Skip to main content

Dr. Karl Dawson: The biologist's toolbox

Submitted by eivantsova on Thu, 12/14/2017 - 09:54

The following is an edited transcript of Tom Martin’s interview with Dr. Karl Dawson, vice president and chief scientific officer at Alltech.

Tom:                            Dr. Karl Dawson is the vice president and chief scientific officer at Alltech and directs activities at the company’s bioscience centers around the world, including Alltech’s Center for Animal Nutrigenomics and Applied Animal Nutrition, where he is the co-director. We thank you for joining us.

Karl:                             Thank you.

Tom:                            The gene editing technology CRISPR (Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats) allows researchers to quickly change the DNA of nearly any organism, including humans. Would it be fair to say that the implications are pretty enormous?

Karl:                             Yes. CRISPR is going to change the way we think about breeding processes, the way we think about changing the genetics of livestock, plants. Even microorganisms will be changed using this type of technology. In terms of the way it will move forward, it has ramifications for just about anything we think about in terms of the overall breeding process and the way we think about using genetics and the genetic material that’s in an animal, plant or other organism.

Tom:                            How does this differ from gene modification?

Karl:                             CRISPR could be considered a form of gene modification. It is different in that it is a very precise tool where we can go in and pick out very specific sites on this long DNA molecule and we can put things in or take things out of it. It is a form of editing or changing a gene structure. And it can be used to not only delete specific genes or pieces of DNA, it can also be used to add in pieces of DNA. So, we can make genetic modifications that way. The difference is that we don’t necessarily have to use a transgenic approach, which means we’re not taking material from other organisms and putting it into a new organism. We’re not changing or bringing two types of DNA together, if you’d like.

Tom:                            So, what are the implications for agriculture, for food?

Karl:                             For food, it is a very fast way of changing and, very specifically, changing specific genetic pieces or genetic information. If you take, for example, some of the things that are being done, one of the examples we look at is the polled cattle. Calves are very oftentimes dehorned when they’re young. Dairy cattle are dehorned. That is a process that is rather uncomfortable for the animal, and it’s something that is very difficult to do, but it is very important because it changes the safety of handling that livestock. There has been a CRISPR approach used to change that in livestock. With traditional breeding, you can cross a hornless animal — a polled animal — with a dairy cow and produce a hornless animal. But when you do that, the productivity of that dairy animal changes considerably because lots of other things change when you do that genetic cross.

                                    The idea of CRISPR is that we could actually go in and take the very specific gene that’s associated with that horn formation and eliminate that gene, or poll that gene. And when we do that, we are doing it almost immediately. The difference is, if I bred that animal or did that through traditional crossbreeding, it would probably take 25 years to produce a high-producing dairy cow with that polled characteristic. In this case, we can do it within calves immediately. No time changed. The next generation of animals will have that specific gene.

Tom:                            Wow. Pretty exciting, isn’t it?

Karl:                             That’s powerful stuff.

Tom:                            How does this technology impact the whole GMO debate?

Karl:                             It’s going to change the GMO debate a little bit. There’s still a lot of controversy in this area. Typically, if you look at CRISPR technology, there are a number of other of these. There’s one called TALEN (transcription activator-like effector nucleases) that’s out there and zinc-finger modifications or nucleases that do the same thing. But when you do this, you can go very specifically to a site in the DNA and make your changes. You’re not introducing any new DNA, so it is no longer a combination of DNA from two animals or transgenic. It is, in fact, just maintaining one type of DNA. As a result, it’s not necessarily a traceable activity. So, theoretically, you could actually do a CRISPR transformation of a particular gene and you would not know that it was any different than a natural mutation process. The only thing is that you directed that very specifically to a very specific gene and a very specific chromosome in that animal.

Tom:                            Getting genetically modified crops approved for use is complex and expensive, and most of the crops that have been modified are large commodity crops: corn, soybeans. Could the ease and low cost make genome editing a viable option for smaller specialty crops as well as animals?

Karl:                             I think it could. There’s going to still be an economic barrier there, I’m sure, whether you could do it economically, but it is a very rapid way. This type of technology is not that complex. In one presentation I heard the other day about this, they were talking about this being something some people could do in their basements one day. So, it’s not that complex to take over. So, yes, it may in the long run be a technique that is used to do that very rapidly in smaller crops, different organisms, even fungi and things like that that we use for food manufacturing.

Tom:                            The implications of the science are pretty profound. Even possibly a little scary. What about worries that the field’s breakneck pace is leaving little time to talk about ethical and safety concerns?

Karl:                             Just about every time you talk about CRISPR, that type of information comes up or that kind of discussion comes up. I guess it is a little bit scary if you think about some of the potentials of these things. One of the areas that we’ll talk a little bit about tomorrow in our gene editing presentation relative to mosquito control is that we have gene editing capability right now that will develop what’s called a “gene drive.” A gene drive will actually make it so a specific gene is always transmitted to the offspring. So, if you think about the possibilities there of transmitting a lethal gene to a mosquito, it’s possible to actually cause the extinction of that species. That is not a long time off, either. You could actually do that very easily and change the ecology of the system completely. It’s nice that we want to get rid of mosquitos and we don’t have to swat them anymore, but the activity here says, yes, you could do that, but what happens to the rest of the ecology if that happens?

Tom:                            Let’s take this opportunity to turn to your work on the Zika virus, if we could. If you can bring us up to date where you are.

Karl:                             This is more of an insect-control concept that we’re working on right now. Quite frankly, the Zika virus in our case is used as an example of what might be done in insect control. Our goal is really to look more at some of the other insects — for example, fly problems in the livestock industry. They face flies, and horn flies, and things like that. But the Zika virus gives us an opportunity to see what can happen with the mosquito population. It is probably more developed in terms of population control than any other insect population. Zika has allowed us to put a lot of emphasis on that today. So, there are a number of techniques that are being used to control mosquitos using both molecular tools such as gene editing as well as particular bacterial control systems that will help eliminate the carrier or vectors for these diseases.

Tom:                            And does that steer us away from chemicals?

Karl:                             Absolutely. One of our big limitations is the development of resistance to pesticides. There are mosquitos today that are extremely resistant. It takes five, 10, 15 times more insecticide to kill the same mosquito that was killed 20 to 30 years ago. So, it is changing very dramatically. The idea here would be to move away to more natural control mechanisms or more sophisticated and more efficient control mechanisms.

Tom:                            What ag-tech trends are you watching these days? Which ones really excite you?

Karl:                             One of the areas we talked about today was programmed nutrition and the idea of programming animals to get very specific responses, whether it’s an immune response or growth efficiency or better reproduction. One of the tools we have today is the use of appropriate nutrients at very specific times of an animal’s life. “Programming” young animals to be resistant to disease or “programming” animals to use a lot less minerals in their diets. Those are things that are very exciting because they’re changing the paradigm of what we used to think was common nutrition.

                                    We no longer just think about the diet composition or the nutrient composition of a diet. We start thinking about, “Well, how do we strategically use that nutrient component to change what the animal is doing throughout its life?” Those same concepts are being used to improve meat quality and product quality from livestock or even plant quality. We can use that nutritional approach to do those types of things. So, I think that’s one of the most exciting things that we’ve worked on recently.

                                    Technology is moving so fast in the agricultural field today. I’ve been at a loss to say I know what are going to be the best trends, but those things that have to do with nutrition are going to be very important to us in the future. I think gene editing, in some form or another, is going to be a very important area for us to think about in the future. It’s not going to be in the traditional ways we think about it. But if you think about the barriers, for example, right now, there is no genetically modified livestock that are being used in food production today; part of that is the fear of what recombinant DNA really looks like, but some of it is the lack of understanding of what some of those molecular changes are. There are cattle that have been developed in China recently. They’re totally resistant to tuberculosis. That was the result of a gene editing. The PRRS (Porcine Reproductive and Respiratory Syndrome) virus in pigs, we have genetically modified animals or used a CRISPR-type gene editing technology to make pigs resistant to the PRRS virus. So, those things are happening. Whether those will be accepted or not, that’s outside of my area of expertise, but the technology is there, and it’s going to change. So, we have to get ready for that type of technology.

Tom:                            I have to believe you must spend a lot of your time being fascinated.

Karl:                             Yes. There’s lots to do. Yes.

Tom:                            What’s the most interesting part of your work?

Karl:                             I’ve been doing this for quite a few years now, and I think the neatest thing that I have to do is — not the science space — but it’s the ability of the younger people we’re producing in science today to come up with innovative ideas. I was involved with the Alltech Young Scientist program here. The brilliance of these young minds, it just always blows me away, and it’s something I like to be involved with. Maybe it’s not a real basic science, but it’s that educational process that leads to innovation that I get excited about.

Tom:                            Dr. Karl Dawson, vice president and chief scientific officer at Alltech. We thank you so much.

Karl:                             Thank you.

Dr. Karl Dawson spoke at ONE: The Alltech Ideas Conference (ONE17). To hear more talks from the conference, sign up for the Alltech Idea Lab.

<>Premium Content
Off
<>Featured Image
Dr. Karl Dawson: The biologist's toolbox
<>Date
<>Featured Image License
Off
<>Image Caption
"CRISPR is going to change the way we think about breeding processes, the way we think about changing the genetics of livestock, plants. Even microorganisms will be changed using this type of technology." — Dr. Karl Dawson on gene-editing.
<>Soundcloud
The SoundCloud content at https://soundcloud.com/alltech-1/039-the-biologists-toolbox-dr-karl-dawson is not available, or it is set to private.
<>Hubspot
<!--HubSpot Call-to-Action Code --><span class="hs-cta-wrapper" id="hs-cta-wrapper-ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302"><span class="hs-cta-node hs-cta-ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302" id="hs-cta-ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302"><!--[if lte IE 8]><div id="hs-cta-ie-element"></div><![endif]--><a href="https://cta-redirect.hubspot.com/cta/redirect/745395/ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302" target="_blank" ><img class="hs-cta-img" id="hs-cta-img-ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302" style="border-width:0px;" src="https://no-cache.hubspot.com/cta/default/745395/ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302.png" alt="Sign up for Alltech Idea Lab"/></a></span><script charset="utf-8" src="https://js.hscta.net/cta/current.js"></script><script type="text/javascript"> hbspt.cta.load(745395, 'ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302', {}); </script></span><!-- end HubSpot Call-to-Action Code -->
<>Feature
Off
<>Primary Focus Area
<>Article Type
<>Regions
<>Topics
<>Image Caption

"CRISPR is going to change the way we think about breeding processes, the way we think about changing the genetics of livestock, plants. Even microorganisms will be changed using this type of technology." — Dr. Karl Dawson on gene-editing.

