Envita® SC Receives OMRI Certification
Azotic Technologies announces that Envita® SC has received certification from the Organic Materials Review Institute (OMRI) for use in compliance with the USDA National Organic Program.
Tom Tregunno, Global Business Development for Azotic, says OMRI certification introduces Envita SC to one of the fastest growing segments in agriculture. “Growers supplying bio-rational and organic products will now be able to take advantage of the many benefits of nitrogen fixation in a variety of crops and growing environments.”
Envita SC is a unique nitrogen-fixing biological based on the microbe Gluconacetobacter diazotrophicus (Gd), originally discovered in sugarcane. This highly effective solution was introduced to the North American market in 2019. Since then, it has experienced phenomenal uptake by farmers around the world as it has consistently delivered exceptional results in a multitude of crops.
AgGateway Part of VISION Conversations
“The conversations have been great, the networking is outstanding, the panel discussions have been particularly insightful,” said Kemp about the conference this year. “Sparking the discussion, sharing ideas around issues like AI and integration and infrastructure in new ways.”
Kemp said the theme of the conference was really centered around adoption, and that’s what AgGateway is all about. “And it allows organizations to build value for their customers, and whoever their customers’ customers may be.”
Listen to this interview with Kemp at the VISION conference.
2024 VISION interview with Brent Kemp, AgGateway 2:22
AquaSpy Shares Ag Tech VISION
AquaSpy is a small company with a big vision for the future of ag tech.
Kathleen Glass is Vice President of Marketing for AquaSpy, which is a soil moisture monitoring company based in California, and also one of the main sponsors of the VISION Conference and Women in Ag Tech (WiAT), as well as one of the founding members of the Global Ag Tech Alliance. Glass is personally involved in all of that and was active on panels, leading working groups, and behind the scenes preparations at the WiAT meeting and VISION Conference last week.
“This was a personal mission of mine,” said Glass during an interview at the conference. “I’m new to ag tech. I come from IoT and AI and telecom, so I’ve been a marketer in helping different industries adopt technologies.”
Glass said she enjoyed being able to lead the Ag Tech Adoption Strategic Solutions Teams Challenge, or Tiger Team, during the conference because she believes working together is the way to advance adoption. “I was very happy to see the diversity of representation of growers, investors, retailers, manufacturers, and ag tech here at VISION. That’s something we have to strive for is having all those constituents in the room.”
Listen to this interview from VISION:
2024 VISION interview with Kathleen Glass, AquaSpy 8:24
Animal Ag News 1/29
Revolutionizing Ag Tech Adoption
Increasing adoption of new technology was a recurring theme at the VISION Conference last week in Glendale, AZ. The first panel at the event delved into some of the strategies and success stories on proving ROI to farmers in ways that encourage ag tech adoption.
Vonnie Estes, Vice President of Innovation for the International Fresh Produce Association, moderated the panel which included Chad Hertz, Hertz Farm Management; Tim Bucher, Agtonomy; and Ben Voss, Raven Industries.
A specialty crop farmer in Northern California as well as an ag tech entrepreneur, Bucher says labor is a big concern for most farmers and important when determining ROI for ag tech. “When you think about automation and robotics, there’s still supervisors needed,” said Bucher. “So if you can scale from one operator to many pieces of equipment that are automated, that’s where ROI is a no-brainer.”
Bucher’s company Agtonomy, just recently partnered with Bobcat to do that very thing. “We call it multi-vehicle,” he said. “If you can take this new Bobcat tractor and you can have one operator managing ten of them, now you’re talking about serious ROI impact.”
Listen to this interview with Bucher from the VISION conference.
2024 VISION interview with Tim Bucher, Agtonomy 5:59
Industry Ag News 1/26
VISION Conference Wraps With Optimism for Ag Tech
The second day of the VISION Conference carried just as much energy as the first and attendees were just as engaged and eager to participate.
Jennifer Goldston, president and founder of AgTech PR set the stage for the day by talking about messaging and comparing the issues of today with the issues being addressed in the industry and general media back in 2017 at the first VISION Conference.
In the second day keynote address, Corteva’s Brian Lutz explored cross-industry synergies to enable ag tech evolution and talked about the difference between solutions on the farm and the enabling technology that makes those solutions possible.
A panel on cross-industry insights into accelerating ag tech advancement and adoption featured an Amazon Web Services executive, a biotech attorney, and the director of Off-Road Autonomy for Trimble. Ram Devarajulu with Cambridge Consultants moderated the discussion between Ron Osborne, Cassie Edgar, and Meiko Martin.
Harnessing Ag Tech for Sustainable Agriculture Transformation was the title of a panel moderated by Susan Groeneveld, sylvester.ai, and featuring two cutting edge ag tech CEOs Steve Sibulkin with BioLumic and Ben Cloud of Biodel AG.
To wrap it all up, members of the Global Ag Tech Alliance presented their key insights and takeaways and urged everyone to be involved in the future of the industry by becoming members of the alliance, whether big or small.
Meister Media Corporate Content Director Heather Tunstall says they were thrilled with the turnout at the VISION Conference this year and pleased that attendees were able to spend a lot of time networking with each other.
“There were a lot of conversations happening and business collaborations going on, and that was amazing to see,” said Tunstall. “I’m looking forward to seeing what happens in the next few weeks and months to really know how successful it was.”
In addition to the next Tech Hub LIVE event July 29-31 in Des Moines, Tunstall says Meister Media and the Global Ag Tech Initiative have a number of new projects coming up including a new podcast that will be launched next week.
Learn more in this interview:
2024 VISION interview with Heather Tunstall, Meister Media 5:33
Infusing Ag Tech Into the Future
“Ag tech is the driver for all agriculture going forward,” declared VISION Conference keynote speaker Brian Lutz with Corteva Agriscience. However, when it comes to agricultural technology, there is a difference between solutions on the farm and the enabling technology that makes those solutions possible.
Lutz, who is VP of Agricultural Solutions for Corteva, explained the difference by comparing tractors to generative AI. “Tractors are solutions,” said Lutz. “They’re comprised of many different enabling capabilities but tractors solve a problem for farmers.”
“Generative AI, on the other hand, is an enabling capability, it’s a technology…we’re putting that into products and solutions,” Lutz explained.
In his presentation, Lutz also noted how enabling technology is rarely industry specific and that many of the tools now used were adopted from other industries.
Corteva is the title sponsor for VISION and Lutz says it’s events like these that will continue to accelerate ag tech development and adoption.
Listen to this interview with Lutz here:
2024 VISION interview with Brian Lutz, Corteva 5:01