The Prague Post - AI robots fill in for weed killers and farm hands

EUR -
AED 4.244287
AFN 76.314525
ALL 96.62239
AMD 442.576155
ANG 2.068673
AOA 1059.772562
ARS 1558.447776
AUD 1.774729
AWG 2.080251
AZN 1.959599
BAM 1.952606
BBD 2.3293
BDT 140.799718
BGN 1.953702
BHD 0.435742
BIF 3408.011361
BMD 1.155695
BND 1.501412
BOB 8.019883
BRL 6.316681
BSD 1.156513
BTN 102.480833
BWP 15.476754
BYN 3.934482
BYR 22651.618666
BZD 2.325906
CAD 1.622867
CDF 2756.332563
CHF 0.930236
CLF 0.028194
CLP 1106.057744
CNY 8.22248
CNH 8.251447
COP 4539.275892
CRC 581.943181
CUC 1.155695
CUP 30.625913
CVE 110.084953
CZK 24.322117
DJF 205.389814
DKK 7.466811
DOP 72.720435
DZD 150.57773
EGP 55.122594
ERN 17.335422
ETB 169.717154
FJD 2.629033
FKP 0.863771
GBP 0.867181
GEL 3.132379
GGP 0.863771
GHS 13.819398
GIP 0.863771
GMD 83.210175
GNF 10035.543181
GTQ 8.858512
GYD 241.954277
HKD 8.990566
HNL 30.373061
HRK 7.529813
HTG 151.321854
HUF 391.853361
IDR 19132.527909
ILS 3.801426
IMP 0.863771
INR 102.470318
IQD 1515.009053
IRR 48611.434635
ISK 141.596066
JEP 0.863771
JMD 185.854422
JOD 0.819385
JPY 176.262533
KES 149.350647
KGS 101.065902
KHR 4649.375706
KMF 491.170161
KPW 1040.118205
KRW 1649.014402
KWD 0.354729
KYD 0.963715
KZT 621.328424
LAK 25101.055144
LBP 103562.46884
LKR 349.919212
LRD 211.634781
LSL 20.025035
LTL 3.412466
LVL 0.699068
LYD 6.286745
MAD 10.593873
MDL 19.573072
MGA 5183.477431
MKD 61.5797
MMK 2426.66672
MNT 4154.676926
MOP 9.263769
MRU 46.189057
MUR 52.42335
MVR 17.693219
MWK 2005.402757
MXN 21.343661
MYR 4.885703
MZN 73.86923
NAD 20.024776
NGN 1688.203943
NIO 42.560207
NOK 11.669479
NPR 163.967408
NZD 2.022305
OMR 0.444355
PAB 1.156508
PEN 3.973185
PGK 4.858013
PHP 67.244166
PKR 327.4273
PLN 4.26081
PYG 8149.706195
QAR 4.228384
RON 5.088544
RSD 117.155106
RUB 93.785883
RWF 1678.640014
SAR 4.334237
SBD 9.511995
SCR 16.470518
SDG 695.164828
SEK 11.000013
SGD 1.50145
SHP 0.86707
SLE 26.815603
SLL 24234.342192
SOS 660.91334
SRD 44.835208
STD 23920.549641
STN 24.459784
SVC 10.119362
SYP 15026.266951
SZL 20.013354
THB 37.687435
TJS 10.622135
TMT 4.044932
TND 3.400239
TOP 2.706751
TRY 48.325998
TTD 7.850093
TWD 35.48688
TZS 2838.28134
UAH 48.144043
UGX 3966.512662
USD 1.155695
UYU 46.344203
UZS 14040.914213
VES 223.116146
VND 30446.780294
VUV 140.779687
WST 3.214686
XAF 654.880259
XAG 0.022018
XAU 0.00028
XCD 3.123323
XCG 2.084273
XDR 0.814461
XOF 654.888745
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.153511
ZAR 20.029757
ZMK 10402.637957
ZMW 26.28113
ZWL 372.133264
  • RBGPF