Farming the future: What's on the horizon?

Submitted by eivantsova on Fri, 12/01/2017 - 14:13

The following is an edited transcript of Tom Martin’s discussion with a panel of experts on the future of farming. Click below to hear the full discussion:

Tom:                I'm Tom Martin, and with us to share their perspectives on what the future holds for agriculture and food production and consumption are Dr. Karl Dawson, vice president and chief scientific officer at Alltech — Dr. Dawson directs activities at the company's bioscience centers around the world — and Dr. Michael Boehlje, who will be joining us shortly. Dr. Boehlje is a distinguished professor of agricultural economics at Purdue University, where he conducts research and teaches in the areas of farm and agribusiness management and finance.

                        Mary Shelman is also with us. Mary is former director of Harvard Business School's Agribusiness Program and an internationally recognized thought leader on the future of the global agrifood industry. And Aidan Connolly, chief innovation officer and vice president of corporate accounts at Alltech. Aidan has been with Alltech for 25 years. I appreciate you all joining us this morning.

                        I'm going to pose questions to each of you. Once you've offered your views, your fellow panelists will have an opportunity to comment on those views. But let's begin with a very broad, very big question that could itself consume an hour — we also have some questions that have come in from media, and we'll try to get them in as well.

 Beginning with you, Dr. Dawson, are you optimistic about the future of farming, and if so, why?

Karl:                 You know, it depends a little bit on what you call “farming” right now and the definition of farming, but I would say that I'm not very optimistic if we continue thinking about farming as we did a decade ago — as a typical family farm. The farm has changed a lot, and it's undergoing a revolution — or evolution — with more technology being in the farm, all the time.

                        To put this into context, I was thinking about a visit I had with my nephew, who runs a farm in northern Montana. He and his neighbors think about farming, using agricultural units, as thousands of acres. That acreage was inconceivable many years ago. We never even thought about using that much land or that many resources, so it's changed considerably.

Even just two decades ago, a 100-acre farm was considered a large farm. These farmers are ready to move to the next level and quadruple in size in the next five years. That's their goal. When they do that, they need the support of technology. 

Even just two decades ago, a 100-acre farm was considered a large farm. These farmers are ready to move to the next level and quadruple in size in the next five years. That's their goal. When they do that, they need the support of technology. Whether it's data from the machines they drive, the harvest or crop materials, the seed stock used for animals or in plants — that support has to come from technology. Farmers are really a technology group now.

Tom:                Mary Shelman, are you optimistic, otherwise?

Mary:              I have to be optimistic. As a farm owner in Kentucky, I have to be optimistic about the future. I do think it's actually a great time. I'm a little more optimistic than Karl. It’s not just about the scale that we can achieve — and a lot of that through technology — it’s also about the ability to achieve more differentiations, to be able to address more consumer needs, and we see now that there are louder voices impacting the food system.

  But if I look around the world — and we go back to those tremendous figures that the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) provides regarding the change in population and income growth —  with the demand for agricultural products, the output of farms is only going to increase and will increase by maybe 60 percent or 70 percent in the next 35 years. That's a great time and a great need that needs to be fulfilled, and I completely agree with Karl that technology will help us do that.

 On the other hand, I do think there's this issue of economic viability that we also need to be aware of: the dynamics of how pricing works at the farm level — the typical supply-and-demand economics — those don't tend to move in lockstep. At times — for example, crop farming in the U.S. today — prices are relatively low compared to other times within the last five years. So, we need to maintain that economic viability for farmers to survive and, in particular, to attract new, younger farmers to the system. As we all know, the average age of farmers in the U.S. is increasing. We're approaching the 60-year-old mark. We need new talent, and they will only come in if there are attractive returns in the agriculture sector.

Tom:                Aidan Connolly, you work within the areas of innovation and ideas. What do you see in the future?

Aidan:              I have the chance to meet the United Nations FAO group every year, and they, of course, have been quite pessimistic about the future of agriculture. We consider the numbers that Mary mentioned of 70 percent increase in food production over the next 35 years, but if you actually compound that out, Tom, you're really only looking at a figure of 1.7 percent improvement in productivity per year — and agriculture has actually exceeded that. I would be extremely optimistic about our potential for increasing and improving the amount of food we produce. I think farming is going to be very much part of feeding this population we've spoken about by 2050.

 When you look at the gaps we have from the nutritional perspective in feeding animals, nutritional perspective in feeding crops — these factors that are holding back agriculture — productivity losses, the amount of food that we lose, the amount of fertilizer we waste and where food is lost, even within the food chain. I would be extremely optimistic about our potential for increasing and improving the amount of food we produce. I think farming is going to be very much part of feeding this population we've spoken about by 2050.

Tom:                Okay, let's move into our questions and we'll begin with Mary Shelman. Consumers are being described as millennials, “prosumers” and “super consumers.” Do you think we're facing fundamentally new groups of consumers, and do you think this reflects a real change in the marketplace? And, if so, what are their needs?

Mary:              Tom, I do think we are facing a fundamental change. We're in the midst of a fundamental change, and that's a very good thing, and I think it's very positive for the food industry and the ag industry. I think people overall — not just millennials — are asking more questions about where their food comes from and how it's produced. And it's not just in the U.S. or in first world countries. This is true around the world in areas, whether it's driven by food safety or whether it's driven by greater awareness because technology — the new digital media — has made information so available. So, I do think we're in the middle of a food movement. I think that this idea of engaged eating is a really attractive thought to get your arms around. A big piece of that, though, is this new millennial consumer that we talk about.

Tom:                What is that?

Mary:              “Engaged eating” is this idea that someone born between 1980 and 2000 has grown up at a time when technology is all around them — they get information in different ways, they have different values, they've grown up being fed products like Annie's Organic Mac & Cheese compared to Kraft. And now this group — the biggest demographic group with 83 million in the U.S. compared to 75 million baby boomers — are at the stage of having families and moving up in their income potential. So, they are very attractive to the food industry.

                        First, millennials have a much greater understanding of the link between what they eat and their health, and that's a very positive change. The second thing is that what they eat is part of their identity. It actually reflects who they are as a person. They enjoy taking pictures of their food and posting them on Instagram, sharing a meal with their friends and going out and seeking information about food in different ways — not just from mom or from an advertisement.

...not only do consumers want products that meet a certain price point and a certain safety point, they want products that have a purpose.

                        Food also reflects our values. This is the thing that perhaps poses the biggest challenge to the traditional food industry because not only do consumers want products that meet a certain price point and a certain safety point, they want products that have a purpose. They want products from an industry that has the same values that they do, and they're often willing to pay more for these products. As a matter of fact, I was at a meeting last week in New Zealand, and someone was presenting the results of a worldwide survey that was asking this millennial group how they thought they had more influence and whether it was through their vote for a political candidate. They say, “No, it's our vote with our dollars.” So, millennials believe that they “vote” for these types of products, and they’re willing to pay for this.

                        We’re actually at a time that there's kind of a bifurcation in the food system. The majority of consumers need safe, affordable food and accessible food, but yet this group that's a premium category is really growing in their needs and growing in their demands, and they like the stories, they want transparency, they need traceability. I think that’s putting a very interesting twist on the system right now.

Tom:                Aidan, any thoughts on this?

Aidan:              I would say that, as a father of two millennials, I question whether millennials are really that much different than prior generations. They are compared to the immediate generation before them. We consider whether their values and their beliefs are similar to those that we saw in people from the 1950s and 1960s, who were also very aspirational in changing the world.  “Prosumer” is a word I like a lot because I think it grasps a little bit more the fact that they're people proactively making food choices based on their ethics and their desires, what they believe and what they would like to support. And that part, Mary, I think, has been described extremely clearly. That is definitely something that we have not seen before. We certainly haven't seen in the last 20 or 30 years. We provide food which is affordable, which is available, which is safe. Consumers or prosumers are looking for something more, and that's a fundamental change in our food system.

Tom:                Dr. Dawson, do you want to add anything? I don't want to exclude anybody here.

Karl:                 I agree with the comments that have come out. I think you are looking at a different marketplace, and I think that that's something that will drive the overall agricultural system completely. So, as time goes on, it will be interesting how that evolves, but I think it's going to be a simple adjustment in the way markets look at the consumer.

Tom:                Okay, Dr. Dawson, next question is for you and Mary, if you would respond. It appears that nutrition has not changed for decades, and we may be at the limits of what we can do given the ways in which nutrition is researched. Are there new tools that allow farmers to understand better how to feed their animals and be more precise in nutrition?

Karl:                 Absolutely, there are new tools, but I guess I would take a little bit of a different view on this. I really don't see that nutrition has been a stagnant science over the last two decades, or even the last century. We've had a lot of advancements that have really been responsible for a lot of the changes in livestock production we've seen. Particularly in underdeveloped countries, we're using lots of new technology with amino acid balances. Nutrient balances are new things that have come out of that.From our point of view, working at the very molecular level, we can see what effect food and food ingredients have on the basic physiology of an animal by looking at gene expression.

 But we do have a lot of new tools that are coming out that are really going to change the way we've looked at this. Some of this comes from the ability to collect data and process that data, to integrate it into a very precise model. We've never had the capability to do that before. From our point of view, working at the very molecular level, we can see what effect food and food ingredients have on the basic physiology of an animal by looking at gene expression. This is a new tool that's progressing. We could probably talk a lot about this, but it's a very precise tool that tells you exactly what's happening and it has really allowed us to uncover a lot of the “hidden secrets” with nutrition.

So, as those new tools are becoming available, they’re going to allow for diagnostic tests. They're going to look at new ways of managing and looking at the way we train our animals to eat.

Tom:                There are many tangential areas we could go off to here, and we're only two questions into this conversation. But let's go off on one: big data, because we know that it's having an overwhelming impact and is something of a latecomer to the agricultural world. Does anybody want to offer some thoughts on how big data is changing things and what the future holds in that area?

Karl:                 I would start off by saying you have a tool here to take millions and billions of observations, whether it's productivity, food intake, the way we grow our crops, how much rain we get — all of this can be integrated into very precise models, and that's going to be the big change in agriculture. If you would like, we're talking about moving to “armchair” farming. We're going to be making our decisions while sitting in front of the computer, looking to see what we can predict in the future. That's a tremendous tool we've never had before.

Big data — whether it be used in terms of diseases, performance of animals or crops, or whether it be used in the realms of a lot of these sensors and new digital technologies — can capture a lot of information we've never been able to capture before.

