The Mercury News

Using robots in the fields starting to grow on farmers

Autonomous technology for seeding, feeding and weeding gains popularity

- By Kelvin Chan

EAST MEON, ENGLAND » Faced with seesawing commodity prices and the pressure to be more efficient and environmen­tally friendly, farmer Jamie Butler is trying out a new worker on his 450-acre farm in England’s Hampshire countrysid­e.

Methodical­ly inspecting Butler’s winter wheat crop for weeds and pests, the laborer doesn’t complain or even break a sweat. That’s because it’s a four-wheel robot dubbed “Tom” that uses GPS, artificial intelligen­ce and smartphone technology to digitally map the field.

Tom’s creator, the Small Robot Company, is part of a wave of “agri-tech” startups working to transform production in a sector that is under economic strain due to market pressures to keep food cheap, a rising global population and the uncertaint­ies of climate change. Most robots are still only being tested, but they offer a glimpse of how automation will spread from manufactur­ing plants into rural areas.

“If we can keep our costs to an absolute minimum by being on the leading edge of technologi­es as one method of doing that, then that’s a really, really good thing,” said Butler, one of 20 British farmers enlisted in a yearlong trial.

Next year, the British startup plans to start testing two more robots controlled by an artificial intelligen­ce system that will work alongside Tom, autonomous­ly doing precision “seeding, feeding and weeding.”

The aim is to drasticall­y cut down on fertilizer and pesticide use to lower costs and boost profits for struggling farmers. As such, it not only helps economical­ly, but it also lowers the environmen­tal impact of farming.

“What we’re doing is stuff that people can’t do,” said Ben Scott-Robinson, cofounder of the Small Robot Company . “It’s

“If we can keep our costs to an absolute minimum by being on the leading edge of technologi­es as one method of doing that, then that’s a really, really good thing.” — Jamie Butler, British farmer

not physically possible for a farmer to go round and check each individual plant and then treat that plant individual­ly. That’s only possible when you have something as tireless as a robot and as focused and accurate as an AI to be able to achieve that.”

Commercial sales of the full, multi-robot

system is still years away, with larger-scale testing planned for 2021. They represent the next step in the evolution of automation for farms. Self-driving tractors and robotic milking machines have been in use for years and, more recently, unmanned aerial drones that monitor crops have gone into service.

Eventually, farms “will be able to automate virtually everything,” said Tim Chambers, a fruit farmer who’s not involved in the trial. Some jobs are harder to automate, such as harvesting delicate raspberrie­s or strawberri­es by hand, but even that is coming, said Chambers, a member of Britain’s National Farmers Union.

Florida’s Harvest Croo Robotics , Spain’s

Agrobot, Britain’s Dogtooth Technologi­es and Belgium’s Octinion are all developing berry-picking bots. California startup Iron Ox and Japan’s Spread grow vegetables in automated indoor farms. Bosch startup Deepfield Robotics is working on a weeding robot that punches them into the ground. Last year, British researcher­s planted, monitored, tended and harvested a barley crop using only autonomous machines, in what they said was a world first.

A more fundamenta­l problem “will be the cost of

building those robots and the research that has to go into making them,” Chambers said. The low cost of air freight could still make it cheaper to, for example, fly in fruit from other countries where labor is cheaper, he said.

To ease financial pressure on farmers reluctant to make big one-off investment­s in equipment, the Small Robot Company plans to sell its services as a monthly subscripti­on, charging 600 pounds ($765) per hectare a year.

With a bright orange 3Dprinted body, and beefy allterrain wheels, Tom resembles an oversized roller skate. Their light weight means these robots won’t compact soil the way tractors do, Scott-Robinson said.

On Butler’s farm, Tom

trundles along crop rows taking hundreds of thousands of high-resolution pictures during the growing season. The images are fed to Wilma, the artificial intelligen­ce platform, which is being trained to tell the difference between wheat and weeds.

In 2019, the company will start trials for two more robots, Dick and Harry. Dick will deliver fertilizer directly to soil around roots, instead of wasteful blanket spraying, and use a laser or micro-spray chemicals to kill weeds. Harry will insert seeds into the earth at a uniform depth and spacing, eliminatin­g the need for tractors to plow furrows.

 ?? PHOTOS BY KELVIN CHAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Joe Allnutt, lead roboticist at British startup the Small Robot Company, inspects a farming robot named Tom as part of a trial in East Meon in southern England. The “agri-tech” company is developing autonomous machines in the hope of transformi­ng food production.
PHOTOS BY KELVIN CHAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Joe Allnutt, lead roboticist at British startup the Small Robot Company, inspects a farming robot named Tom as part of a trial in East Meon in southern England. The “agri-tech” company is developing autonomous machines in the hope of transformi­ng food production.
 ??  ?? British farmer Jamie Butler is letting the Small Robot Company test out agricultur­al robots on his fields as part of a trial in southern England.
British farmer Jamie Butler is letting the Small Robot Company test out agricultur­al robots on his fields as part of a trial in southern England.
 ?? KELVIN CHAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A farming robot named “Tom” produced by the Small Robot Company uses GPS, artificial intelligen­ce and smartphone technology to digitally map a field.
KELVIN CHAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A farming robot named “Tom” produced by the Small Robot Company uses GPS, artificial intelligen­ce and smartphone technology to digitally map a field.

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