Robots for Specialty Crops - Part 2

Robots for Specialty Crops - Part 2

Tim Hammerich
Tim Hammerich
News Reporter
I’m Tim Hammerich with your Southeast Regional Ag Report.

Yesterday, I introduced you to Burro, the autonomous robot that transports fruit from where it is picked to where it is packed. But Burro CEO Charlie Andersen sees this innovation going far beyond just helping with harvest. He sees it as a platform to bring automation onto specialty crop farms.

Andersen.. “The challenge with these industries is that each respective crop is relatively small from a market size perspective. And so you need an enormous amount of talent to do certain things within each crop. And so for that reason, I think that what you're going to have is companies that are focused on doing things like yields in blueberries, digital entomology in certain spaces. And they're gonna be taking data off of platforms like ours, and then providing that data back to growers in a creative way. And we see our platform being something that enables them to do that.”

Andersen also sees the platform as an economical entry point which may lead to not only data, but potentially crop scouting and spot spraying.

Andersen… “And so most of the customers that we are working with right now see this logical progression. They recognize that if we get autonomy into our operation, we might get like a 20 to 40% efficiency today, which is quite significant with labor going to 15 or 18 bucks an hour with when it's fully burdened. But beyond that, you have a vision based platform online that can over time be scaled up to do more things.”

Learn more about Burro on tomorrow’s episode of “The Business of Blueberries” Podcast which can be downloaded any podcast player.

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