Aidan:              I think, in particular, we've seen some of the bigger questions such as food safety — something which is extremely difficult to measure on-farm — and what can influence it, what causes it to increase or decrease. We at Alltech have been working with other programs where big data allows us to capture the factors that we have underlined — why that occurs — which we've never been able to analyze before.

 We're starting to understand things in a very fundamental way, and I think that big data — whether it be used in terms of diseases, performance of animals or crops, or whether it be used in the realms of a lot of these sensors and new digital technologies — can capture a lot of information we've never been able to capture before. We can now interpret that information because we're able to use larger algorithms, larger systems to be able to understand what exactly we're looking at.

Michael:          Okay, sorry for the problems here in terms of getting engaged, but I'm here now. To comment on big data: It seems to me that, specifically, we have had significant advances in this area, and the advances may be as much along the entire value chain as they are at the production sector. In fact, the production sector may be lacking and just starting to catch up. The whole issue of the opportunity we have here, in terms of both capturing the payoff of big data not only at the farm production level but also throughout the entire value chain, is really critical. We can now accurately receive the message from consumers of what they want in terms of physical characteristics of their food or their eating experiences and also get more feedback in terms of those credence attributes, which are really important but difficult to measure. Now we can get them more accurately with traceability through that value chain. So, that’s a big advancement.

Tom:                Okay. Thank you for joining us, Dr. Boehlje. Let's dig a little more deeply into technology and the next question is for you, Aidan and Dr. Dawson. Let's look at the range of primary technologies that are transforming agriculture beyond big data. What else is happening out there?

Aidan:              There's an awful lot happening, and it's very hard, I think, for somebody to capture the degree of change which is occurring. I think if anybody thinks that agriculture is going to be the same way in 20 to 30 years' time, they've got their head in sand. We've written a certain number of papers on the digital technologies and the rate that digital technologies are transforming agriculture at the moment. This includes robots, drones, blockchain, the internet of things, virtual reality and enhanced reality. These are technologies which, either from a hardware or software perspective, can fundamentally change the ways in which we understand what happens when we grow plants or grow animals.

There are other technologies, such as nutrigenomics. That's one that Alltech is invested in very heavily. We're the only ones in animal agriculture to do so. We are big believers that understanding how nutrients impact gene expression in animals and in organisms is going to be very important for maximizing their productivity. I wouldn't forget gene editing, either. This is an area — described as CRISPR — that is dramatically transforming what we can do, again, with the ability of plants and animals to resist disease, enhance productivity, achieve certain characteristics we're looking at from the food perspective.

I don't know how to capture it all in such a short way, Tom, but I'd certainly say the digital technologies, nutrigenomics and gene editing are the three major areas that are going to transform the way we think about how food is produced.

Tom:                Karl Dawson, anything to add to that?

There are things that are happening in the area of biochemistry — findings that are really changing the way we think about processing feeds, handling feeds, the way we think about using feed additives. 

Karl:                 I think I'd add a few other things: There are things that are happening in the area of biochemistry — findings that are really changing the way we think about processing feeds, handling feeds, the way we think about using feed additives. All of those are coming from very basic biochemical evaluation of what's going on in the animal systems and the way they eat. We're doing the same thing in plants today.

                        One of the things that comes up when you start thinking a little bit about this is that we always think about what we're going to do on the nutrition side and how we're going to change the nutrition. We can do that, and we're starting to home in on the gap between genetic potential and what the animal can do.

  The other side of that issue that comes up is that we can start thinking about selecting our animals for specific nutrition. We talked a little bit about gene editing and the capabilities there. We have the capability of doing that and changing what those animals look like coming into the system, and we have the same capability on the plant side. That’s a very important thought process to keep in mind: that those two things are going to come together someday, and we have to be able to go forward with those in the future.

Tom:                Okay, an open question to all of you: This comes to us form Irish Farmers Monthly, and it dovetails nicely with what you've just been talking about. From both the environmental and the productivity perspectives, how important will electric and autonomous vehicles be on the future farm? Will such machinery become more important in light of the increased need for sustainability as the world population increases? Any thoughts?

Aidan:              Look, we're facing a world where we're talking about having planes fly themselves, cars drive themselves. It's perfectly logical that we would see the same thing on the farm. And anybody who's seen some of the injuries that can occur on a tractor and cause somebody to lose an arm or a limb understands that there are all sorts of safety issues that could be addressed by no longer having the potential for operator error.

                        From my perspective, I think it is difficult to find labor on-farm. When you find labor, you want labor to be well-trained and well-prepared. You have safety opportunities, also. I think there's just going to be a lot of factors that are going to drive for these autonomously driven tractors and harvesters to become part of our future.

Automation and robotics are going to be, I think, much more common and more rapidly adopted than many people think.

Michael:          Automation and robotics are going to be, I think, much more common and more rapidly adopted than many people think. We have a debate here on the Purdue campus of how quickly we're going to see those happening in the field. The discussion is related to whether it's going to be five years or 10 years before we're going to see an adoption of automated tractors and other systems within crop production agriculture. We already see it in the dairy industry in terms of robotic milking. We're seeing it happen particularly in terms of harvesting, especially crops. It’s going to happen much more rapidly than we realize, and it has the opportunity to profoundly change the agricultural sector. It’s a really, really important development.

Tom:                Anybody else?

Karl:                 I think that's true, and, quite frankly, it's not that far off. Some of it is already here. I've been on combines that essentially drive themselves down the row. You need a driver there to turn the combine around, but in the big fields, these 18-, 19-, 20-foot stalls can be driving themselves, and they're controlled by GPS. It's amazing to see how little manpower it really takes to run those.

Michael:          And now they’re able to turn themselves around. So that's even changed.

Karl:                 They didn't the day I was there.

Michael:          Oh, I understand, but that's how fast this technology is coming. It's coming very rapidly. My belief is we'll see this in the fields in five years — not 10 years — and rapidly adopted.

Tom:                Aidan?

Aidan:              I was just going to say I was with an ag-tech startup that obviously made too much money because the owner had just bought himself a Tesla. He just took his hands off the steering wheel and let the car drive itself, which gave me a little bit of heart palpitations as I watched it maneuvering its way through the city. But it shows you what's possible. In the fields, we've got a much more controlled environment — we have much less risk of things such as car doors opening or bicycles. It’s an inevitable part of our future, and we have the perfect opportunity to use this technology.

Mary:              I just want to add an even finer detail around it: What happens when we get in the field and we have the sensors on and the sprayers operating and you're actually sensing which weed to spray or which bloom doesn't have enough pollen on it so you can provide supplemental pollination? We have this micro-level influence. Technology can help us get closer to achieving that potential.

Tom:                We're talking about 9 billion people by 2050. Do these innovations get us to where we need to go to be able to feed the world?

The technology is developing fast and it will continue to keep up with the demand for the foreseeable future.

Karl:                 I think there's no doubt about that. I think the technology is developing fast and it will continue to keep up with the demand for the foreseeable future.

Aidan:              I had the opportunity to talk to a cooperative this week that was asking for some ideas about 2050, and I said that 2050, for me, has become unimaginable in terms of what could potentially happen. I often wonder whether 2050 is the right number to use. Maybe we should just be focusing, as Dr. Boehlje mentioned, on the next five to 10 years, where we can concretely comprehend what will change. But if you say the number is 9 billion and Mary says the number is 10 billion and somebody else says, “Well, what happens if we start being capable of changing life itself and really extending life spans?” maybe the number we're looking at is 15 billion. Maybe we're looking at a much greater number of people that we're going to have to feed.

                        I think we need to be really cognizant of the fact that this technological thing is moving so quickly. Don't stretch yourself too far in predicting. Look concretely at what should be used and how it should be used in the foreseeable future, which is probably more like 10 years than 35 years.

Tom:                These things are changing so much more rapidly these days. You mentioned nutrigenomics earlier, and I wanted to touch on that with Dr. Dawson. What are the main benefits that you see from a nutrigenomics perspective for farmers, and how will that change the way that they farm?

Karl:                 Well, if you think we're going to have a diagnostic kit tomorrow that solves all the nutritional problem of animals, nutrigenomics isn't going to deliver that right now. However, it is redefining nutrition. When we think about the value weight of feed material or feed product, the supplementation strategy, management practices, the way we feed calves or young chickens — all of those things are starting to change now because we have a tool that allows us to actually measure what happens when we make a nutritional change. That's a very powerful thing, and it's not only allowing us to look at productivity. We can now measure immunity in a bird and change that by nutritionally altering the young chick's diet. Same thing with calves: We can pass material information from one generation to the next using a nutritional strategy, but we can actually measure that and see how it's done.

Nutrigenomics is really going to redefine things. It's already redefined mineral nutrition. Trace mineral nutrition will never be the same...

                        Nutrigenomics is really going to redefine things. It's already redefined mineral nutrition. Trace mineral nutrition will never be the same as we view it from now on. We know that we can use less minerals. We can change and have less impact on the environment by using these tools. This tool allowed us to very rapidly understand that and change our nutritional practices.

Tom:                Dr. Boehlje, I want to give you an opportunity to jump in here.

Michael:          Let me just comment quickly. I'm not a scientist at the same level as Dr. Dawson, so I don't have that understanding at a granular level. But, we sometimes describe the technologies as moving agriculture from “growing stuff” to biological manufacturing. This biological manufacturing is very much in the context of what we've already been talking about: it's understanding the science and nutrigenomics. It's understanding biotechnologies and everything that has the potential to significantly impact the growth process of plants and animals at a much more scientific level. We’re getting sciences and technologies that are developing because of the interconnectivity between science bases previously kept in silos: nutrition, nutrigenomics and biology. We see some universities that have said, just as an illustration, that science is not only important, but is also essential. In fact, the required science increasingly in many universities is you have to take biology. You have to take biology to get an understanding because biology is increasingly driving the world.

Mary:              You know, can I come back to that, Mike? I agree with you and Dr. Dawson that science and nutrigenomics is giving us amazing tools. But, Mike, you used that term “biological manufacturing,” and I put on my consumer hat, and I just think that that's a terrible term. Today’s consumers don't want their food manufactured in any kind of factory, and that's just kind of the picture that comes to mind (with the term “biological manufacturing”). We were talking about how we can be more responsive to consumers, have differentiation, we can give this credence attributes, yet you're proposing or using this term that's actually far from that.

Michael:          I understand your perspective and I absolutely agree with that perspective. We aren't going to promote or advertise, we're not going to be saying to consumers, “This is a biological manufacturing process.” In fact, the word “processing,” generally, is not something consumers really want to hear relative to food.

