Tag: farmers

  • American farmers turning to AI to aid uncertain future

    American farmers turning to AI to aid uncertain future

    Tulare, Calif. – The U.S. agriculture industry is used to overcoming obstacles, but 2025 is shaping up to be a particularly daunting year. Labor shortages, water restrictions and the pending threat of tariffs are at the forefront of every farmer’s mind.

    “There’s always challenges in agriculture, but so many are happening at the same time right now,” said Karen Ross, secretary of the California Department of Food and Agriculture. “I think this happens about once every generation where there’s just a bunch of driving forces.”

    In 2023, the agriculture industry earned over half a trillion dollars in cash receipts – $267.4 billion for crops and $249.6 billion for animal products. But 86% of farms are “small farms” – meaning they gross under $350,000 per year. These are the farms feeling the pressure the most.

    EGG FARMER HIT HARD BY BIRD FLU, DESCRIBES ‘NIGHTMARE’ OF LOSING 3 FLOCKS

    “Production agriculture tends to be a marginal business when it comes to profit. You’re talking about a typical average kind of return on investment of low- to mid-single digits on farm is pretty typical,” said Roland Fumasi, head of RaboResearch Food & Agribusiness. “So any kind of downward pressure on markets… really puts a lot of pressure on farm finances that are already marginal at best anyway in most years.”

    In 2023, the agriculture industry earned over half a trillion dollars in cash receipts – $267.4 billion for crops and $249.6 billion for animal products. (Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post / Getty Images)

    Now, farmers are turning to technology for help, and at the World Ag Expo – the largest agricultural trade show in the world – manufacturers were keen to show off their latest products.

    Over 1,200 farm equipment manufacturers descended on California’s Central Valley last week in hopes of finding buyers among the more than 100,000 people in attendance. Tulare, California, has been home to AgExpo since 1968, and this year, a buzzword was making waves – AI.

    AI, or artificial intelligence, is being utilized in all sorts of ways. From driving autonomous vehicles to performing arduous tasks to analyzing environmental changes, AI is addressing everything from solving labor shortages to increasing crop yield – and farmers are on board.

    “We’re part of that first wave of AI that allows us to see things that are happening in the field,” said Paul Mikesell, founder and CEO of Carbon Robotics. “The farmers are incredibly inquisitive. They’re very innovative and inventive, and so they got what we were doing right away.”

    DEADLY BIRD FLU DETECTED IN NEVADA DAIRY CATTLE

    Mikesell’s company generated a lot of buzz around their product, the LaserWeeder, which uses AI to identify weeds and kill them at the stem using a laser. Not only does it cut out the physical toll that comes with weeding, it also eliminates the need for herbicides.

    “It can kill weeds that humans can’t even see. And we get in and kill them before they steal nutrients to compete with the crops,” added Mikesell.

    But as a decades-long drought dessicates the US West and the once-mighty river dwindles, questions are being asked about why a handful of farmers are allowed to take as much water as all of Nevada and Arizona combined. (Photo by SANDY HUFFAKER / AFP) (Photo by SANDY HUFFAKER/AFP via Getty Images)

    Farmers are turning to technology, including artificial intelligence, to confront challenges they expect to face in 2025. (Sandy Huffaker/AFP via / Getty Images)

    Another company is using AI to help one of the ecosystem’s busiest and most threatened employees – bees. According to Project Apis m., colony rates are seeing unprecedented losses, at more than 50%. Some beekeepers are reporting 100% colony loss, a scary prospect for almond farmers, who rely on bees to pollinate their trees.

    BeeHero uses AI sensors inside beehives to measure everything from acoustic signatures from the queen to the number of bee visits per minute to give farmers a real-time understanding of bee coverage and pollination. This provides beekeepers with the information they need to help the bees thrive.

    “The beekeepers who work with us, their colony collapse rates are 33% lower than the industry average,” said Brent Wellington, BeeHero’s director of product marketing.

