Title: New waves of IT in agriculture
1New waves of IT in agriculture
- David Zilberman
- Zilber_at_are.berkeley.edu
- University of California Berkeley
2Overview
- New IT
- Lessons of adoption in ag
- Trend in ag and implication for IT
3New Waves of Information Technology
- CommunicationInternet, video
- Enhanced computing
- Remote sensing/ Geopositioning
- NetworksWeb
- Wireless
- MiniaturizationMicro and Nano
4Expanding Capabilities Meeting Latent Demand
5Identification and Tracingin regulation and
marketing
- Who did it ? Identification of source of
pollution, etc. Transition from non-source to
source-point pollution control policies. - Who made it ? Identity preservation and product
differentiation. Value capture in retailing and
biotechnology.
6Differentiation Discriminatory Treatment in
Production
- Transition from uniform treatment of
heterogeneous elements within the system to a
precision system, where heterogeneity and
variability are recognized and treated over space
and time. - Enhancement of productivity by
- Improving quality
- Increasing yield
- Reduced cost
7Aggregation Creating Markets
- Building a critical mass for differentiated
products. - Match-making
- Resale
- Cooperative buying and selling
- Enhanced price discovery
- E-marketing is in its infancy and worth 150
billion annually.
8Overcoming Barriers of Space and Time in
production management
- Video conferencing
- Remote monitoring and treatment of living system
applications in - Veterinary medicine
- Pet control
- Wildlife management
- Water resource systems
9Elements of Agricultural and Environmental IT
Packages
- Package Multicomponent
- Requires multidisciplinary cooperation in
- Information science
- Natural science
- Decision science
- Engineering
Monitoring
Diagnosis
Prescription
Application
10Determinants of Technology Specification
- Technological feasibility
- Cost
- Demand
- High quality premium --gt investment in
sophisticated quality control system - Low value of saved inputs / minimal gain in
output --gt reduces incentives for precision
11You can guess the use, impact, and value of a new
technology ahead of time but you cannot know
it.
12Research on adoption aims to understand
Who adopts and when How to market new
technologiesHow policies affect adoption
13- On the Adoption and Impact of Information
Technologies in Agriculture, Resources, and the
Environment
14Adoption-Dynamics ProcessS-Shaped Function of
Time
15Adoption within Diverse Populations
- Early adopters have most to gain from technology,
tend to be younger and more educated. - Adoption is triggered by crises, higher prices,
or regulation. - Credit constrains adoption.
16Lessons of Low-Volume Irrigation Drip,
Microsprinkler
- Diffused very slowly over 20 years, currently
covers less than 10 of farmland. - High adoption rates on high-value crops, fruits,
and vegetables, and in landscaping. - Gardeners are farmers too.
- Spurts of adoption following droughts.
- Adoption is higher in locations with high prices
of water, sandy soil, and steep landlocations
where the technology is most profitable. - Drainage problems trigger adoption.
17Lessons of CIMIS
- Benefits in the early 1990s were estimated to be
15 times the cost. - Agricultural water savings, 10 to 40
- Yield effect, up to 10.
- Led to adoption of advanced management.
- Unintended major uses were also in
- Urban water use
- Pest control
- Legal procedures
- Spawned a private network of weather stations
with software management strategies.
18Computers in Agriculture
- Slow adoption rates only 25 in 1990, today
close to 75. - Early adopter characteristics
- larger, with multicrop integrated operations
- younger, more educated,
- Adoption enhanced recently by
- Lower cost, user friendliness
- network externalities
- fun factors
- Most adopters used word processing, billing, and
business applications much less use of
managerial application.
19Technology leaders
- Small number of leaders push frontier
- DRIP,Computers,varieties,crops
- Innovation is tough
- Mostly in high value crops
- Automation
- Saves labor,chemical water
- Increase quality
- Reduce risks-physical financial
- Cheap inputs reduce incentives to innovation
- Regulations enhance adoption-
- Timing matters
20Agricultural Practices in the Information Era
- Software and remote sensing ease compliance to
pesticide-use registration requirements. - Electronic water markets.
- Web and e-purchasing of inputs.
- Cooperative electronic purchasing.
- Electronic consulting.
- E-marketing of flowers and other high-value
output. - And thats only the beginning.
21Precision farming potential in irrigation of
cotton
Realizing the potential requires perfect
information application
22Factors affecting gains from precision
- Ability to monitor the variables that count
- Correct reading of information- 5 misdiagnosis
may lead to losses - Timeliness
- Effective and diverse response options-
e.g.heterogeneous field conditions may benefit
from diverse genetic choices (Biotech and
Precision may go hand in hand) - Ability to replace or reduce polluting inputs
23Processes affecting agriculture
- Population growth
- Environmentalism
- Consumerism
- Globalization
- Privatization
- New technologies-
- Biotech
- IT
24Gains from quality
High quality
Price of peaches
1.00
Low quality
.30
Time
Midseason
Quality measured by sugar content flavor and size
can triple prices. Seasonality matters
25Willingness to pay for green and clean
- gt10 of consumers will pay gt25 for pesticides
free crops - Prime markets(Japan) reward minimal chemical and
biological manipulation of foods - Yard care industry grosses gt 40 Billion annually
nation wide - Golf courses gross gt 6 Billions in California
annually - Stigma effect of contamination reduce price of a
unit of housing by gt50K - During next decades
- Several Billions are planned to be spent animal
waste - Tens of Billions on water quality
26Complementarity of IT and new Biotechnologies
- New biology will increase varietal choice
- Need capacity for changing variety and treatment
within fields - Need documentation of treatment,state of plants
and immediate response to changes
27Think Locally act Globally
- Ag and environmental IT will provide export
opportunities- most ag and resource problems are
outside the US - With or without Kyoto CO2 emission reduction and
sequestration will be rewarded- monitoring will
be required - Transition from water extraction to improve water
efficiency- source of new global demand - Development increases demand for environmental
amenities- It will allow to provide them cheaply