years, potential recruits to Australian agricultur­e have been turned off by the harsh image of traditiona­l farming, but a marked accelerati­on towards automation­haspiquedt­heinterest of young generation­s, with jobs available to do everything from developing crop-protecting drones to crunching data on cattle nutrition.

“The proliferat­ion of drones and sensors are the key drivers,” said Hennessy, adding that Ruralco’s graduate programme had seen a rise in the number and quality of applicants.

While Australia is among the world’s leaders in robotics for outdoor use, having given birth to the first robot to round up cattle, the A$ 4 billion agricultur­e technology industry is still in its infancy. It is mainly just a few companies that are big enough to recruit.

The nation’s largest cattle firm Australian Agricultur­al Company (AACo) is one of the local firms in the sector that has regularly been hiring tech-savvy youngsters. — Reuters

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