    John Deere, which commands more than 40% of the market share in the U.S. agriculture machinery industry, is also on board with AI. The company developed the 5ML autonomous tractor that’s being used for blast spraying, essentially spraying nut trees with chemicals to protect the trees. Normally, it’s a task that must be done at night, in a hazmat suit, driving under 3 mph, six to eight times a year – a chore farmers would much rather pass to machines.

    Ticker Security Last Change Change %
    DE DEERE & CO. 480.22 +14.00 +3.00%

    The response has been really, really positive. The average age of farmers in the U.S. is around 58 years old, and many of them are working 12 and up to 18 hours during peak seasons just to manage their operations due to shortages of qualified labor,” said Jason Brantley, John Deere’s vice president of production systems for small agriculture and turf.

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    The ag industry is changing, but farmers and manufacturers alike are embracing whatever it takes to keep their crops growing and animals producing, said Ross.

    “It’s very important that we continue to look for ways to automate, to ease the jobs that we have,” Ross said. “How do we think about the use of technology, autonomous vehicles, robotics, as a way to create new and better jobs for the existing farmworkers, as well as attract young people to bring that energy and that creativity to the new tools and technologies that are absolutely essential to our survival.”

  • Egg farmers facing the ‘worst bird flu outbreak’ in ‘history,’ industry leader fears

    Egg farmers facing the ‘worst bird flu outbreak’ in ‘history,’ industry leader fears

    American farmers and those in the agricultural business continue to reel over the spread of H5N1 bird flu, which apparently shows no sign of slowing to “disaster” status.

    “The real crisis is that we’re going through the worst bird flu outbreak that we’ve had in the last 10 years since 2015, potentially the worst bird flu outbreak that we’ve ever had in the history of this country,” Eggs Unlimited Vice President Brian Moscogiuri said on “Fox & Friends” Thursday.

    “We’ve lost 120 million birds since the beginning of 2022. In the last few months alone, since the middle of October, we’ve lost 45 million egg-laying hens,” he added. “We’ve lost a significant amount of production, more than 13%. So we’re just dealing with supply shortages. And it’s just a disaster right now because this virus is in three of the top egg-laying states in the country. It doesn’t seem like it’s stopping anytime soon.”

    According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), bird flu detections have been made in dairy cattle, wild birds, poultry flocks and other mammals, while 68 human cases have been confirmed as well as one death.

    EGG PRICES AREN’T COMING DOWN ANYTIME SOON, EXPERTS SAY

    Companies recently started imposing limits on egg sales as the shortage caused by outbreaks persists, causing a frenzy among shoppers. Droves of viral videos have surfaced in recent weeks, showing shoppers stockpiling eggs. One video posted on TikTok claimed that an entire section of eggs at a Costco was gone in less than 10 minutes.

    A grocery store worker rearranges items in the depleted egg section on January 23, 2025 in Miami, Florida. (Getty Images)

    Other grocery and restaurant chains like Trader Joe’s, Korger, Whole Foods and Waffle House have been limiting customer purchases or adding egg surcharges as the nationwide supply dwindles.

    “We’re just trying to figure out, and the farmers are trying to figure out, how the virus is getting in… there’s several different catalysts, including wild migratory birds that have been flying over the country in the fall, in the spring each year… And we’re also wondering, is it in the ground? Is it in the air on these farms? Some of these farms that have been able to clean out and are working on repopulating have actually been hit again,” Moscogiuri said.

    “The farms really need help in identifying where the virus is coming in from, and then,” he expanded, “solutions to stopping the virus so that they can repopulate, resupply and ultimately help to bring the egg prices back down.”

    Since January, average egg prices have risen 15% and are up 53% year-over-year, data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture and Bureau of Labor Statistics shows.

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    Eggs Unlimited is one of the largest international suppliers of eggs, servicing major retailers, distributors and food service companies while also serving as a sort of egg “broker,” according to Moscogiuri. 

    Business is understandably “difficult” right now, he said. 

    “There’s less eggs available. Right now, we’re really focused on making sure that our customers are getting the orders and their supply, and making sure that they have eggs on their shelves. For consumers, [we’re] trying to limit their impact with the pricing and the supply chain shortages that we’re currently seeing right now.”

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    FOX Business’ Daniella Genovese contributed to this report.