Robohub.org
 

David Gardner, CEO of RASE, at Oxford Farming Conference


by
06 January 2013



share this:

photo of David Gardner

Together with Professor Maurice Maloney, Director of Rothamsted Research, David Gardner, CEO of The Royal Agricultural Society of England, speaking with Charlotte Smith of the BBC R4’s Farming Today, for the January 5th edition of Farming Today This Week, covering the 2013 Oxford Farming Conference (held Jan. 2nd-4th on the campus of Oxford University), had this to say on the morning of the last day of the conference:

I think engineering has a huge amount to offer. We’ve seen a huge growth in the last decade or so in terms of precision farming on arable farms, so the whole concept of measuring in detail what we are doing on an individual field basis, and indeed within parts of fields, that gives us the opportunity firstly to reduce inputs, so for example we can identify which parts of the field need particular fertilizer, and just applying them to that part of the field. We can identify which parts of the field need particular weed killers and apply them just to that part of the field, rather than applying them to the field as a whole. And today I’m going to talk, and it will be quite controversial at the conference, I think, but I’m going to talk about relatively small, light-weight gantries that are autonomous, that don’t have a driver on them.

And a bit further on…

A farm in 1980 looked nothing like a farm in 1945. Now I think the really exciting thing is that a farm in the middle part of this century will look nothing like a farm does today. I think we will see much less pesticide use. I don’t think it will be eliminated completely, but I think there will be a lot less pesticide use, a lot less fertilizer use, and I think we’ll see mechanization that is just completely different, with the sort of autonomous machines that I’ve talked about, and robots doing things like picking apples and picking strawberries in the landscape – just completely different from what we do today – and I wish I was starting my career again, because I think it’s going to be immensely exciting.

Professor Maloney agrees…

The idea of different technologies interdigitating and solving a problem is key to this. Robotization is something that will happen in agriculture. It’s already happening in Santa Clara County in the U.S., weeding lettuce fields it’s entirely done by robotization now, but robots are not inconsistent with a very benign, bucolic environment, and in fact it would give opportunities to farmers to spend more time thinking about the rest of the environmental considerations that they would like to contribute to but simply don’t have the time because they’re doing mundane activities.

The recording is available from the iTunes store. Begin at 12 min 30 sec, or, for better context, at 10 min 30 sec.



tags:


John Payne

            AUAI is supported by:



Subscribe to Robohub newsletter on substack



Related posts :

Robot Talk Episode 158 – Autonomous robot deliveries, with Ahti Heinla

  29 May 2026
In the latest episode of the Robot Talk podcast, Claire chatted to Ahti Heinla from Starship Technologies about their AI-powered delivery robots that operate independently on streets and pavements.

Light-activated gel could impact wearables, soft robotics, and more

  28 May 2026
In the field of ionotronics, data are transferred through ions, potentially providing a bridge between electronics and biological tissue.

Handle with care: Soft robot gripper picks ripe fruit without bruising

  27 May 2026
Stretchable fiber-optic sensors used to create a soft robot gripper.

Robot Talk Episode 157 – Generating new robot designs, with Josie Hughes

  22 May 2026
In the latest episode of the Robot Talk podcast, Claire chatted to Josie Hughes from École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne about using AI to develop new designs for robotic manipulators.

Robotics Café brings together autonomous robot practitioners

  20 May 2026
Recently launched series for researchers, students and industry practitioners aims to provide a platform for students to present their work.

Table tennis robot defeats some of world’s best players – why this has major implications for robotics

  18 May 2026
Ace, from Sony AI, is the first robot to beat elite human players in competitive physical sport.

Robot Talk Episode 156 – Rugged robots for dangerous missions, with Gavin Kenneally

  15 May 2026
In the latest episode of the Robot Talk podcast, Claire chatted to Gavin Kenneally from Ghost Robotics about robot dogs for defence, security, and public safety.

Developing active and flexible microrobots

  13 May 2026
This class of robots opens up possibilities for biomedical applications.



AUAI is supported by:







Subscribe to Robohub newsletter on substack




 















©2026.02 - Association for the Understanding of Artificial Intelligence