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March 8, 2023
 
 
 
 
New Report Reveals On-Farm Wins And Potential With Data-Driven Decision Support Tech
 

USDA’s recent report on precision agriculture and adoption of digital technologies shows some bright spots. It also illustrates challenges and areas of opportunity for farmers and the value chain that supports them.


The good news: Adoption of automation technologies has grown significantly in the past 20 years. Nationwide, use of GPS is well over 50% and as high as 73% for sorghum and cotton acres, according to USDA’s “Precision Agriculture in the Digital Era: Recent Adoption on U.S. Farms." Yield maps and yield monitors hover around 50% adoption, up from single digits in the late 1990s, though use of the data depends heavily on crop and year.


The overwhelming majority (95%) of cotton and sorghum producers and two-thirds of soybean producers use yield monitor data to help determine chemical input use. Corn and wheat producers largely use yield monitors to measure moisture content. Corn and soybean producers also use the data to improve or add drainage.


The challenging news: Data-based decision support stops there. Soil-mapping implementation has plateaued below 25% or has fallen slightly in the past 10 years. Variable-rate application of fertilizers remains at or below 25% for all crops except corn (37%).


Additionally, use of imaging technology remains in the single digits. Adoption of all technologies is particularly troubling for smaller farmers: “Except for cotton, less than 25% of smaller farms (those with acreage in the first quintile) rely on yield maps, soil maps, VRT, and/or guidance systems,” the report says. 


Farmers who see the largest benefits of precision agriculture tend to use an integrated approach to technology systems. This includes data capture and management along with real-time decision making. Larger operations tend to benefit from a fully connected agriculture platform because of economies of scale. Meanwhile, many smaller farm operations manage their businesses with a patchwork of technologies.


With our national coalitions that include America’s Conservation Ag Movement and Trust In Beef, we’re working with partners to help producers go beyond data capture and automation. Together, we will support farmers and ranchers as they integrate technologies that will meaningfully support their decisions to improve productivity, manage risk, minimize environmental impact and access emerging markets.


Our experience studying the human dimension of climate-smart change shows that tools and information alone are insufficient to help producers with their sustainability investments. Those resources must be paired with something decidedly more low-tech: Trust-based, human-to-human working relationships. Valued advisers and partners can help farmers and ranchers test new approaches, learn and implement those systems on their operations, and stick with them so they can experience the full benefits. 


USDA's research illustrates the tremendous potential that remains across working lands to accelerate these kinds of collaborative relationships. It reminds us that transformation is a natural part of farming and that each of us has a role to play in supporting producers at every stage of their journey.


Yours in regenerative ag,
Amy Skoczlas Cole
President, Trust In Food™

 
 
 
 
Verdesian Joins America’s Conservation Ag Movement
 
By David Frabotta, director of climate-smart content, Trust In Food: Farm Journal’s Trust In Food™ is proud to announce Verdesian Life Sciences has joined America’s Conservation Ag Movement™, one of the largest public-private partnerships solely dedicated to the acceleration of conservation agriculture. 
 
 
 
 
Nutrien Recognized In GreenBiz Indigenous Farming Feature
 
Shared by Nate Birt, senior adviser, Trust In Food: New initiatives designed to expand the use of Indigenous knowledge in U.S. agriculture are gaining ground, according to a recent GreenBiz article. Nutrien, an ACAM partner, is among the companies invested in building capacity for this work.
 
 
 
 

News We’re Following

 

2023 Farm Bill: Feeding the nation through working lands conservation (via The Hill)

Shared by David Frabotta, director of climate-smart content, Trust In Food: Congress should signal its support for America’s conservation-minded farmers and ranchers as they prepare the 2023 farm bill, writes CEO Adam Putnam of Ducks Unlimited, an ACAM partner. “The farm bill is one of the few remaining bipartisan endeavors left in Washington,” Putnam says. “It’s critically important to the livelihood of farmers and ranchers, rural economies, wildlife conservation and our nation’s food supply.”

 
 

The 10 Most Innovative Companies In Agriculture Of 2023 (via Fast Company)

Shared by Nate Birt, senior adviser, Trust In Food: Regenerative-focused businesses top Fast Company’s recently released list of the most cutting-edge agriculture companies. Among them are a company developing closed-loop chicken production to reduce food waste (Do Good Foods) and an authority on ag pest monitoring and data capture (Trapview).

 
 

Soil Health And Nutrient Density: Preliminary Comparison Of Regenerative And Conventional Farming (via PeerJ)

Shared by David Frabotta, director of climate-smart content, Trust In Food: Emerging data suggests regenerative farming practices that boost soil health can increase food's nutrient density, a new peer-reviewed study published by PeerJ says. "Soil health appears to influence phytochemical levels in crops, indicating that regenerative farming systems can enhance dietary levels of compounds known to reduce risk of various chronic diseases," the researchers conclude.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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