A farm technology startup is using robots and artificial intelligence to tackle sustainability concerns in agriculture.
Northern California-based Iron Ox was born from the realization that conventional American agriculture negatively impacts the environment in a multitude of ways. The type of farming most of us are familiar with uses as much as 70 percent of the world’s fresh water supply and produces up to 1.19 gigatons of greenhouse gasses every year. There’s also the issue of wasted produce, with up to 40 percent of fruits and veggies ending up in a landfill before ever reaching a consumer. While companies like Imperfect Foods, Uglies, and Misfits Market aim to offset this by proudly selling produce your typical grocery store won’t, these businesses don’t address the root of the problem: how the produce is grown.
Iron Ox uses two house-designed, AI-supported robots to perform most repetitive farming tasks and ensure resources are used efficiently. The first of these, called Grover, makes up the brawn of Iron Ox’s robotic crew. Able to lift more than 1,000 pounds, Grover helps move plant “modules” (i.e. planter boxes) around the greenhouse. Grover also helps water and harvest crops in tandem with Phil, the company’s brainier robot farmer. Phil monitors and delivers each module’s water, nutrient mix, and pH levels to maximize crop yield and quality while making sure resources aren’t overused.
Grover and Phil are designed to work in greenhouses, meaning Iron Ox has to plop down a facility before bringing its leafy greens, fruit, and other produce to a particular region. But the company itself says this isn’t a problem. While Iron Ox’s first facility sits in the San Francisco Bay Area, it just wrapped up construction on a 535,000-square foot greenhouse in Lockhart, Texas, where it will bring sustainably-grown produce to the entire state.
“Iron Ox’s Lockhart facility is the blueprint for sustainable produce farming near urban centers across the nation and around the world,” Iron Ox senior communications director Jen Capasso told ExtremeTech. “We want to make food a renewable resource for everyone. While our vision is global, we know that everything we achieve will be through our local efforts. Food grown at an Iron Ox facility will stay nearby, ensuring our surrounding communities have access to fresh produce that is grown recently, locally and sustainably.”
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By Adrianna Nine on May 4, 2022 at 5:30 am
Photo Credit:
- Iron Ox
- Iron Ox’s Grover robot. (Photo: Iron Ox)
Source : ExtremeTech
Link to original : This California Greenhouse is Run by Robots