    0.4500

    76

    +0.59%

  • CMSD

    0.1600

    24.3

    +0.66%

  • CMSC

    0.2600

    23.9

    +1.09%

  • GSK

    0.1500

    43.69

    +0.34%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1000

    15.1

    -0.66%

  • RELX

    0.3100

    45.13

    +0.69%

  • RIO

    2.7200

    68.16

    +3.99%

  • VOD

    -0.1300

    11.17

    -1.16%

  • SCS

    0.2000

    16.49

    +1.21%

  • NGG

    -1.2200

    73.3

    -1.66%

  • AZN

    -0.0200

    84.51

    -0.02%

  • BCE

    0.3000

    24.2

    +1.24%

  • BCC

    -0.2400

    72.08

    -0.33%

  • JRI

    0.2800

    14.05

    +1.99%

  • BP

    0.2100

    33.7

    +0.62%

  • BTI

    -0.7300

    50.81

    -1.44%

AI robots fill in for weed killers and farm hands
AI robots fill in for weed killers and farm hands / Photo: Josh Edelson - AFP

AI robots fill in for weed killers and farm hands

Oblivious to the punishing midday heat, a wheeled robot powered by the sun and infused with artificial intelligence carefully combs a cotton field in California, plucking out weeds.

Text size:

As farms across the United States face a shortage of laborers and weeds grow resistant to herbicides, startup Aigen says its robotic solution -- named Element -- can save farmers money, help the environment and keep harmful chemicals out of food.

"I really believe this is the biggest thing we can do to improve human health," co-founder and chief technology officer Richard Wurden told AFP, as robots made their way through crops at Bowles Farm in the town of Los Banos.

"Everybody's eating food sprayed with chemicals."

Wurden, a mechanical engineer who spent five years at Tesla, went to work on the robot after relatives who farm in Minnesota told him weeding was a costly bane.

Weeds are becoming immune to herbicides, but a shortage of laborers often leaves chemicals as the only viable option, according to Wurden.

"No farmer that we've ever talked to said 'I'm in love with chemicals'," added Aigen co-founder and chief executive Kenny Lee, whose background is in software.

"They use it because it's a tool -- we're trying to create an alternative."

Element the robot resembles a large table on wheels, solar panels on top. Metal arms equipped with small blades reach down to hoe between crop plants.

"It actually mimics how humans work," Lee said as the temperature hit 90 degrees Fahrenheit (32 degrees Celsius) under a cloudless sky.

"When the sun goes down, it just powers down and goes to sleep; then in the morning it comes back up and starts going again."

The robot's AI system takes in data from on-board cameras, allowing it to follow crop rows and identify weeds.

"If you think this is a job that we want humans doing, just spend two hours in the field weeding," Wurden said.

Aigen's vision is for workers who once toiled in the heat to be "upskilled" to monitor and troubleshoot robots.

Along with the on-board AI, robots communicate wirelessly with small control centers, notifying handlers of mishaps.

- Future giant? -

Aigen has robots running in tomato, cotton, and sugar beet fields, and touts the technology's ability to weed without damaging the crops.

Lee estimated that it takes about five robots to weed 160 acres (65 hectares) of farm.

The robots made by the 25-person startup -- based in the city of Redmond, outside Seattle -- are priced at $50,000.

The company is focused on winning over politically conservative farmers with a climate friendly option that relies on the sun instead of costly diesel fuel that powers heavy machinery.

"Climate, the word, has become politicized but when you get really down to brass tacks farmers care about their land," Lee said.

The technology caught the attention of Amazon Web Services (AWS), the e-commerce giant's cloud computing unit.

Aigen was chosen for AWS's "Compute for Climate" fellowship program that provides AI tools, data center power, and technical help for startups tackling environmental woes.

"Aigen is going to be one of the industry giants in the future," said AWS head of climate tech startups business development Lisbeth Kaufman.

"I think about Ford and the Model T, or Edison and the light bulb -- that's Kenny and Rich and Aigen."

G.Kucera--TPP