The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Automatic help at hand

- NANCY NICOLSON, FARMING EDITOR

Aff or dab le agricultur­al robots are on the horizon according to Robotriks, part of a cluster of technology companies based at Plymouth University.

As analysts predict the agricultur­al technology market will reach $22.5 billion by 2025 – a rise from $9 billion in 2020 – the small company has introduced the Robotriks Traction Unit (RTU) which is designed to do manual farm labour. It costs £7,000, a fraction of similar products on the market.

The developmen­t comes hard on the heels of a report by digital analysts Juniper Research, which identified the key agricultur­al technology growth sectors as sensors for crop management, GPS field mapping, and supply chain management.

These services are anticipate­d to account for 67% of market value by 2025 as the farming industry strives to increase yields and reduce costs through connectivi­ty and data insights.

The report states: “The need to automate data collection processes will drive the number of monitoring sensors to 436 million by 2025; rising from 170 million in 2020.

“These sensors will enable the monitoring of climate, hydration and soil pH levels to minimise operationa­l inefficien­cies.”

However, on a purely practical level, the RTU unveiled by Robotriks comprises a large drive wheel, suspension and a computer system, held together by galvanised pipe on which farmers can attach implements. These include convention­al items such as a tow hitch, wheelbarro­w or grass cutter, but also more high te cha nd new devices including soil probes, robotic harvesting arms or depth cameras for 3D crop rendering.

It works either by remote control or autonomous­ly, can carry several hundred kilos and is limited to run at up to 10mph.

Company director Jake Shaw- Sutton said: “The aim is to create a system which is affordable and reliable.

“It’s not about taking away jobs, it’s about filling jobs where there currently are no people available to do them. For a while there have been fewer people willing to go out into the fields and harvest fruit and vegetables; this is an autonomous solution to that.”

 ??  ?? FARM LABOUR: The Robotriks Traction Unit is an affordable agricultur­al robot.
FARM LABOUR: The Robotriks Traction Unit is an affordable agricultur­al robot.

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