Dawn of the drone age: how agri-tech is boosting production and morale

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"The Watercress Company Integrates Drone Technology to Enhance Agricultural Productivity"

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Tom Amery, managing director of The Watercress Company, is pioneering the use of advanced agricultural technology by integrating drones into their farming practices. Inspired by an Instagram video, Amery has invested £80,000 in three DJI Agras T50 drones, which can carry up to 50kg of fertilizers or seeds for efficient distribution. This technology is expected to significantly enhance productivity, enabling the company to apply potash or phosphate two to three times faster than traditional methods. The initiative aims not only to optimize the use of fertilizers—reducing waste—but also to improve staff morale by minimizing labor-intensive tasks. Amery emphasizes that by investing in technology, they can offer better pay to their operators, which in turn aids in staff retention, a crucial factor in the agricultural sector where labor shortages are prevalent. Furthermore, while the drones are currently grounded pending regulatory approval from the Civil Aviation Authority, Amery is optimistic about their operational future across the company’s 20 hectares of farmland in Hampshire and Dorset.

In addition to drone technology, The Watercress Company is experimenting with multispectral cameras to analyze crop health through AI-generated heatmaps. This approach aligns with the National Farmers’ Union (NFU)'s push for innovation in farming to enhance productivity and sustainability. However, the NFU warns that many farmers face financial constraints that deter them from investing in new technology. Despite a government commitment of £200 million for agricultural innovation by 2030, the recent budget cuts to farming in England have raised concerns about the accessibility of these funds for smaller operations. Amery expresses skepticism about whether his company will benefit from such initiatives, noting that much of the funding often does not translate to practical improvements at the farm level. Nevertheless, he remains committed to seeking innovative solutions to overcome challenges in crop production, underscoring the importance of continual progress in agricultural practices.

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“The idea came from an Instagram video,” says Tom Amery, looking admiringly at one of three huge drones he has bought to help grow watercress on aHampshirefarm.

The drone boasts four sets of rotary blades and is able to carry up to 50kg of fertiliser, seed or feed for spreading or spraying, and is the product of several years of meticulous research by Amery, often using the unlikely corners of social media dedicated to agricultural technology.

Amery and The Watercress Company, where he is managing director, are among the food producers attempting toembrace cutting-edge techin one of the world’s oldest professions to help speed up processes and boost production in the face ofextreme weather. It’s a challenge the government appears alive to, with agri-tech includedin its industrial strategyearlier this month.

The company has invested £80,000 in the Agras T50 drones, made by the Chinese company DJI and designed for agricultural use.

Distributing potash or phosphate by drone rather than by hand will be “two to three times faster than walking”, Amery says. This will mean it can be applied in a more targeted way, reducing the amount of fertiliser needed for the crop, which ends up in the 25m bags of salad it sells each year through the UK’s largest supermarkets.

Despite the long-running discussion over whether machines will replace humans in agricultural jobs, Amery said the investment would boost morale. “It’s about staff retention, taking out an unfavourable part of the job,” he adds. “We will pay the operators more. With more pay, staff are more likely to stay.”

While such drones are already in use on farms in North and South America, asdocumented in detailon social media, they remain a novelty in the UK. The Watercress Company’s drones are currently grounded, as the business awaits the permits required by the aviation watchdog, the Civil Aviation Authority.

However, Amery hopes they will soon be fitted with hoppers and whizzing above the watercress beds across the grower’s 20 hectares of land, spread across 12 Hampshire and Dorset farms. The route for each field can be programmed in advance, while 20-year-old employee George Mathews has been trained up and has obtained a licence to pilot the drones.

Even though The Watercress Company follows growing methods largely unchangedsince Victorian times– when the leaves first gained popularity in the UK as a source of nutrition, especially for the urban poor – it is no stranger to technology.

Today’s crop is still grown in watercress beds fed by natural streams that have been in use since the 1880s, although the leaves are now cut every other day between May and October using a bespoke harvester.

The grower is also trialling multispectral cameras, which are able to capture images in various spectral bands – or ranges of wavelengths – far beyond what the human eye can see. The images can produce a “heatmap” of the fields, which are analysed by AI to assess the location of any crop problems.

The Watercress Company is pursuing the kind of innovation the National Farmers’ Union (NFU) wants to see adopted by more UK farms, as food producers look to work in a more efficient and more sustainable way.

However, at a time whenmany farmers are feeling the financial squeeze, the NFU believes that few will have the money, or confidence, to invest in new and potentially untested technology.

This is also essential to improve productivity in the farming sector, the NFU says, warning that without it, the UK risks slipping further behind its international competitors.

“Driving forward productivity to build domestic food production should be on every government’s list,” says Tom Bradshaw, the president of the NFU. “Among our European neighbours there is evidence that we are falling behind and are not as productive in some areas.”

In the industrial strategy, agri-tech, along with precision breeding, has been included as areas of focus within the growth sector plan and the NFU believes this will help farming businesses to “become more productive, sustainable and resilient”.

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The government’s farming innovation programme has been allocated £200m up to 2030, which the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) said would offer “targeted funding to drive innovation in agriculture”.

“Driving innovation and growth in agri-tech is a win-win for the nation,” says the farming minister, Daniel Zeichner. “Not only can we create jobs, strengthen economic resilience and ensure food security is maintained, we can boost the profits of farmers and growers through innovation.”

However, the announcement came just days after the farming budget in England wascut by £100m a year in the government’s spending review, which reduced Defra’s day-to-day spending budget by 2.7%, although this was cautiously welcomed by the NFU and farming groups, who had feared greater cuts.

Back in Hampshire, The Watercress Company is not convinced that it will benefit from the money allocated for the farming innovation programme.

“Lots of this funding is often driven by high-level innovation, and often lots of that doesn’t make it to the farm gate or doesn’t result in increased levels of production and productivity,” says Amery.

“You can end up putting a huge amount of investment into technology not proven to provide results.”

Up to now, the grower has carried the cost of almost all of its innovation itself. It was able to secure £20,000 of funding, representing around a quarter of its drone investment, from the government’s shared prosperity fund, through its local council.

However, Amery says the business is rarely able to access funding such as R&D tax credits, which are only available to companies which are required to pay corporation tax. Partnerships, like The Watercress Company and many others in the farming sector, as well as sole traders, do not pay corporation and are therefore ineligible.

This has not put the grower off seeking out the latest gadgets to improve his crop. “Innovation is usually driven by a desire to overcome a problem,” says Amery. “I think we get one major innovation every five to 10 years, one that is a game-changer.”

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Source: The Guardian