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The challenges posed by global broadacre crops in delivering smart agri-robotic solutions: A fundamental rethink is required

Grieve, Bruce Donaldson; Duckett, Tom; Collison, Martin; Boyd, Lesley; West, Jon; Yin, Hujun; Arvin, Farshad; Pearson, Simon

Authors

Bruce Donaldson Grieve

Tom Duckett

Martin Collison

Lesley Boyd

Jon West

Hujun Yin

Simon Pearson



Abstract

Threats to global food security from multiple sources, such as population growth, ageing farming populations, meat consumption trends, climate-change effects on abiotic and biotic stresses, the environmental impacts of agriculture are well publicised. In addition, with ever increasing tolerance of pest, diseases and weeds there is growing pressure on traditional crop genetic and protective chemistry technologies of the ‘Green Revolution’. To ease the burden of these challenges, there has been a move to automate and robotise aspects of the farming process. This drive has focussed typically on higher value sectors, such as horticulture and viticulture, that have relied on seasonal manual labour to maintain produce supply. In developed economies, and increasingly developing nations, pressure on labour supply has become unsustainable and forced the need for greater mechanisation and higher labour productivity. This paper creates the case that for broadacre crops, such as cereals, a wholly new approach is necessary, requiring the establishment of an integrated biology & physical engineering infrastructure, which can work in harmony with current breeding, chemistry and agronomic solutions. For broadacre crops the driving pressure is to sustainably intensify production; increase yields and/or productivity whilst reducing environmental impact. Additionally, our limited understanding of the complex interactions between the variations in pests, weeds, pathogens, soils, water, environment and crops is inhibiting growth in resource productivity and creating yield gaps. We argue that for agriculture to deliver knowledge based sustainable intensification requires a new generation of Smart Technologies, which combine sensors and robotics with localised and/or cloud-based Artificial Intelligence (AI).

Citation

Grieve, B. D., Duckett, T., Collison, M., Boyd, L., West, J., Yin, H., …Pearson, S. (2019). The challenges posed by global broadacre crops in delivering smart agri-robotic solutions: A fundamental rethink is required. Global Food Security, 23, 116-124. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gfs.2019.04.011

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Apr 26, 2019
Online Publication Date May 3, 2019
Publication Date 2019-12
Deposit Date May 27, 2022
Journal Global Food Security
Print ISSN 2211-9124
Publisher Elsevier
Volume 23
Pages 116-124
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gfs.2019.04.011
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1203896