HOMESTEAD, Fla. (AP) â Jeremy Ford hates wasting water.
As a mist of rain sprinkled the fields around him in Homestead, Florida, Ford bemoaned how expensive it had been running a fossil fuel-powered irrigation system on his five-acre farm â and how .
Earlier this month, Ford installed an automated underground system that uses a solar-powered pump to periodically saturate the roots of his crops, saving âthousands of gallons of water.â Although they may be more costly up front, he sees such climate-friendly investments as a necessary expense â and more affordable than expanding his workforce of two.
Itâs âmuch more efficient,â said Ford. âWeâve tried to figure out âHow do we do it?â with the least amount of adding labor.â
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EDITORâS NOTE: This story is a collaboration between The Associated Press and Grist.
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A growing number of companies are bringing automation to agriculture. It could ease the sectorâs deepening labor shortage, help farmers manage costs, and protect workers from extreme heat. Automation could also improve yields by bringing greater accuracy to planting, harvesting, and farm management, potentially mitigating some of the challenges of growing food in an ever-warmer world.
But many small farmers and producers across the country arenât convinced. Barriers to adoption go beyond steep price tags to questions about whether the tools can do the jobs nearly as well as the workers theyâd replace. Some of those same workers wonder what this trend might mean for them, and whether machines will lead to exploitation.
How autonomous is farm automation? Not completely â yet
On some farms, driverless tractors churn through acres of corn, soybeans, lettuce and more. Such equipment is expensive, and requires mastering new tools, but row crops are fairly easy to automate. Harvesting small, non-uniform and easily damaged fruits like blackberries, or big citruses that take a bit of strength and dexterity to pull off a tree, would be much harder.
That doesnât deter scientists like Xin Zhang, a biological and agricultural engineer at Mississippi State University. Working with a team at Georgia Institute of Technology, she wants to apply some of the automation techniques surgeons use, and the object recognition power of advanced cameras and computers, to create robotic berry-picking arms that can pluck the fruits without creating a sticky, purple mess.
The scientists have collaborated with farmers for field trials, but Zhang isnât sure when the machine might be ready for consumers. Although robotic harvesting is not widespread, a smattering of products have hit the market, and can be seen working from to .
âI feel like this is the future,â Zhang said.
But where she sees promise, others see problems.
Frank James, executive director of grassroots agriculture group Dakota Rural Action, grew up on a cattle and crop farm in northeastern South Dakota. His family once employed a handful of farmhands, but has had to cut back due, in part, to the lack of available labor. Much of the work is now done by his brother and sister-in-law, while his 80-year-old father occasionally pitches in.
They swear by tractor autosteer, an automated system that communicates with a satellite to help keep the machine on track. But it canât identify the moisture levels in the fields which can hamstring tools or cause the tractor to get stuck, and requires human oversight to work as it should. The technology also complicates maintenance. For these reasons, he doubts automation will become the âabsoluteâ future of farm work.
âYou build a relationship with the land, with the animals, with the place that youâre producing it. And weâre moving away from that,â said James.
Some farmers say automation answers labor woes
Tim Bucher grew up on a farm in Northern California and has worked in agriculture since he was 16. Dealing with weather issues like drought has always been a fact of life for him, but climate change has brought new challenges as temperatures regularly hit triple digits and blankets of smoke ruin entire vineyards.
The toll of climate change compounded by labor challenges inspired him to combine his farming experience with his Silicon Valley engineering and startup background to found AgTonomy in 2021. It works with equipment manufacturers like Doosan Bobcat to make automated tractors and other tools.
Since pilot programs started in 2022, Bucher says the company has been âinundatedâ with customers, mainly vineyard and orchard growers in California and Washington.
Those who follow the sector say farmers, often skeptical of new technology, will consider automation if it will make their business more profitable and their lives easier. Will Brigham, a dairy and maple farmer in Vermont, sees such tools as solutions to the nationâs agricultural workforce shortage.
âA lot of farmers are struggling with labor,â he said, citing the âhigh competitionâ with jobs where âyou donât have to deal with weather.â
Since 2021, Brighamâs family farm has been using Farmblox, an AI-powered farm monitoring and management system that helps them get ahead of issues like leaks in tubing used in maple production. Six months ago, he joined the company as a senior sales engineer to help other farmers embrace technology like it.
Workers worry about losing jobs, or their rights, to automation
Detasseling corn used to be a rite of passage for some young people in the Midwest. Teenagers would wade through seas of corn removing tassels â the bit that looks like a yellow feather duster at the top of each stalk â to prevent unwanted pollination.
Extreme heat, drought and intense rainfall have made this labor-intensive task even harder. And itâs now more often done by migrant farmworkers who sometimes put in 20-hour days to keep up. Thatâs why Jason Cope, co-founder of farm tech company PowerPollen, thinks itâs essential to mechanize arduous tasks like detasseling. His team created a tool a tractor can use to collect the pollen from male plants without having to remove the tassel. It can then be saved for future crops.
âWe can account for climate change by timing pollen perfectly as itâs delivered,â he said. âAnd it takes a lot of that labor thatâs hard to come by out of the equation.â
Erik Nicholson, who previously worked as a farm labor organizer and now runs Semillero de Ideas, a nonprofit focused on farmworkers and technology, said he has heard from farm workers concerned about losing work to automation. Some have also expressed worry about the safety of working alongside autonomous machines but are hesitant to raise issues because they fear losing their jobs. Heâd like to see the companies building these machines, and the farm owners using them, put people first.
Luis Jimenez, a New York dairy worker, agrees. He described one farm using technology to monitor cows for sicknesses. Those kinds of tools can sometimes identify infections sooner than a dairy worker or veterinarian.
They also help workers know how the cows are doing, Jimenez said, speaking in Spanish. But they can reduce the number of people needed on farms and put extra pressure on the workers who remain, he said. That pressure is heightened by increasingly automated technology like video cameras used to monitor workersâ productivity.
Automation can be âa tactic, like a strategy, for bosses, so people are afraid and wonât demand their rights,â said Jimenez, who advocates for immigrant farmworkers with the grassroots organization Alianza AgrĂcola. Robots, after all, âare machines that donât ask for anything,â he added. âWe donât want to be replaced by machines.â
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Associated Press reporters Amy Taxin in Santa Ana, California, and Dorany Pineda in Los Angeles contributed. Walling reported from Chicago.
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Follow Melina Walling on X at @MelinaWalling.
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Melina Walling, Associated Press And Ayurella Horn-muller, Grist, The Associated Press