It's interesting, though, that consumers are more than happy to hear the term “processing” relative to health issues or other things they buy, but they really are, in many cases, very negative about the term as it relates to food.

                        I'm not going to promote “biological manufacturing” to consumers, but it’s certainly a concept we in the industry, at the production level, must be increasingly mindful of. This allows us to adopt and facilitate the process of growing and producing food more scientifically and better than we have in the past.

Tom:                Dr. Boehlje, a topic that we were discussing before you were able to join us is big data — or farming data — in the future. Actually, it's happening now. How does that affect the types of people who will choose farming as a profession in the future? Do you think it will change the attractiveness of agriculture in some way?

Michael:          I think that, increasingly, what we're going to find in this industry is that those people who are going to be successful have some skills that maybe they need to enhance to be successful. Particularly, what we're interested in is analytical skills — analytical skills that are tied to data and information.

                        We see this particularly in the financial area, which is the area I work in. Some farmers abhor recordkeeping. They abhor this idea of having to keep financial information to provide to their lender, to understand their own business, to get the financial performance assessment that they need. We need to, increasingly, develop that skill and feel comfortable with that skill of looking at numbers, looking at information, trying to understand what the numbers say and the story they tell — not just crunching those numbers. Data assessment, data summarization, data visualization — those are going to be skills that we need to have more and more of our producers understand, and they will be the skills that might be very important differentiators.

                        And it's not just the stories that we need to have in terms of average yields. We see that, as we go across the fields with our yield monitors today, it's the distributions that count. It's what happens when you are in parts of that field where you have low yields as a function of a number of things that happened — whether they be weather or whether they be agronomic-oriented — and where you get those high yields as well. The same is true with animals. We're starting to see different animal performance even in the same pen in the same group as a function of their genetics, as a function of a number of things. We're going to get more granular in the data, and we need to understand the story there.

                        Data assessment, data summarization, data visualization — those are going to be skills that we need to have more and more of our producers understand, and they will be the skills that might be very important differentiators. Certainly, strategic thinking is another one of those skills, risk assessment, a lot of other skills. But the one specifically related to big data is this willingness to work with data and understand "the story" it tells.

Tom:                Aidan, do you have thoughts on that?

Aidan:              Yes, from a historical perspective, I think of what our system was for deciding who would become farmers. I suppose, originally, everyone is a farmer, and then gradually we decided that there would be land and that land would be passed from a farm owner to their eldest son. And over time, then, it seems, — at least in Ireland — it was divided amongst as many children as you had. Each one got a parcel of land, which created its own issues. Gradually, we seem to have moved toward a system where those who don't want to stay on the land go to cities or go and find other jobs, and we've been left with the people who really want to be farmers. Only in the last 20 or 30 years did we start to understand that being a farmer involves education as well. So, obviously, all the educational systems were set up through land grants and other systems around the world to try to create farming as a profession.

                        I think what we're looking at now is a fundamental change in what that farmer will look like. They won't necessarily grow up on a farm. They might grow up in the city. They won't necessarily have the skills of understanding animals or understanding plants. They'll understand data, they'll understand analytics, equipment, decision-making between all the various technologies, and what they should buy and what they shouldn't invest in.

 I think what we're looking at now is a fundamental change in what that farmer will look like.

                        So, those are dramatically different skills and skills that were used for the last, I'd say, thousand years — you might say a hundred years — to select or to decide who is it that's a farmer, who is not a farmer, and that's very fundamental. And back to the same numbers we're talking about, I think those influence not who is going to be a farmer in 10 or 20 or 30 years' time. Probably even in the next five years, we're going to see dramatic differences in terms of who are the right people, who are the successful people who are going to take over stewardship of the land.

Tom:                It seems to have broad implications for the entire culture. Are we talking about these attributes appearing mostly in large farming operations, or all the way down the chain to small family farmers?

Mary:              I think they have to go all the way down to small family farmers. I would come back to this and say to both of you, to Mike and to Aidan, that you gave a great description. I agree completely. It's about understanding the data to use the data. But, again, what's missing is the typical production push, and we now have consumers controlling more of the acres.

It’s not just about producing at the lowest price, but producing what the market wants...

                        I would add to this list — and this is whether it's maybe more appropriate even for a small family farmer or the new generation that is very attracted to farming for different reasons — is being able to understand the market. It's about being able to understand how to deliver this differentiated product that has extra value. It’s not just about producing at the lowest price, but producing what the market wants — or different segments that the market wants — and being able to sell into those channels, connect with those channels.

                        This is a very big basket now — a very big ask — which is a great thing for family farming enterprises because, typically, you don't have just one person doing all the decision-making — you have a whole set of people. The whole family is around the table, and it's the husband and the spouse, even the children as they come into the family business. I see these enterprises, and they have different specializations within, and that's fantastic because everybody can bring their strength to the table.

Michael:          Let me just completely agree with what Mary said. That's a really important issue. We have a tendency in agriculture to talk about supply chains. That's true in almost all industries and is reflective of the “push” mentality that we've had in a lot of industries, including agriculture: how we're pushing through the supply chain to the consumer. Increasingly, we're talking about “chain reversal,” and that's the whole idea: demand-driven change. We have consumers increasingly telling the entire chain what they want, how they want it and how it ought to be done.

 An important skill that's going to be much more important for farmers is going to be this whole idea of understanding and a willingness to work in an interdependent system — rather than being independent — and be very focused on relationships, collaboration and interpersonal skills. Those are things that many farmers haven’t historically — if I take my own father, for example — liked to do. He wanted to be in his farming operation. He didn't want to do farm records, and he didn't want to have a whole lot of relationships with other people. And, increasingly, those skills will be essential to be a successful farmer in the future.

Tom:                I have a question here from media that I think is appropriate at the moment. Let's just open it up for everybody. I think each of you can bring a perspective to this. This is from Owen Roberts. He's with the University of Guelph and is president of the International Federation of Agricultural Journalists, and he asks a very appropriate question because of what happened yesterday in Switzerland — the country renowned for its food supply. They held a national referendum yesterday designed to anchor food security in their constitution. It initially won approval by about 77 percent of the electorate. Globally, this was quite a groundbreaking exercise on their part, reflecting the growing interest by people everywhere in the production of the foods they consume, as you mentioned, Mary. He asks that we touch on some reasons why precision nutrition can give them confidence about the future of food supply and how they get that message to consuming public. If you'd like to begin with that, Mary?

Do we have the water? Do we have the land? How is climate variability affecting things? This precision nutrition piece is an important data tool that will enable us to do as much as we can with the resources that we have.

Mary:              Wow, that's a tough one. I think this issue about food security is really important for everybody in the world, right? And you're talking about Switzerland here. The challenge is that in some countries you don't have the resources to do that. I don't know enough about this referendum or the backend pieces of it. But, I'd say that precision nutrition will be incredibly important to meet this global demand. At the country level — we have talked so much about the fact that we can enhance productivity, but we have to do it in a time of decreasing resources, decreasing natural resources. Do we have the water? Do we have the land? How is climate variability affecting things? This precision nutrition piece is an important data tool that will enable us to do as much as we can with the resources that we have. I think country by country you're not going to get the same answer.

Tom:                Wheels are turning here, I guess.

Aidan:              I think that we talk all the time about the need for countries to produce all of their own food, and in essence, that sounds like motherhood and apple pie — you have to agree with it. I don't feel that old, but I can remember days, or growing up, when there weren't oranges in the supermarket, when you couldn't find bananas all year round, when things were much more seasonal. We've all gotten used to the idea that there's an abundance of food. It's available relatively inexpensively. Its carbon footprint, even if it comes from Colombia or Kenya, is actually quite low because the systems of distribution have become extremely efficient. I'll even look at countries like China that want to be sufficient in food yet increasingly are consuming corn from Brazil and soybeans from the United States, and they are purchasing pork and chicken. These are countries that have said they want to produce everything themselves. It's clear that that isn't always that easy.

..the fact is that we have this increasingly interconnected global system, and consumers have an expectation of being able to have food available at a relatively cheap cost and all the foods they want all year round.

                        Mary and I have had this debate in the past about people storing food in cans in their houses. Is that what we should be doing? We imagine people would start to do that again. I struggle with that idea. I think the world has become increasingly global. It requires, of course, free trade and requires us to trust that other countries won't declare war on us — which maybe is a big thing to wonder about. But the fact is that we have this increasingly interconnected global system, and consumers have an expectation of being able to have food available at a relatively cheap cost and all the foods they want all year round.

Tom:                Dr. Dawson, do you have thoughts on this?

Karl:                 I agree with the direction that Aidan is going, but the important things that are coming out today with agriculture boil down, oftentimes, to resource limitations — what do we have to work with? Whether it be the environment, land, water — those are the things that are going to drive the way we look at efficiency as we move forward. I don't know the initiative that they're talking about in Europe, but the idea that these are things that we can control right now is probably not right. We're going to have a limited amount of resources.

I look at an area where I grew up in southwest Montana. At one time, people died over water rights. For many years, it hasn't been that way, but I received something in the mail the other day that said I had to declare my water rights again on the property that I own there with the idea that that's going to go away pretty soon. It's going to be legislated. Maybe there are some security issues there we need to look at. One of the reasons that it's bad there is mining, which uses a lot of water, but the fact is that it's going to happen around the world. So, security does need to be legislated to some extent.

Tom:                Dr. Boehlje, thoughts on food security?

It’s not just our ability to produce enough to have "food security." It's also our ability to protect the amount of production we get and make sure that it actually gets to consumers and, as a matter of fact, to be more efficient and effective in terms of consuming it...

Michael:          Yes, I think the other dimension here is what kind of losses we have in the food chain, particularly in different economies in different countries. It’s not just our ability to produce enough to have "food security." It's also our ability to protect the amount of production we get and make sure that it actually gets to consumers and, as a matter of fact, to be more efficient and effective in terms of consuming it and not having such waste as we frequently have, particularly in the developed countries and developed world.

                        This whole issue of trying to reduce the amount of losses — the wastage — the amount impacted by storage losses, waste in the field, by not getting harvested adequately, by not getting transported adequately — particularly in many countries in the developing world. At the same time, in countries like the U.S., we have a lot of food wastage that occurs just out of our own refrigerators, out of our own food systems, where we buy food products, we don't consume them, we don't take care of them, we don't refrigerate them — and if we do refrigerate them, we lose track of them — we throw it out the back of the restaurant, we may try to donate it, but sometimes it's already expired in terms of its ability to be able to be consumed. There's a lot of waste in the system, and there actually are some major initiatives underway on the part of both corporate and university organizations to try to reduce the losses in the food chain, and that's an important part of this discussion.

