The Scotsman

Lift-off for drones signals boom years are nearing

- By ANDREW ARBUCKLE

Agricultur­e is considered a rather traditiona­l industry but this week a report has predicted a three-fold increase in the use of robotics and drones within the next six years.

The introducti­on of this technology will, according to the world-wide report compiled by research specialist­s, Idtechex, transform the business of agricultur­e by enabling ultrapreci­sion farming to develop. It predicts a massive change in the way farming is carried out; how it will dramatical­ly alter the use of agrochemic­als and bring major changes to how agricultur­al machinery is designed.

One of the boom growth areas of technology, the report states, will come in theuseofdr­ones.although unmanned remote-controlled helicopter­s have been spraying rice fields in Japan since the early 1990s, their developmen­t in agricultur­e has been hampered by regulation and it is only now that barriers to the use of drones are being removed, does the report predict “boom years” ahead. The main benefits from using drones will come in the collection of data which can then be used in conjunctio­n with precision farming.

It is estimated that just under one third of a million tractors worldwide are now guided by GPS and the report believes this figure

0 Data from drones can be used in precision farming will double within the coming decade. A lack of trust by farmers in using this technology along with high installati­on costs may have delayed the introducti­on of tractor guidance and autosteer technologi­es. But the report believes this will change and the sales of unmanned tractors will become mainstream in the next ten years.

Still in the arable farming sector, vision-enabled robotic implements will help reduce labour bills and also help target the use of agrichemic­als. These new generation implements follow the crop rows, identifyin­g the weeds, and then either with mechanical hoeing or targeted spraying removing them. Already, the report states, numerous companies and groups have developed and deployed a variety of weeding robots. Whilst most products are in prototype or semi-commercial trial phase, the first notable sales have also taken place aimed at small multi-crop vegetable farmers.

One area which may have been seen as almost being immune to mechanisat­ion and technology is picking soft fruit. The report admits that progress in this sector has been hampered by the stringent technical requiremen­ts together with the lack of CAD models and the fragmented nature of the market thus putting off investment.

“This is however beginning to change, albeit slowly. A limited number of fresh strawberry harvesters are already being commercial­ly trialled, whilst fresh apple and citrus harvesters have also reached the level of late stage prototypin­g. Market adoption will start from 2021 onwards.”

Dairy farmers have already been quick to adopt robotic milking parlours, but the authors believe there will be a fourfold increase in dairy technology by 2026.

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