Dayton Daily News

Tired of waiting for driverless vehicles? Head to a farm

- By Scott McFetridge

For years Americans have been told autonomous technology was improving and that driverless vehicles were just around the corner.

Finally they’re here, but to catch a glimpse of them, you’ll need to go to a farm rather than look along city streets.

Beginning this fall, green 14-ton tractors that can plow day or night with no one sitting in the cab, or even watching nearby, will come off the John Deere factory assembly line in Waterloo, Iowa, harkening the age of autonomous farming.

The developmen­t follows more than a decade-long effort by the world’s largest farm equipment manufactur­er, and marks a milestone for automation advocates, who for years have been explaining why driverless cars aren’t quite ready for prime time.

“I’m glad to see they’re coming out and will stimulate the other technologi­es,” said Raj Rajkumar, a professor at Carnegie Mellon University and an expert in autonomous cars.

Deere isn’t saying yet how much the autonomous tractors will cost but the new technology will be added onto tractors that sell for about $500,000, said Ben Haber, a company spokesman. The company plans to operate the autonomous tractors on 10 to 50 farms by this fall before significan­tly increasing the number in following years.

For the past decade, the supposedly imminent debut of autonomous vehicles on city streets and freeways has been repeatedly pushed off as companies struggled to guarantee their safety.

But, Rajkumar notes, tractors have it easier because they don’t need to contend with other vehicles, pedestrian­s or the complexiti­es of an urban scene. Tractors can make use of consistent GPS data, unlike cars that can lose contact traveling through tunnels or amid tall buildings.

Or as Joel Dawson, a Deere production director, put it, “You aren’t going to see a crosswalk in most cornfields in Iowa or Nebraska.”

Modern tractors already have GPS guides that handle steering and turning to ensure optimum plowing, seeding and harvesting. They also use real-time streams of data to make changes if needed because of soil conditions, the amount of fertilizer applied or other factors.

The autonomous tractor will now let farmers hook up a plow behind a tractor, start the machine with a swipe of a smart phone and then leave it to rumble up and down a field on its own.

The driverless tractors are equipped with six pairs of cameras that work like human eyes and can provide a 360-degree image. When filtered through computer algorithms, the tractor is able to determine where it is in the field and will abruptly stop if there is anything unfamiliar in its path.

Farmers often grow crops on different parcels of land that are miles apart, so while the tractor plows in one field a farmer can work at another, drive into town for supplies or spend time with their families at home. Given that less than 2% of Americans work on farms and rural population­s have dwindled for decades, the autonomous tractors also are expected to help with chronic labor shortages.

The shift to ever-more sophistica­ted tractors is part of a movement that emphasizes planting, fertilizin­g and harvesting during narrow windows of time when conditions are perfect. If new technology can help farmers complete a job when soil and air temperatur­es are just right ahead of approachin­g wet weather, for example, it can mean more plentiful crops months later.

Still, the tractor won’t be for everyone.

Ed Anderson, director of research for the Iowa Soybean Associatio­n, cited the substantia­l cost, and noted that some farmers prefer hands-on work rather than overseeing operations via a smartphone.

 ?? BILL KRZYZANOWS­KI / JOHN DEERE VIA AP ?? An autonomous John Deere tractor plows a field without a driver on a farm in Blue Earth, Minn.
BILL KRZYZANOWS­KI / JOHN DEERE VIA AP An autonomous John Deere tractor plows a field without a driver on a farm in Blue Earth, Minn.

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