Tom:                Dr. Boehlje, I want to stay with you for this next question, and Mary, if you would consider this as well: Economically, the U.S. has been the best place to farm, as you have written, based on its strong infrastructure and on its open markets. Do you think that that will continue to be the case in the future or should farmers be seeking new places to conduct business?

Michael:          We already see that occurring. We have significant expansion of production in agriculture, as everyone knows, in South America, Brazil, Argentina being particularly the case — significant expansion of agricultural production in Ukraine, and they are major competitors now to the U.S. We see it occurring in China, we see it occurring in Africa. So, we do see opportunities much more broadly in terms of farming than we used to. I can name a farming family here who has both a U.S. operation and a Brazilian operation. I actually know three families that have that kind of situation.

So, we are expanding agricultural production more globally. If you go back 30 years or longer, a crew chef from the former Soviet Union came to the U.S. to buy wheat to feed his people. Here we are in the middle of a cold war and he comes to the U.S. — his archenemy — to buy food. This has to be the ultimate indication of the failure of the system. Why did he come to the U.S.? Well, in a way, we were the only store in town. We were the only place where you had the opportunity to get the amount of wheat that he needed to feed his people. Now you can get that in a much broader base of geographies, in addition to corn, soybeans and other products.

 Now, the interesting dimension is that we're going to see farmers who are more geographically diversified in their production systems. We already see it in the specialty crops, where farmers in California have Mexican production as well because they can't grow what they need there. We see it happening in terms of other parts of the U.S., where farmers are in different geographic regions even across the U.S. I've got a potato grower friend who grows potatoes in nine states, 15 locations.

 We see it already happening in the U.S. We think it’s going to go into a more global perspective, and that's really an interesting question and issue because it has profound implications: If we geographically diversify production agriculture, how will the potential weather variability impact total supplies? Will we get diversification benefits? We don't know. But one would logically think that we do. So, will there be farming opportunities in other parts of the world that farmers — whether they be U.S., whether they be European, whether they be South American — ought to be seriously thinking about? The answer is yes.

Tom:                Mary Shelman, thoughts on this?

Land probably isn't the unit of natural resource that we should be looking at. I think water is, in the future, the way that we're going to frame farming operations.

Mary:              Well, I absolutely agree there are opportunities all over the world. Mike didn't mention Africa. I think that's the next frontier for farming, and they need a lot of strong technology and value chain development there to make that work. However, to come back to the opportunities in the U.S., I think they're still very strong, although it's a bit of a transition from the typical push mentality into one that's more based on getting the most value per acre, per animal, per unit of natural resource. Land probably isn't the unit of natural resource that we should be looking at. I think water is, in the future, the way that we're going to frame farming operations. You think about what happens with the tremendous growth of the Brazilian soybean industry — it's basically shipping water from Brazil to China. That's really how I think about agriculture in the world: removing water from one place to the other. There is also the New Zealand dairy industry, selling water basically through milk powders to China, to India, to other places in the world.

                        I think here that there are tremendous opportunities, but our farmers have to be much smarter in terms of all these technologies we were talking about, the different ways that they think about their business, and connecting to markets and figuring out where to get the most value from that water, from that land, and how to factor in the risks.

Tom:                Karl? Aidan? Thoughts?

Karl:                 One of the things that we haven't touched on much here is the efficiency of animal protein production. If you start looking at things that are going on around the world right now, aquaculture is one that will really get your interest. The development of recirculating aquaculture systems is full-steam right now. More of them are going into Norway — their production of fish. These recirculating systems are going to grow tenfold in the next five years.

Tom:                And those are land-based, correct?

Karl:                 Those are land-based systems, but they're very intensive when looking at protein production. We're talking about a system that's probably three to four times more efficient than any of the terrestrial animals we're used to working with. They're better than chickens, they're better than pork, they're better than beef by a long way. So those kinds of impacts are going to be tremendous when it actually comes to looking at animal protein and the way they're being developed. For us in the feed industry, the implications are gigantic.

Tom:                Thoughts, Aidan?

Aidan:              No.

Tom:                Nope. Okay. I do have one that I think you might like to address: Blockchain. This, by the way, comes to us from Simon Duke of Feedinfo.

Aidan:              You can thank him personally from me.

Tom:                What’s your opinion of blockchain and its potential for the animal nutrition industry?

Aidan:              Blockchain is one of the most exciting of the digital technologies. It's also one of the most difficult to get your head around. I suppose the bitcoin example is the one that most people are most familiar with, and it's the one that probably makes it easiest for people to understand: You have something which is this digital ledger where you can understand what's happening in the chain, but not see the individual actors or the individual people who are involved in the chain. I think that has tremendous implications for agriculture. Typically, as farmers, we have not liked people knowing exactly where our cattle come from. At the same time, when there's a disease, we want to be able to trace it back. We've not liked knowing who the people are who transform our food from when it's grown on the land to when we consume it. And, yes, again, if there's an E. coli outbreak and a child dies, we want to know where it occurred and how it happened.

Traceability is a fundamental part of our future. Recapturing the confidence of consumers is extremely important, and I think blockchain is the technology that allows us to do so in a manner that keeps us comfortable.

                        I think when you see companies like Walmart getting behind blockchain and using it in countries like China and being so impressed by its potential — and then they start taking it to the United States and elsewhere — I think you can see what the possibilities are. Traceability is a fundamental part of our future. Recapturing the confidence of consumers is extremely important, and I think blockchain is the technology that allows us to do so in a manner that keeps us comfortable. We're not giving away all of our secrets and, therefore, perhaps not trading our margins to the end food retailer, but at the same time making sure that something does occur. How fortunate that is that we can actually find out where that occurred, what it is that we need to do to stop it happening again.

Michael:          I think this issue of blockchain is a really important issue — sorry for interrupting — but let me just leverage those comments on food safety and traceability just a little bit further. A lot of people, when they talk about blockchain, think about it in terms of the financial markets and some other breaches we've had recently in the financial markets and personal security, et cetera, are really important. So that's where a lot of the common perspective is. But it's interesting how some industries are actually quite ahead of us in terms of using blockchain traceability. For example, the diamond industry is using it as a mechanism to try to trace and make sure that those diamonds that they're sourcing not only are true and accurate diamonds, their location and — back to Mary's points — are with the right credence attributes — that they are mined in the right way with the right work pros, with the right people. So, I think that this whole issue of traceability and food safety will be probably the biggest impact that blockchains have on the agricultural sector.

Tom:                Okay. We have time for one more question before we wrap things up, and let's begin with Mary, if you would. What are the opportunities for farmers to change the way they sell food? Are there specific ways in which farmers can view this as an opportunity to be more profitable or to gain even new markets?

Mary:              We talked about this growing fragmentation on the consumer end of it, that it's moving beyond just wanting cheap and accessible and safe food into things that align with values and other things around the specialty side. I think that does provide some opportunities at the farm level, first of all, just to be much more market-oriented and know where that profit potential is and basically growing what the market is interested in buying rather than what you want to sell. But not everybody can be direct-to-consumer. There are opportunities with technology now. We see the rise of some brands from the farm level. It starts out like a Laura's Lean Beef or Creekstone Farms or Pete and Gerry's Organic Eggs — things that come with some specialty proposition — that actually move all the way to the brand level. When I was in New Zealand last week, McDonald's had big banners in their stores saying, “We sell 100% free-range eggs.”

                        These types of changes are coming. If you look at the AmazonFresh website, you can buy hamburgers from a single cow. When you think about the implications of the supply chain for that and that differentiation, not everybody, clearly, is going to be able to deal with the market at the consumer level. But even at the customer level, the processor level that's buying in, the sustainability pushes inside of these companies, and also better understanding. Again, if you don't satisfy their consumer needs, it will be more about providing these products that have the exact kind of value or attributes that market wants.

                        I think, though, the challenge is that there's tremendous resistance to making those kinds of changes because our system has been set up to move big quantities of relatively undifferentiated products. I was speaking with a buyer of U.S. soybeans in a Southeast Asian country. He said, "We want to buy soybeans based on their oil content because we know how that breaks down in the value proposition." But the big processing companies want to sell soybeans based on whether it's, basically, color and size and the fact that it's this kind of bean and they really don't want to tell. So, it's finding these unique opportunities that are able to match that scale and finding those buyers that are willing to pay.

Tom:                Aidan, what do you see out there?

Apps on phones, websites, digital technologies, the ability to be able to see through cameras what's actually happening on the farm, to be able to see through blockchain what has actually occurred in terms of the way your food is processed — these are all just tremendous opportunities for farmers to engage directly with the end consumers of their food...

Aidan:              Well, Mary summarized it extremely well, which makes it difficult, but I'll maybe take a slightly different approach. I think that we are seeing very large changes in consumer behavior. You see that when they go to the grocery stores or supermarkets and they’re not going to the so-called “center aisles” anymore. They're not choosing to purchase the cornflakes, they're not buying food that, traditionally, was perhaps the macaroni and cheese that was extremely processed, for example, and they're looking for the “mom and pop” — as I call them — brands. These companies may not even have commonly recognized names. Consumers are looking for these companies they perceive as being more organic, more local and fitting with their ideals for food and the way they “vote,” as you put it earlier, Mary.

                        From my perspective, I think that's a massive opportunity for farmers to engage directly with consumers. Instead of farmers going to big food companies or medium-sized food companies, they can go directly farm-to-consumer. They can have a relationship directly with a consumer of their food. That can allow them, hopefully, to capture more value, so they can charge a higher price or just capture more value within the system and to, hopefully, adapt to what they find consumers are looking for. Maybe consumers are asking for questions that larger systems can't accomplish.

The massive opportunities, particularly, through apps on phones, websites, digital technologies, the ability to be able to see through cameras what's actually happening on the farm, to be able to see through blockchain what has actually occurred in terms of the way your food is processed — these are all just tremendous opportunities for farmers to engage directly with the end consumers of their food, and I think, eventually, that makes potentially a more profitable farming system.

Tom:                Dr. Boehlje?

Michael:          Yes, I think Aidan and Mary have really, really synopsized this issue quite well. Let me just put a broader context on it with some keywords. We're increasingly seeing this entire food production and distribution industry move very dramatically from a commodity orientation and a supply chain mentality to a differentiated product orientation and a demand-driven system. Those are very dramatic shifts in terms of what people have to do and how they do it, and the technology is increasingly available to get that done. Consumers are not buying food products. They want food consumption experiences, and that's a really different perspective on this industry than what we’ve had with the traditional producer commodity and what I sometimes refer to as the “produce and peddle mentality”: If I produce it, they will come. That is not the industry of tomorrow.

