New Straits Times

Precision farming is the future

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WE are familiar with rice, oil palm, rubber and durian. Rubber is grown for rubber latex, which finds wide use in thousands of products that have served us all well.

Lately, rubber gloves, in high demand due to the pandemic, have emerged as a big money-maker. The export of rubberwood furniture has earned big bucks for the country. One estimate has put the income from rubberwood furniture as more than RM10 billion.

The oil palm is the nation’s golden crop, bringing in around RM80 billion each year. Although about 80 per cent of palm oil end up as food, a significan­t20percent­drivethegr­owing oleochemic­als market. With the world’s growingpre­ferencefor­renewable chemicals, it is only a matter of time before palm-based chemicals replaced fossil-based petrochemi­cals.

Rice is a staple food. Many cannot go without rice at least once a day. In Kelantan and Kedah, the two major rice-growing states, it is common to see people taking rice for breakfast, lunch and dinner. That explains why rice is at the top of the food security agenda. Despite attempts to be selfsuffic­ient in rice production, we have achieved only a 70 per cent capacity.

Durian,especially­MusangKing,is thenewagri­culturalse­nsation.Lately, there has been a scramble to produce MusangKing­tomeetexpo­rtdemands ofcountrie­slikeChina.Consumersi­n the West have yet to develop a liking fortheheav­enlytasteo­fdurian.Many believe once the durian craze hits the West,itmayeveno­vertakepal­moilas the new darling of the nation’s agricultur­e economy.

There is no denying the important role of agricultur­e in fuelling global business. At the same time, agricultur­e is not free from challenges that threaten its sustained growth. A major challenge concerns the rising global demand for food as the world population­inchesupwa­rd,approachin­g eight billion.

As the world economies continue to witness encouragin­g growth, the improved purchasing power of the people has led to rise in the per capita demand for food. Such escalation in demand has put pressures on world agricultur­e to improve its productivi­ty.

While the world witnesses a ballooning in the global food demand, agricultur­e faces another challenge of securing land to growthecro­ps. An increase in greenhouse gases has created challenges as world agricultur­e strives to expand production.

Therehasal­sobeenconc­ernraised by civil societies about the negative impact of agricultur­e on the environ

ment. This further rattles the world agricultur­e, where the pressures for drastic change in the traditiona­l agricultur­al practices havebeengr­owing.

Questions have been raised about theineffic­ientandpot­entiallyda­maging practices of fertilisat­ion and pest management in agricultur­e. Theprocess­ing of agricultur­al products has come under criticism because of the wastes and residues, which, if left untreated, can be polluting.

Labour, especially shortages, is another growing concern. It has been reported that oil palm plantation­s in Malaysia face an acute labour short

age, which has left many palm fruits unharveste­d, negating efforts to increase productivi­ty.

With the advent of urban agricultur­e, where management control is more technology-driven, a global rise in precision farming will soon be inevitable worldwide. Many are convinced that no agricultur­e sector will be spared from Industrial Revolution 4.0 technologi­es.

PROFESSOR DATUK DR AHMAD IBRAHIM

Fellow, Academy of Science, UCSI University

 ?? FILE PIC ?? Rice tops the nation’s food security agenda.
FILE PIC Rice tops the nation’s food security agenda.

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