Agricultural Robots: Market History and New Update with Current Trend Shares, Strategies, and Forecasts, 2017 to 2023
"Agricultural
Robots: Market Shares, Strategies, and Forecasts, 2017 to 2023"
The Report covers current Industries Trends, Worldwide Analysis,
Global Forecast, Review, Share, Size, Growth, Effect.
Description-
The
study addresses the efficiencies gained when robots can work 24 x 7
without getting tired from leveraging the fact that they do not make
mistakes. The robots are able to perform repetitive tasks
effectively, with cameras they can discern whether fruit is ripe or
not and pick only the ripe fruit that can be sold. The robots can go
back several times to pick fruit, while human pickers generally make
one pass, two at the most. The robots can pick more fruit because
they can get more ripe fruit from a tree.
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Agriculture
is the second greatest source of employment worldwide, and the least
automated of all industries. Agriculture is the largest remaining
opportunity for automation. Agriculture has become more mechanized so
that many crops are harvested using machinery worldwide. Agricultural
continues its declining employment trend as robotics are adopted.
Lely robotic cow milking systems target large
dairy farms implement innovation in agriculture. Successful robotic
milking on farms with more than 500 cows is supported. Agriculture
faces enormous challenges over the coming decades. Agricultural
entrepreneurs have to keep pace with rapid population growth and the
need to deliver food at progressively more competitive prices.
Lely supports technical revolutions that help
evolve automated process, ranging from forage harvesting machines to
milking, feeding and barn equipment. Lely equipment allows
successfully increasing the scale of operations.
Safeguarding optimum animal welfare and return on
investment is the aim. By partnering with Lely on the milking
automation journey, creates benefit from a unique set of management
instruments to monitor milk quality, feed/milk conversion ratio for
the individual cow or the complete herd. Lely continues to develop
knowledge and products for the future. A basic requirement for
profitable robotic milking includes attention to feed/milk
efficiency.
Freedoms include permitting cows to achieve
well-being by achieving more freedom, making it so that the farmers
get the most out of their herd. Lely discovered that farmers who use
free cow traffic are more successful with robotic milking.
“Using cow milking systems, ore milk per cow and
more milk per robot is being achieved. Systems work with less
difficulty and with the possibility of working more sociable hours.
Many farmers who used to use forced systems have changed over to free
cow traffic flow in order to benefit from the advantages of robotic
milking.”
Robots are used for harvesting. High value crops
are a target of agricultural robotic development. What could be
tastier than a strawberry, perfectly formed, and perfectly ripened?
New agricultural robots are able to improve the delivery of
consistent quality food, and to implement efficiency in managing food
production. Strawberries are a high profit crop.
A new generation of machines has just been born.
Strawberry harvesters with the world's most advanced technology to
give maximum performance to a farm. Harvesting robots can optimize
the productivity of the farming business. Growers can get the best
results in a berry farm using automated process. Automated picking
collection systems improve labor productivity, give speed and agility
to harvest operations.
Employment opportunity will come from human
implementation of digitation, building APIs that make digital
connections and building algorithms that make sense of digital data
collected. There is plenty of work for humans to figure out how to
react to alerts generated by digital algorithms.
The market for agricultural robots at $1.7 billion
in 2016 is expected to grow to $27.1 billion by 2023. Agricultural
Robots: users harness robots to plow, plant, spray, prune, milk,
pick, shear, and harvest. As economies of scale are achieved, markets
will grow rapidly.
** Companies Profiled
– Market Leaders
- Lely
- Tetrelaval / DeLaval
- Yaskawa / Motoman
- Yamaha
- Kuka
– Market Participants
- 8Villages
- ABB Robotics
- Adigo
- AeroVironment
- Agile Planet
- AgRA: RAS Agricultural Robotics and Automation (AgRA
- Agribotix
- Agrobot
- AquaSpy
- Australian Centre for Field Robotics
- Autonomous Tractor Corp. (ATC)
- Avular B.V
- Blue River Technology
- Bosch Deepfield Robotics
- Clearpath Robotics
- Rowbot
- CNH Industrial / Fiat / Case IH
- cRops
- Cyphy Works
- Digital Harvest
- DJI Innovations
- ecoRobotix
- Fanuc
- FarmBot
- Frank Poulsen Engineering
- Georgia Tech Agricultural Robots
- Google
- Harvard Robobee
- Harvest Automation
- HoneyComb
- IBM
- iRobot
- Jaybridge Robotics
- John Deere
- Kinze Manufacturing
- Kuka
- KumoTek
- Kyoto University
- Lely
- LemnaTec Phenomics
- Millennial Net
- Japan: National Agriculture and Food Research Organization
- Ossian Agro Automation / Nano Ganesh
- Parrot/senseFly
- Precise Path Robotics
- Robotic Harvesting
- SAGA – Swarm Robotics for Agricultural Applications
- Sentera
- Sicily Tractor Harvesting
- Shibuya Seiki
- Spread
- Sustainable Harvest
- Tetrelaval
- DeLaval Sustainable Dairy Farming
- Trimble
- Universidad Politécnica de Madrid
- University of California, Davis
- Vision Robotics
- Wall-Ye V.I.N. Robot
- Yamaha
- Yaskawa
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