Tom:                Karl Dawson, thoughts on this?

Karl:                 Well, I guess I would agree with the whole concept here, but there is still a large change needed. I've been involved with programs for the last 15 years producing high-quality beef products with very specific attributes that we felt were of interest to the consumer and receiving good reviews from the consumer. But from a commercialization point of view, to date, those have been failures. We are not getting the story across in a way that allows us to get the feedback from the consumer and get the middleman to buy into the concepts we're making at the producer level or in the production. Alltech Angus was an example of a meat product: Succulent, very good reviews, and, quite frankly, we never could make that go because there was a barrier there between us and the consumer.

                        I see where that's coming from and the potential for doing that, but there's still a big hole in the middle in that commercialization chain that we have to take advantage of. Believe me, I'd love to see it go, because if you tell me what attributes you want in your beef, we can work on those things with our tools today.

The existing system is set up to be more commodity push, and that includes the processing sector. But we see now the advent of these nontraditional actors here: the investors.

Mary:              I might just come back to that because I think that's the same resistance that I was talking about there: Why we can't sell soybeans based on oil content rather than something else? The existing system is set up to be more commodity push, and that includes the processing sector. But we see now the advent of these nontraditional actors here: the investors. You have Bill Gates basically investing in Beyond Meat — alternate protein sources. You have Sergey Brin, founder of Google, investing in tissue culture beef. You have Jeff Bezos of Amazon now completely disrupting everybody's thought pattern by buying Whole Foods. So, hopefully, Karl, I think we're just at the breakthrough point on getting through. There are people in the system now that look at this and say our traditional food system is broken. Now, that's a rough thing, but they're coming with very innovative ideas, very disruptive ideas, and see a new future. And I think we're talking about what that new future is. Hopefully we're close to getting past that.

Tom:                Okay, we have just a few minutes remaining. What I'd like to do to conclude is to go around the panel and ask you to give us your closing thoughts on what viewers of today's discussion might want to consider their main takeaways from what they have heard. We'll begin with you, Dr. Boehlje.

Michael:          We’re certainly talking about an industry that's in a major transformation. In fact, we do programs called “Disruption” and “Chaos,” and that's where we are in this industry. It's been pretty tradition-bound in many cases. As just indicated in the previous conversation, parts of it are still tradition-bound. But there will be a profound transformation from outside the traditional players in the industry when we start doing more — putting together the pharmaceutical and the health industry within the nutrition industry. Maybe we're going to find that what happens is outside forces are going to be shaping up more than they have. When we put sensing technology out there, when IBM decides, which it has, that agriculture is the space where they ought to be spending some time and energy, not just at production, but across the value chain, that makes a big difference in this industry.

                        We’re going to see a lot of both big and small firms and organizations outside the traditional sources or the traditional players in the industry have a very disruptive impact on this industry.

Tom:                Dr. Dawson.

If I had to sum it up in one sentence: It's not your daddy's farm anymore.

Karl:                 Well, I think it's obvious from the conversation today that technology is going to drive a lot of different things. If you look at how we refer to the farmer today, I would change that to “agricultural technologist” rather than “farmer.” We're going to be bucking tradition, and that's one of the things that is a huge problem for a very conservative industry as we're moving forward. But if I had to sum it up in one sentence: It's not your daddy's farm anymore.

Tom:                Mary Shelman, takeaways?

Mary:             I think it's been a great discussion. In particular, the consumer has a much stronger vote today than ever before about what's happening on the farm. Therefore, you have to be market-oriented, and market-oriented not just in terms of thinking about the price of soybeans or the price of beef, but about the fundamental segments that can meet with the different value propositions around it.

                        So that's one piece, and the talent piece is absolutely essential. There are tremendous challenges, but even more importantly, there are tremendous opportunities in the next few years, and I think it's incredibly exciting time. But you have to be a little bit patient because, as Karl said, you can come up with a great product and a great proposition, but time might not be quite right yet. So how do you navigate this transformation that we're in and actually be able to balance looking toward the future while remaining very grounded today and having a successful business?

Innovators are the ones who are going to be successful — they're the ones who are going to survive and thrive. That's the farming of the future for me — innovation.

Aidan:              I think farmers of the future will be innovators. Until now, farmers have been good at learning from others, embracing technologies that others have, learning what methods they use and doing so successfully. In the future, my recommendation to farmers would be to buy yourself a passport, go travel the world, read as much as you can, learn as much as you can, and when you see innovations within reason, embrace them as quickly as possible. I think innovators are the ones who are going to be successful — they're the ones who are going to survive and thrive. That's the farming of the future for me — innovation.

Tom:                Aidan Connolly, Mary Shelman, Karl Dawson, Dr. Michael Boehlje, thank you all for joining us. It's been a fascinating conversation. We appreciate it very much and thank you for joining us.

Farming the Future was a live video panel discussion. To watch the recorded video and learn more about our panelists, click below:

<>Premium Content
Off
<>Featured Image
Farming the future: What's on the horizon?
<>Date
<>Featured Image License
Off
<>Image Caption
The future of farming includes automated machinery, food traceability and data providing unprecedented insights. What do those innovations mean for farmers and consumers? A group of agribusiness experts gathered to discuss the possibilities.
<>Soundcloud
The SoundCloud content at https://soundcloud.com/alltech-1/039-farming-the-future-a-panel-discussion is not available, or it is set to private.
<>Hubspot
<!--HubSpot Call-to-Action Code --><span class="hs-cta-wrapper" id="hs-cta-wrapper-da313af5-05f6-48aa-b6cb-784cf5d8310e"><span class="hs-cta-node hs-cta-da313af5-05f6-48aa-b6cb-784cf5d8310e" id="hs-cta-da313af5-05f6-48aa-b6cb-784cf5d8310e"><!--[if lte IE 8]><div id="hs-cta-ie-element"></div><![endif]--><a href="https://cta-redirect.hubspot.com/cta/redirect/745395/da313af5-05f6-48aa-b6cb-784cf5d8310e" ><img class="hs-cta-img" id="hs-cta-img-da313af5-05f6-48aa-b6cb-784cf5d8310e" style="border-width:0px;" src="https://no-cache.hubspot.com/cta/default/745395/da313af5-05f6-48aa-b6cb-784cf5d8310e.png" alt="Watch Farming the Future"/></a></span><script charset="utf-8" src="https://js.hscta.net/cta/current.js"></script><script type="text/javascript"> hbspt.cta.load(745395, 'da313af5-05f6-48aa-b6cb-784cf5d8310e', {}); </script></span><!-- end HubSpot Call-to-Action Code -->
<>Feature
Off
<>Primary Focus Area
<>Animal Nutrition Focus Areas
<>Article Type
<>Regions
<>Topics
<>Image Caption

The future of farming includes automated machinery, food traceability and data providing unprecedented insights. What do those innovations mean for farmers and consumers? A group of agribusiness experts gathered to discuss the possibilities.

Robert Walker: Agriculture and the internet of things

Submitted by vrobin on Fri, 10/20/2017 - 15:30

Luther:                        Robert Walker is CEO of Ireland-based KEENAN, an Alltech agri-brand and a pioneer in the internet of things for the farm. A KEENAN specialty is finding ways to pair its range of machinery with innovative digital technologies. Thank you for joining us.

Robert:                        Hi. Thanks.

Luther:                        Let’s start with defining “the internet of things.” What is it?

Robert:                        So, the internet of things is literally the future, where we have all the things that surround us connected via devices or connected to the internet. So, you have a connection between people and things, things and things, and people and people.

Luther:                        What would you say is the future of the internet of things?

Robert:                        There is a predicted spend on the internet of things of somewhere around $7 trillion to set up the infrastructure. So, it’s certainly a “big dollar” future, but it means that our houses, our cars, our cities, our environment are all going to become smarter.

                                    As Google chairman Eric Schmidt said, the internet is literally going to vanish all around us as the internet becomes integrated with our day-to-day lives. So, the world as we know it will become the internet, and we won’t be interacting with the internet in the same way as we have up until now.

Luther:                        In what ways is the internet of things reaching the farm?

Robert:                        Up until now, the internet of things has mostly been focused on houses — smart homes, smart cities and wearables — we all know the wearable technology we can have in our exercise watches. But there’s been very little focus on the farming side of smart tech. However, smart farming is really the area that is probably the most exciting for most tech companies. There are companies like Intel, Vodaphone and IBM clamoring to try and get into the ag-tech space because there are literally so many things in agriculture that can be connected. The gains that you can have from agriculture are just massive.

Luther:                        KEENAN has been a leader in this space and ahead of its time. Tell us how KEENAN can capitalize on the internet of things.

Robert:                        We’re used as a bit of a poster child for the internet of things now, I think, because we were one of the first to innovate in that space. But what we’ve done practically — let’s just get down to practicalities here — we have a device in the side of our mixer wagon — our mixer wagon mixes a total mixed ration (TMR) diet — that device weighs or collects the data from the weigh cells of the wagon and the number of revolutions that that mixer wagon goes through. In other words, it knows how much feed has been put in the wagon and how processed the TMR is in that wagon. It then transmits that data via the cloud to a hub in Ireland — we also have other hubs being set up currently — and algorithms in that hub determine if we’ve overfed or over-processed that TMR. There’s a tolerance set in those algorithms that notifies a team of nutritionists if the machine has deviated from what it was supposed to have done.

                                    We can then immediately contact the farmer and tell the farmer what happened, or go directly to the machine and make adjustments in real time. The most exciting part is that we have the data from what was supposed to have been fed and the actual performance results. We can then provide real insights to that farm to help them improve productivity. At the end of the day, productivity is what it’s all about.

                                    The KEENAN system is designed to improve efficiency. By efficiency, I mean that we can get the same amount of milk or beef from less feed, or more milk and beef from the same amount of feed. So, it’s about having efficient farms, which obviously drives the profitability of farmers.

Luther:                        When Alltech acquired KEENAN in 2016, you became the CEO. What have you learned in the last year with KEENAN?

Robert:                        First, that ag-tech is going to profoundly change your business model. You see some of the business models — for example, John Deere — where what they sell today is vastly different from what they were selling maybe five or 10 years ago. They are now selling bundled packages of technology and machine. They are selling performance. They’re not just selling steel anymore. We are doing the same. We have started selling a machine paired with technology and a consumable. That consumable is high-value nutrition. By pairing machine, technology and nutrition, we’re basically able to perform better on the farm.

