How AI could help farming become more efficient and sustainable
Another one of the smart farms is at Olds College, where Felippe Karp is conducting research into how to develop standards for data collection and processing to build AI models.
AI models are only as good as their datasets, explained Karp, who is a research associate at the college and a PhD candidate in bioresource engineering at McGill University. His focus right now is on measuring and predicting variability of soil nutrients.
“With this data set, we trained an artificial intelligence model ... and used that to predict the availability of nutrients in the soil.”
It takes time to find out whether new technology or a new approach has affected a crop, said Dara, and this can be a barrier to adoption for farmers.
“Sometimes ... it’s within a year, within a season or within a few years,” she said.
Farmers often get just “one shot” at a crop each year, Keena said.
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“And so we can't ask them to take big risks on integrating new technologies at scale as part of their operations in things that are unproven.”
“Innovation Farms ... addresses a piece of one of the barriers of people needing to be able to see these technologies rolled out in a full scale and commercial way ahead of being able to adopt them themselves.”
Farmers’ trust levels are also a barrier, said Dara, especially since with AI sometimes the decision-making process isn’t clear.
Data is paramount to AI models, she added, but farmers need to be better incentivized to share their data in order to make the technology better.
Farmers can be resistant to sharing their own data, said Karp: “That's one of the challenges we face when we talk about developing more complex models.”
But over time, Petras said he’s seeing an uptick in engagement from farmers.
“Farmer engagement is absolutely critical” to developing AI tools for agriculture, he said, which can include field demonstration days, conferences and workshops, he said.
“If they've seen it demonstrated, essentially in their backyard through a smart farm, well, then we're that much further ahead toward adoption.”