One has to admit that this increased production does make the case for
social planning of production, although obviously the wealth benefits
will be harvested by privately owned corporations like Monsanto.
************

The same machinery collects data on crops and soil. But many farmers
have haphazardly managed the information, scattered in piles of
paperwork in their offices or stored on thumb drives clattering in
pickup-truck ashtrays. The data often were turned over by hand for
piecemeal analysis.

Sellers of prescriptive-planting technology want to accelerate,
streamline and combine all those data with their highly detailed
records on historic weather patterns, topography and crop performance.

Algorithms and human experts crunch all the data and can zap advice
directly to farmers and their machines. Supporters say the push could
be as important as the development of mechanized tractors in the first
half of the 20th century and the rise of genetically modified seeds in
the 1990s.

The world's biggest seed company, Monsanto, estimates that data-driven
planting advice to farmers could increase world-wide crop production
by about $20 billion a year, or about one-third the value of last
year's U.S. corn crop.

The technology could help improve the average corn harvest to more
than 200 bushels an acre from the current 160 bushels, companies say.
Such a gain would generate an extra $182 an acre in revenue for
farmers, based on recent prices. Iowa corn farmers got about $759 an
acre last year.

...
Mike B)
-- 
Wobbly times
http://wobblytimes.blogspot.com.au/
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to