                                    The second thing I’ve noticed in my year at KEENAN is that ag-tech is growing a lot faster than people think. We assume a lot of what we see at conferences are for the future. But those technologies are actually here today. Today, there are big changes. Google had their conference in San Francisco this week. Some of the things they launched were just mind-blowing. Those technologies are already here and can be used today on the farm. That’s very exciting.  

Luther:                        Expanding upon that: What is your realistic view for the future of the farm?

Robert:                        The farmer of the future is going to be connected via smart devices that are capable of gathering data, which can be analyzed and provide unique insights. There are two scenarios: The first is that these devices get so smart that we no longer need a nutritionist and agronomist to help us interpret it. I’m of a different opinion: I think that the more data we have — the more information and insights we have — the more we need people to help us interpret those results — or at least people to interpret how to put those algorithms in place.

                                    The smartphone of the future is a connection between animal, farmer, crop and experts. All are connected via the web and all are able to provide unique insights from analyzing huge amounts of data to improve profitability. At the end of the day, why would we do it if it wasn’t about profitability and productivity?

Luther:                        You state that we are in the midst of an agricultural revolution. What do you mean by that?

Robert:                        What I mean by that is that there have been three agricultural revolutions: The first was domestication of animals and crops. The second was the industrial era, when we went into mechanization, plant protection, products, fertilizers and agrichemicals as we know them today. This third era is one in which we’re using multiple devices — technologies — to leverage the data generated on the farm. That allows us to produce more from every acre of farmland and produce more from every animal.

Luther:                        You described data as the new electricity. What do you mean by that analogy?

Robert:                        When electricity was discovered, it was absolutely revolutionary; it changed everything. Electricity changed the way in which we live. It brought about heating, cooling, lights and so on. It was truly a transformative technology. The same thing is happening with data and ag technology. It is going to completely revolutionize how we operate on the farm, how we tend our crops and how we tend our animals. That is going to have a transformative effect on how we profit off those animals. It will be transformative to the way in which we operate and, of course, how we feed the world and nourish the population.

Luther:                        What are the benefits to a farmer of tapping into cloud-based tools?

Robert:                        The fundamental benefits are productivity, profitability, convenience and speed. For me, it’s got to be about the productivity and profitability piece because if it’s not going to be beneficial to a farmer’s bottom line, he’s not going to want to do it. There are a lot of technologies out there that possibly need to be improved upon to show benefit, but there are also a lot of technologies out there that are already showing massive improvements in productivity and profitability.

                                    Those technologies really need to be looked at quickly by farmers. They need to be adopted quickly. Farmers really need to be embracing this new era. It is sometimes difficult because there is so much coming at them — so many apps, so much data, so many people trying to sell them things. But, wading through all of that, there are real jewels within ag- tech that can transform a farmer’s bottom line within days.

Luther:                        Given recent cyber events, are there any concerns regarding security of cloud-based tools or the internet of things?

Robert:                        There absolutely are major concerns about security, and that’s an area that I believe needs to be worked on at great length. It’s something that concerns us, and we take it very seriously. We invest in the best technologies for our system, and we’d expect the same from other reputable vendors. There’s a lot of work that needs to be happening and is happening from the big companies out there like the Googles and the IBMs.

                                    Even from our perspective, we’re very vigilant and believe that it is vital that we protect our farmers’ data and our own data, because it impacts food security around the world. I also think that governments are going to get more involved with this because food is, in the end, a major security risk. It’s something that can be leveraged. So, the U.S., as a nation, needs to protect its food source. As food gets more connected via technology, it’s somewhat the responsibility of the government as well.

Luther:                        How are agriculture and food control changing in a world of big data?

Robert:                        Big data and technology allow us to link all the players — the key stakeholders — in the industry. Up until now, it’s been segmented: farmers have looked after their farm; milk processors have looked after their milk; supermarkets looked after selling their product. Big data and technology allow us to link all of that so the entire food chain becomes one continuum. That means that your supermarket can very easily know the traceability — the source — and the way in which food has been produced all the way up the chain. That provides the consumer with many more guarantees. The consumer has a much bigger voice and knows where his food was produced, how it was produced and whether the companies and people that produce it are reputable and can be trusted. It is already transformative.

                                    KEENAN, for example, is working with supermarket chains in Ireland and in the U.K. to ensure that the beef is produced sustainably; that the beef is produced in a way that is humane, friendly to the environment and friendly to the animal. And we’re also able to look after the farmers so that his interests are then conveyed to the supermarket. So, the continuum is vital.

Luther:                        With the rising billions in China, India, Africa and other parts of Asia that are moving into a middle class with more requirements and demands, would you say that the internet of things is the key, or one of the keys, to meeting that demand?

Robert:                        It absolutely is. The internet of things shrinks the world so we can communicate directly with that end customer, whether the end customer is in China, India or right here in the U.S. So, the food chain between consumer, supermarket, processor, farmer, supplier to the farm, all that shrinks. We can better understand what that consumer wants, what that consumer needs, and innovate around that. It gives a lot more power to the farmer and the ag sector to be able to deliver what is required down the line. It more evenly spreads the responsibility and the balance of power across the entire chain, whereas right now, some would argue that responsibility is slightly more eschewed in terms of some of the players in that food chain. I think a lot of farmers would believe that they’re the small players in that chain, but I think in the future they’re going to have a bigger voice.  

Luther:                        How will the future of farming affect the average consumer’s kitchen table?

Robert:                        The average consumer is going to be able to understand much better where the food comes from. They’re going to understand the environmental impact of the food and the way in which it was produced. They’re going to have more choices. They’ll be able to have food that’s healthier and that’s more in tune with their ethics and their preferences.

Luther:                        What’s the most fascinating trend you’re keeping an eye on these days?

Robert:                        There are so many fascinating trends out there, but one that is really changing the way we think of things is the trend of visual technologies. Up until now, we’ve always measured things on farms and in laboratories in terms of their chemical makeup. Now, with digital recognition technology, we’re able to look at feeds and understand what could be in that feed. We know if it’s more homogenous. We might be able to predict what its nutritional value is. We can look at animals through facial recognition technology and understand what their behavior patterns are.

                                    Who knows where that technology can go? We all know that the human eye can detect things almost intuitively. So, if we can do that through a machine, imagine what can be achieved. Farmers seem to have a second sense when it comes to understanding things like the health of animals or whether a feed is good. A lot of that comes from their visual sense. If we can replicate that through technology, I think it’s very, very exciting. So, visual technology for me is probably the most exciting part.

Luther:                        What would you say to a farmer who is apprehensive about technology or about these trends — or change, perhaps — in this vision that you have? What are the benefits for them? And then maybe address some of their concerns as well.

Robert:                        Firstly, I think we — meaning the ag industry — have been responsible for using jargon and launching products that are really complicated to use. So now we’ve really been trying very hard to make that a much simpler exercise. If you think about consumers around the world with general household products, when they buy that product, it’s in part because it’s easy to use. Why shouldn’t it be the same for agriculture? So, we’re to blame for not making technology easy to use and easy to understand.

                                    From a farmer’s perspective, they really should be adopting these technologies and they should be trying them out as quickly as possible. They need to be educating themselves. They need to be ahead of the game. Most farmers I know are pretty tech savvy. They have very technically enabled tractors. They use smartphones. They use computers. They know what’s going on. So, it’s not that there’s a lack of education, but maybe there’s a lack of exposure to some of these technologies. My advice is that they just jump in there, try them out, assess them for themselves. Also, hold the salesman accountable for the results that they have on the farm. If they don’t see results, that’s fine. Move on. It’s not a lifetime commitment.

Luther:                        As with many technologies, there is often a false start where a technology promises to transform an industry, but sometimes it takes a while for it to get to that point. So, it sounds like you’re saying that we are now at a point where these technologies are ready to have an impact not only today, but going on into the near future.

Robert:                        Absolutely. It is happening today, and the technology is ready. There are wonderful apps and technologies out there that are transforming agriculture right now. There have been some false starts. There will still be some false starts. I think that what we’re going to see is a consolidation of the industry. There are so many little players out there that have small ideas that are great, but when paired with bigger ideas can make a better end product.

                                    So, lots of little pieces together make a much better package for that farmer to use and to invest in. Consolidation is already happening with some of the bigger companies buying some of the smaller technologies. It’s in the newspapers every day. And, as that consolidation happens, the technologies are going to become more robust. They’re going to be more intuitive. They’re going to rely on other ancillary technologies to make sure that they work.

                                    The overall user experience is just going to get better and better.

Luther:                        What do you enjoy most about your work?

Robert:                        I enjoy the fact that we have, at the moment, a machine — which is a very tangible item a farmer uses on an everyday basis and that he has been using for the last 40 years — that is suddenly given a new “lease on life” through technology and can greatly improve performance from where it was.

                                    I like the fact that we can bring these new solutions to farmers and help them be more profitable. At the end of the day, we’re only here because of the farmer — because of the demand for food. So, we are, in many ways, a service provider to that farmer and to the feed industry. I like that idea of being a service provider for the betterment of farming, consumers and the world population.

Luther:                        Robert Walker, CEO of the Alltech agri-brand KEENAN. Thank you for your time.

Robert:                        Thanks very much. I had fun.

Robert Walker spoke at ONE: The Alltech Ideas Conference (ONE17). To hear more talks from the conference, sign up for the Alltech Idea Lab.

<>Premium Content
Off
<>Featured Image
<>Date
<>Featured Image License
Off
<>Soundcloud
The SoundCloud content at https://soundcloud.com/alltech-1/032-the-internet-of-things-robert-walker is not available, or it is set to private.
<>Hubspot
<!--HubSpot Call-to-Action Code --><span class="hs-cta-wrapper" id="hs-cta-wrapper-ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302"><span class="hs-cta-node hs-cta-ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302" id="hs-cta-ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302"><!--[if lte IE 8]><div id="hs-cta-ie-element"></div><![endif]--><a href="https://cta-redirect.hubspot.com/cta/redirect/745395/ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302" target="_blank" ><img class="hs-cta-img" id="hs-cta-img-ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302" style="border-width:0px;" src="https://no-cache.hubspot.com/cta/default/745395/ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302.png" alt="Sign up for Alltech Idea Lab"/></a></span><script charset="utf-8" src="https://js.hscta.net/cta/current.js"></script><script type="text/javascript"> hbspt.cta.load(745395, 'ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302', {}); </script></span><!-- end HubSpot Call-to-Action Code -->
<>Feature
Off
<>Primary Focus Area
<>Article Type
<>Regions
<>Topics

Dr. Mark Lyons: Meeting the demands of the rising billions

Submitted by vrobin on Sun, 08/13/2017 - 13:52

Luther:                        I’m joined by Dr. Mark Lyons, global vice presid ent and head of Greater China at Alltech. He received his master’s degree in brewing and distilling and a Ph.D. in solid state fermentation at Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh, Scotland. Thank you for joining us.

