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Fendt, Bosch-basf Partnership Aims to Launch Smart Spraying Technology by 2024

Fendt, Bosch-basf Partnership Aims to Launch Smart Spraying Technology by 2024

BY DAN MILLER

Fendt is testing a new sense-and-act weed management system that it aims to release commercially in 2024 in the Americas and Europe, the equipment manufacturer said.

Sold under the Smart Spraying moniker, the technology is to be a factory-installed option on Fendt's Rogator sprayers. Smart Spraying -- targeting only weeds in fallow fields or in fields with growing crops, in daylight and night -- will be the result of a two-year partnership between the Bosch BASF Smart Farming joint venture and AGCO.

Fendt is an AGCO Corp. brand. Bosch BASF Smart Farming is a joint venture of Bosch and BASF created in 2021 with the stated purpose of combining BASF's agronomic know-how and large image warehouse with Bosch's hardware expertise, especially its camera-enabled "spray or no-spray" technology. Smart Spraying is Bosch BASF's first commercial venture.

"We expect to offer limited availability of the solution in 2024," said Joe Dimler, product manager for Sustainable Crop Care Solutions at Fendt-AGCO. "It is a two-tank solution, and growers will have the flexibility to perform both green-on-brown and green-on-green (applications)."

Green-on-brown describes camera-based automated spraying of weeds growing generally in fallow fields. Green-on-green is a spraying pass in fields with growing crops, for example soybeans. Fendt has a number of these sprayers already in the field for on-farm testing and is finding the best results with sprayers running at a maximum speed of 12 miles per hour.

These early tests are showing that on relatively clean fallow fields, herbicide savings amount to about 80%. If the applicator is working over the top of growing crops, savings on contact herbicides are in the range of 50%-70%, Dimler said.

Smart Spraying is not the first sense-and-act application system. But it has some important characteristics that go beyond some of the available technologies. As the system matures, its data will integrate with Xavio Field Manager, a digital crop-optimizing platform.

"The solution (will) interact with the technology to collect characteristics like plant population and plant health and detect early (signs of) fungus in the field," Dimler said. "The grower will leverage the data he collects to make decisions throughout the year." Rogator's Smart Spraying boom mounts 36 cameras.

Smart Spraying offers farmers "insights into the data gathered during the application," according to a release from BASF. "Supported crops currently include corn, soy, cotton, canola, sunflower, sugar beet, with capabilities for more crops such as small grains being added over time."

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