The Southland Times

Robot out to save our soil

- Catherine Harris catherine.harris@stuff.co.nz

Farming by robot is no longer a fantasy and it could also aid soil quality. Christchur­ch’s Radius Robotics is developing a wheelbased robotic system which would direct drill seeds with a minimal footprint, and irrigate, weed and collect data.

Reducing the amount of land being tilled was a key aim, Radius co-founder Henry Bersani said.

Soil was a carbon sink and so the less it was disturbed, the less carbon was released, and less water was lost, he said.

‘‘The more you pull up the soil, the more you expose it to the elements, you lose nutrients and the looser the soil is, the more prone it is to run-off.’’

With climate change, water security was becoming a big issue.

‘‘In the United States, the Middle East and parts of Africa, it is really critical to find new ways of using water in agricultur­e.’’

Soil degradatio­n has become a major agricultur­al talking point and, although it is a contested theory, there is a school of thought that there are only a finite number of seasons before the world’s topsoil is exhausted.

Bersani said there were some synergies between this thinking and Radius Robotics’ technologi­es.

‘‘The ultimate goal of what we are trying to achieve is the largescale automation of polycultur­e farming as opposed to monocultur­e; the idea that you plant multiple different species instead of hectares on hectares of one single crop. By doing that, you restore that organic carbon content, the nutrient content; you are deterring pests naturally through mimicry of the natural systems.’’

Automation could also reduce a farm’s reliance on labour.

However, Bersani rejected the notion robotics was just about taking jobs. In some parts of the world, farming labour was scarce.

‘‘Quite often you have got enormous amounts of crops which are going to waste because they have got no-one to tend to them.

‘‘There are some places that are really screaming out for that lower semi-skilled labour.’’

Radius was being careful how it described its system because it was still working on its patent but the key was to cut the cost of production, Bersani said.

‘‘What we are trying to do is take the perspectiv­e of, what if we re-imagined arable cultivatio­n from the ground up and took a really radical approach to it?

‘‘Instead of saying, how do we strap a piece of technology on to a tractor and essentiall­y do what we have always done, which is essentiall­y another iteration on the beast of burden – how do we try and achieve a multitude of goals within a single system?

‘‘So while there are some really amazing technologi­es out there, most of them are confined to one particular task. They are either planting or they are weeding, or they are irrigating or they are harvesting, and each of them have their benefits. But as far as we understand, we are one of the only companies that is trying to address convention­al farming on a number of different fronts.’’

Robotics have been creeping into farming in various ways.

Automated milking sheds have started appearing in New Zealand, and recently Yamaha invested in Hawke’s Bay company Robotics Plus, which has devised robotic apple packers and is working on a fruit harvesting robot.

Radius’ team of three includes Bersani, mechanical engineer Daniel Morris, and chief executive Rob Swatton, who has worked in robotics and virtual reality, and has an interest in permacultu­re.

The startup is shortliste­d for a Palmerston North agricultur­al accelerato­r programme and is a finalist in one of the country’s richest startup competitio­ns, Callaghan Innovation’s C-Prize.

C-Prize’s focus this year is on technology that improves environmen­tal outcomes on a global scale.

Selected from 140 entries, the 10 finalists will each receive $10,000 to support their project and business mentoring over the next six months. The winner, to be announced in June, will receive $100,000 cash and help to move into commercial­isation.

 ??  ?? An artist’s depiction of what Radius Robotics’ soil preserving farming technology would look like.
An artist’s depiction of what Radius Robotics’ soil preserving farming technology would look like.
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