Smart Farming provides big opportunities to transform agriculture, says Beecham

Smart Farming is not just for large farms and research centres, but is starting to impact small and medium-sized farms, says Beecham Research, a leading IoT analyst and research firm that looks closely at the agriculture sector.

“The farming industry is very receptive to technical innovation and is already embracing IoT, using information from sensors, machinery and weather stations, for example,” said Saverio Romeo, principal analyst at Beecham Research. “It is the ability to capture, harness and analyse vast amounts of data to take informed decisions that is set to revolutionise the agricultural sector and is starting to deliver tangible benefits and measureable ROI (return on investment) for farms of all types and sizes.”

While the primary driver behind smart technology is usually to reduce costs, time and wastage, smart farming has also been proven to benefit other areas such as safety and welfare, health, nutrition and sustainability.

Saverio Romeo, principal analyst at Beecham Research
Saverio Romeo, principal analyst at Beecham Research

The number of applications for smart farming is also growing rapidly, including: yield measurement and quota systems, plant and livestock disease monitoring, remote machine control and diagnostics, greenhouse management, virtual fencing and livestock biology monitoring. And for areas such as high value crop and precision livestock farming, smart fishing and aquaculture, smart technology is helping to increase production efficiencies and generate higher profit margins.

From an IoT technology perspective, Beecham Research points to three key steps for smart farming: data sensing, data communications, storage and processing. “Farms need to have integrated solutions that bring together sensor networks, machine-to-machine communications, data analytics, management systems and applications development,” said Romeo. “Farm Management Information Systems (FMIS) with predictive capabilities are also critical to help farmers make the right decisions at the right time.”

Smart Farming White Paper published

Beecham Research points to companies such as Libelium, that are helping to deliver the vision of smart farming by developing an integrated approach to data sensing, communications, storage and processing.

Libelium’s technology is also connectivity-agnostic, open and interoperable to support a growing ecosystem of partnerships that brings together players in the smart farming value chain, from sensor and data analytics companies to cloud-computing and specialist agri-tech solution providers.

A Beecham Research White Paper published this week in association with Libelium explores a number of smart farming case studies including predicting vineyard conditions in Slovenia and Switzerland; preventing pests in olives, increasing tobacco crop quality and reducing time-to-market for strawberries in Italy; improving cocoa production in Indonesia; and preventing environmental impact in waste water irrigation in Australia.

“The overall smart agriculture market is growing across all types of farming and data sensing and data management services are fundamental to its success,” said Romeo. “Companies such as Libelium will play a major role in making the benefits of the IoT accessible to small and medium farms.”Libelium_logo

“Small farmers and large landowners need help to approach and understand the potential of the IoT market by installing smart technologies to increase sustainability and competitiveness in their productions.” said Alicia Asín, Libelium CEO.

For a copy of the White Paper go to: http://www.beechamresearch.com/download.aspx?id=1051

The White Paper is part of a series of Beecham Research activities to promote the relevance of Smart Farming for the agri-tech community and in particular, the IoT community. Beecham Research recently contributed to the prestigious workshop, ‘Sensing Technologies for Land Management’, at Bangor University, discussing the potential of Smart Farming with top UK agri-tech experts. Robin Duke-Woolley, CEO at Beecham Research, will also be chairing the ESA (European Space Agency) event on M2M and IoT over satellite on Friday 8 July, where Libelium will talk about smart agriculture and farming.

Comment on this article below or via Twitter: @IoTNow_ OR @jcIoTnow

RECENT ARTICLES

Carson City upgrades to Iteris’ advanced Vantage Apex sensors

Posted on: April 26, 2024

Iteris has announced that Carson City, Nevada has chosen to upgrade the city’s intersection detection sensors to Iteris’ Vantage Apex hybrid sensors.

Read more

Make the Intelligent Choice: Embed X103 in Smart City Outdoor Devices

Posted on: April 25, 2024

The adage “less is more” is the current state of digital transformation, starting with existing technology that has already proven successful – and then further adapting and streamlining. The “smart

Read more
FEATURED IoT STORIES

What is IoT? A Beginner’s Guide

Posted on: April 5, 2023

What is IoT? IoT, or the Internet of Things, refers to the connection of everyday objects, or “things,” to the internet, allowing them to collect, transmit, and share data. This

Read more

The IoT Adoption Boom – Everything You Need to Know

Posted on: September 28, 2022

In an age when we seem to go through technology boom after technology boom, it’s hard to imagine one sticking out. However, IoT adoption, or the Internet of Things adoption,

Read more

9 IoT applications that will change everything

Posted on: September 1, 2021

Whether you are a future-minded CEO, tech-driven CEO or IT leader, you’ve come across the term IoT before. It’s often used alongside superlatives regarding how it will revolutionize the way

Read more

Which IoT Platform 2021? IoT Now Enterprise Buyers’ Guide

Posted on: August 30, 2021

There are several different parts in a complete IoT solution, all of which must work together to get the result needed, write IoT Now Enterprise Buyers’ Guide – Which IoT

Read more

CAT-M1 vs NB-IoT – examining the real differences

Posted on: June 21, 2021

As industry players look to provide the next generation of IoT connectivity, two different standards have emerged under release 13 of 3GPP – CAT-M1 and NB-IoT.

Read more

IoT and home automation: What does the future hold?

Posted on: June 10, 2020

Once a dream, home automation using iot is slowly but steadily becoming a part of daily lives around the world. In fact, it is believed that the global market for

Read more

5 challenges still facing the Internet of Things

Posted on: June 3, 2020

The Internet of Things (IoT) has quickly become a huge part of how people live, communicate and do business. All around the world, web-enabled devices are turning our world into

Read more