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Autonomous Technology Coming To Fields In The Next Five Years

The rapid change in crop protection technology was one the topics presented at the Farm Forum Event in Calgary.

On Wednesday, December 5, Warren Bills with xarvio Digital Farming Solutions shared his thoughts on the future of agriculture technology during the panel discussion titled, “Advances in Agronomy- Digital Information, Bio Products and Disease”.

Bills says, crop protection is one of the areas farmers are most open minded about adopting new technology.

“Not one gets up in the morning and is excited necessarily to spend a whole bunch more dollars on crop protection, and a whole bunch more time in the sprayer. The more we can help them manage that risk, and make better decisions using this tech and this data, the better. Farmers in Western Canada are not behind in this category, we just need to keep pushing them as quickly as the technology is pushing us.”

Bills says, these innovations include autonomous machines.

“The opportunity to create autonomous machines that are able to pass through our fields without seats and without cabs, and make decisions on how to apply a product to control a weed species, or disease species, is here today, we’re seeing it in action.”

In his presentation, Bills talked about technology where sprayer boom sections are controlled by biomass satellite imagery when spraying fungicides.

The boom sections turn on, or off, so the product is only applied where the crop is thick enough to require treatment.

Bills says, the point of these advances in crop protection technology is to create more consistency in application.

He predicts we’ll see autonomous machines in fields across Western Canada within the next five years.

Source : Steinbachonline

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Canada reaches tariff deal with China on canola, electric vehicles

Video: Canada reaches tariff deal with China on canola, electric vehicles

Canada has reached a deal with China to increase the limit of imports of Chinese electric vehicles (EVs) in exchange for Beijing dropping tariffs on agricultural products, such as canola, Prime Minister Mark Carney said on Friday.

The tariffs on canola are dropping to 15 per cent starting on March 1. In exchange for dropping duties on agricultural products, Carney is allowing 49,000 Chinese EVs to be exported to Canada.

Carney described it as a “preliminary but landmark” agreement to remove trade barriers and reduce tariffs, part of a broader strategic partnership with China.