https://www.autoblog.com/2020/02/11/agriculture-naio-weed-picking-robot-autonomous-farming/
In the near future, robot farm vehicles will pick weeds, too
Feb 11th 2020  Sven Gustafson

[image  
https://s.aolcdn.com/os/ab/_cms/2020/02/11120523/DINO-Tien-TRAN-Hans-Lucas-HD-3.jpg


videos
https://youtu.be/fW7UVHz9QYA
Naïo Technologies  DINO, autonomous mechanical weeding robot


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autom green house crop picking e-bot
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French company Naio Technologies is already testing its autonomous vehicles
in California

For all the talk about self-driving cars taking over our roads and literally
relegating human drivers to the back seat, it’s in the ancient practice of
agriculture where autonomous, artificial intelligence vehicles seem destined
to go into service first. The latest evidence? Weed-killing robots.

A French company called Naïo Technologies has developed three different
robot electric vehicles capable of removing weeds from row crops, tackling
the two-headed farming quagmires of high costs for removing weeds and
persistent shortages of laborers willing to actually do it. And it’s coming
to the U.S. In addition to having around 150 robots in use in Canada, Europe
and Japan, Naïo has begun testing its autonomous weeders at 15 different
commercial farms in California, Modern Farmer reports. The company last
month said it had raised €14 million (about $15.29 million), which it’s
using in part to push into the U.S. market.

“Our weeding robots respect both the environment and man,” spokeswoman
Anouck Lefebvre tells Modern Farmer. “They provide a solution to tackle
farmworker shortages, reduce the strenuous physical workload of hand
weeding, and limit the use of chemical weed killers.”

It’s hardly the only company working on autonomous weed-killing technology.
Ag giant John Deere in 2017 splashed out $305 million to acquire a Silicon
Valley startup that developed a precision herbicide-spraying robot called
Lettuce Bot, while a San Francisco company called FarmWise Labs, which has
developed an orange robot weed-picker that resembles a tank, told Digital
Trends it has raised $14.5 million in venture funding.

The technology bodes well for a less chemical-intensive future of farming,
with the prospect of disrupting Big Ag. A study by UC Davis found that
hand-weeding costs about $300 per acre, while the pesticide, herbicide and
genetically modified seed market that depends on farmers dousing fields
indiscriminately with chemicals is estimated to be worth $100 billion.

Naïo has developed three different weed-picking robots: the lightweight Oz,
designed for small farms and greenhouses; Ted, a hooped vehicle for
vineyards that is already in use in southern France; and Dino, the flagship
vehicle designed to tackle weeds on large-scale vegetable farms. All combine
precision GPS navigation, mechanical weeding arms that use machine learning
to identify weeds, and the ability to map out crops and send data to
farmers. They also feature nifty tank-turning capability to make U-turns in
tight spaces.

The smallest model, the Oz, relies on four, 110-watt electric motors and
either 24-volt lead or higher-range lithium batteries, while Dino relies on
lithium batteries and four electric motors, with a top speed of about 2.5
mph, a run time of up to eight hours and the touted ability to cover up to
12 acres per day.

Naïo tells Modern Farmer it plans to open a center in California later this
year to store, maintain and market its robots, with a commercial launch
expected stateside later this year as well. All this technology predictably
isn’t cheap — the Dino runs about $220,000 — but Naïo envisions renting them
to farmers or helping them on financing options. Trials in the U.S. have
reportedly generated promising results.

It’s difficult to say which company will be first to market with
self-driving weed-pickers, but it seems safe to say that their day is coming
soon.
[© autoblog.com]


http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/EVLN-kubota-com-auton-e-Tractor-concept-comes-to-the-farm-tp4696323.html
EVLN: kubota.com auton e-Tractor concept comes to the farm
Feb 03 2020


+
https://thebusinessjournal.com/sun-powered-vehicles-to-take-center-stage-at-world-ag-expo/
Electric vehicles to take center stage at World Ag Expo
February 6, 2020 ... World Ag Expo in Tulare-CA ... 3 e-tractors & 2
electric forklifts will be on display at the world’s largest agricultural
trade show ... Fremont-CA based Monarch Tractor, was named one of the top-10
new products being introduced at this year’s Ag Expo ...
https://thebusinessjournal.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/Tractor-photo-3-Solectrac-eUtility.jpg




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