Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Meet the farmers of the future: Robots

- By Michael Liedtke

SAN CARLOS >> Brandon Alexander would like to introduce you to Angus, the farmer of the future. He’s heavyset, weighing in at nearly 1,000 pounds, not to mention a bit slow. But he’s strong enough to hoist 800-pound pallets of maturing vegetables and can move them from place to place on his own.

Sure, Angus is a robot. But don’t hold that against him, even if he looks more like a large tanning bed than C-3PO.

To Alexander, Angus and other robots are key to a new wave of local agricultur­e that aims to raise lettuce, basil and other produce in metropolit­an areas while conserving water and sidesteppi­ng the high costs of human labor. It’s a big challenge, and some earlier efforts have flopped. Even Google’s “moonshot” laboratory, known as X, couldn’t figure out how to make the economics work.

After raising $6 million and tinkering with autonomous robots for two years, Alexander’s startup Iron Ox says it’s ready to start delivering crops of its roboticall­y grown vegetables to people’s salad bowls. “And they are going to be the best salads you ever tasted,” says the 33-year-old Alexander, a one-time Oklahoma farmboy turned Google engineer turned startup CEO.

Iron Ox planted its first robot farm in an 8,000-square-foot warehouse in San Carlos, California, a suburb located 25 miles south of San Francisco. Although no deals have been struck yet, Alexander says Iron Ox has been talking to San Francisco Bay area restaurant­s interested in buying its leafy vegetables and expects to begin selling to supermarke­ts next year.

The San Carlos warehouse is only a proving ground for Iron Ox’s longterm goals. It plans to set up robot farms in greenhouse­s that will rely mostly on natural sunlight instead of high-powered indoor lighting that sucks up expensive electricit­y. Initially, though, the company will sell its produce at a loss in order to remain competitiv­e.

During the next few years, Iron Ox wants to open robot farms near metropolit­an areas across the U.S. to serve up fresher produce to restaurant­s and supermarke­ts.

 ?? ERIC RISBERG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Thursday photo a robotic arm lifts plants being grown at Iron Ox, a robotic indoor farm, in San Carlos At the indoor farm, robot farmers that roll maneuver through a suburban warehouse tending to rows of leafy, colorful vegetables that will soon be filling salad bowls in restaurant­s and eventually may be in supermarke­t produce aisles, too.
ERIC RISBERG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Thursday photo a robotic arm lifts plants being grown at Iron Ox, a robotic indoor farm, in San Carlos At the indoor farm, robot farmers that roll maneuver through a suburban warehouse tending to rows of leafy, colorful vegetables that will soon be filling salad bowls in restaurant­s and eventually may be in supermarke­t produce aisles, too.

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