Mark:                          Thank you.

Luther:                        What are your thoughts on the rising billion?

Mark:                          I think it’s really the “rising billions” because, as we delved into this, we really started to see what is transpiring in the world and how, from my perspective living in China for the last five years, we’re only at the start of a major change.

                                    We think about the transformation of China in the last 30 years, and what’s taking place is that only 10 percent of the Chinese population has about $10,000 of disposable income in their pocket. By 2030, that will increase to 35 percent of the population. That 25 percent increase is bigger than the American population. So, if we think about that and then we think about India, we think about many other developing nations, we think about the continent of Africa, and to a certain degree we even think about the transformation through technology of our own population and millennial spending and the next generation coming after them — there’s an absolute transformation in terms of the way our economy is going to work and the way our companies need to respond.

Luther:                        How do you define the rising billions in terms of that group of people?

Mark:                          By 2022, there will actually be more people in the middle class than the poor class. So, I think we’re starting to see that there’s a group of people who have money to spend and who are interested in different types of products. Their access to technology and the transparency that that brings is extraordinary, and some of the platforms they’re using, particularly “fintech,” or financial technology, are really transforming these individuals. So, these are people for whom there’s an aspirational element. There’s a yearning to have certain types of products. And so, I think we need to market to these individuals in a different way than we traditionally do and realize that the market is much, much bigger than our traditional market or our domestic market. This is going to take different types of thinking. It’s also going to take different ways of transacting.

Luther:                        So, how are we going to connect these people to the internet? What technologies are going to be used?

Mark:                          Yes, there are some really exciting projects. There’s Project Loon, which is essentially launching a bunch of mini satellites and ways for people to be connected. Just the emergence of accessible smartphones, so people are able to get access to the internet. Some of the estimates are that by 2030 we’ll have about 50 percent of the global population connected to the internet. I think that’s probably conservative. I think this is all going to happen a lot faster.

                                    Some of the projects that people are looking at — you’ll virtually be able to access the internet anywhere in the world at low cost. Already in China we’re using social media to pay, so Alipay, or a lot of other pay programs through WeChat, through social media. That’s transforming things, because people who don’t even have a computer are accessing information, but they’re also paying for products. In Africa, we’re already seeing that just through text messages people are paying for products, and that’s been in place for over five years.

Luther:                        How will the rising billions disrupt the global economy?

Mark:                          Look at the approximately 325 million Americans and the position of the number one economy globally. I think we have to accept the fact that there are countries that obviously have much bigger populations than us that are going to be — even if they’re half as affluent — their economies are going to be bigger. Obviously, there’s a lot of focus on China — but all the ASEAN countries, India, again Africa as a region — you’re talking about populations that dwarf ours. So, we have to start to switch our mindset from being so focused on our domestic market to start to think like these more nimble, smaller countries that are really export-focused.

                                    We’re originally from Ireland. Everything is about export. Everything is about the global network and being connected. I think, as a country, America needs to reposition itself to being a leader in technology, perhaps being a leader in innovations, and that those are the types of things that we’re going to lead the way in.

Luther:                        What should businesses be doing to prepare for the arrival of these additional billions of people coming online?

Mark:                          I think it’s really a way of seeing these as market opportunities and getting out there, visiting. Educate yourself, educate your people, start to think globally, and not in the closed mindset that we have.

                                    Unfortunately, I think politically and globally right now, there’s a lot of pullback. There are a lot of people pushing against globalization, but I think it’s just something that’s inevitable. Once that door opens, and how connected people are, if we don’t get involved in that, we’re going to be sitting on the sidelines.  As a very global company operating in almost 130 countries, we can’t think any other way. I always encourage people: Get out there. See what these markets are like. Find the ones that you think fit you, and your business, and your culture, and go there and make it happen.

Luther:                        What about in a local economy? You’re a global company. What about for a business that may be more local? Do you see an effect on that from the billions coming online? Is there something they should be doing?

Mark:                          I think the other aspect of it is that you see some of these markets, and you see similar challenges that they’re going through. I think there’s often a lot that can be learned.

                                    It really is incredible to see in China people going to Starbucks with no money — they get 10 people in line and no money changing hands. Isn’t that amazing? China’s probably going to be the first cashless society and also the largest country in the world.

                                    Are there things like that that maybe we could bring back here and we could innovate? Are there new technologies? Are there new ways that we could do things? I think that’s probably one of the parts that we find most interesting traveling around the world. You see something in some place, and you see applications for it in another.

                                    I think the local part is going to be critical because people are searching for — Europeans call it “provenance.” We call it “origin” or “traceability.” People want authentic products. They want local products. So, all of that is very, very important.

                                    Yesterday, we had a beer festival. Five thousand people came through. More than 5,000 people. What were they looking for? They were looking for beers that were local. They were looking for products that were local. That’s the real draw. The story…and that traceability is something that local companies will have as an advantage over global big brands, and that’s something they need to exploit.

Luther:                        You addressed the fact that in China they are exchanging currencies cashless. In what ways are the rising billions coming online that are different than the Western world?

Mark:                          I think that there’s obviously this whole discussion around leapfrogging, and the fact that they’re not having to go through all the steps. So many countries have just forgone having phone lines and all these networks that are very expensive and expensive to maintain. They’re skipping a lot of those infrastructure steps because they’re just able to go straight to cellular. Leapfrogging brings a certain expectation of speed, an expectation of change.

                                    The biggest difference is that they’re so much more open to change and anticipating change, whereas we’re often pushing back against change and wanting to have things stay the same. That’s something that concerns me, because I think that if you’re anticipating change, then you’re much more innovative. You’re much more likely to come up with new ideas. That’s something that I think we need to be aware of — that change is a good thing. Change is something that we should want, and we should be driving it forward.

Luther:                        Are there potential negative consequences to the rising billions coming online?

Mark:                          I think that geopolitical shifts and power shifts in the economy will cause eruptions. They’ll cause confusion. I think there’s a big feeling in this country of people who feel like America is number one. Wait a minute, what if we’re number two?

                                    Number one in what, and what is it that we’re really after here? I think repositioning America as a leader is really important. Are there negatives? I think that’s going to be down to how we handle the situation. There are incredible positives. The number of people that are going to be lifted out of poverty, and poverty being something that is of the past is very much an idea that we can be thinking about and realize is going to happen. That’s a tremendous positive; that can’t be a negative.

Luther:                        How will the rise in billions affect the average consumer?

Mark:                          I think that we’re going to see a total transformation in terms of the number of people in this middle class. In Asia today, about half a billion people would be considered in the middle class. By 2030, we’re talking about 3.2 billion.

                                    For the average consumer, I think that just transforms everything. We’re going to live in a world that’s totally different. The communication we’re going to have with these individuals around the world is going to be extraordinary. And so, I think for the average consumer, and we’re definitely going to see it in the next generations coming through, they’re going to grow up with a totally different mindset. I think that’s supposed to be the exciting part for us, but also maybe one of the challenges.

Luther:                        Amazon is always referenced for having taken advantage of the long tail effect. Do you see the rising billions as a similar effect to the long tail, maybe not as high in income, but because of the quantity that are coming online, the opportunity there for disruption and for profitability and companies that take advantage of it?

Mark:                          Absolutely. I think we’ve seen this now with companies that are operating in these very large markets. The population is so big that you can come up with something, make not that much money on it, and you’ve got such a scale that once you start to get out of your own country, your competitiveness is just off the charts. Certainly we’re seeing that in China. I think we’re already seeing that in India with some of the domestic companies. Once they start to step out of their own markets, they can really take a dominant position. That’s going to be something to keep an eye on.

                                    Already we’re facing a situation that seems like we don’t have that many companies that are really dominating the space, and that may even become fewer when we look at it globally. So, I think that’s something that many, many companies are seeing as a big opportunity.

                                    On the other side, I think back to the local idea, how do we come up with ways that we can play in those niche spaces that could be much more profitable? So, I think that in certain regards there are going to be dominant players, but sometimes those spaces are not that profitable. We’ve seen in many cases that, in certain niche areas that are very specialized, you can be making far less revenue and similar profits.

Luther:                        What other facts about the rising billions do you find surprising or intriguing or that you’re seeing that the average person in America or in the Western world may not realize?

Mark:                          I think the big message is that these individuals have the same types of desires and interests and want experiences and products that are probably not dissimilar to what we would want.

                                    I think their spending patterns are quite different than ours. I’m amazed in China. Beijing is such an expensive city. I look at the salaries that my colleagues make and the salaries that friends make, thinking, “How are people living on this?” You realize it’s because they’re not buying a lot of the types of things we’re buying. They don’t have two, three, four cars. They don’t have a television in every room. They think of debt in a very different way. And so, there’s a whole array of surprising things about these individuals and their spending patterns, but I think there’s opportunities within that.

                                    At the end of the day, I think our similarities are much greater than people anticipate. People care about the same types of things. Their family, certain interests, feeling important, feeling recognized. Those things are fairly universal.

Luther:                        Dr. Mark Lyons is the global vice president and head of Greater China at Alltech. Thank you for joining us.

Dr. Mark Lyons spoke at ONE: The Alltech Ideas Conference (ONE17). To hear more talks from the conference, sign up for the Alltech  Idea Lab. For access, click on the button below.

<>Premium Content
Off
<>Featured Image
<>Date
<>Featured Image License
Off
<>Soundcloud
The SoundCloud content at https://soundcloud.com/alltech-1/dr-mark-lyons-the-rising-billions is not available, or it is set to private.
<>Hubspot
<!--HubSpot Call-to-Action Code --><span class="hs-cta-wrapper" id="hs-cta-wrapper-ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302"><span class="hs-cta-node hs-cta-ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302" id="hs-cta-ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302"><!--[if lte IE 8]><div id="hs-cta-ie-element"></div><![endif]--><a href="https://cta-redirect.hubspot.com/cta/redirect/745395/ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302" target="_blank" ><img class="hs-cta-img" id="hs-cta-img-ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302" style="border-width:0px;" src="https://no-cache.hubspot.com/cta/default/745395/ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302.png" alt="Sign up for Alltech Idea Lab"/></a></span><script charset="utf-8" src="https://js.hscta.net/cta/current.js"></script><script type="text/javascript"> hbspt.cta.load(745395, 'ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302', {}); </script></span><!-- end HubSpot Call-to-Action Code -->
<>Feature
Off
<>Primary Focus Area
<>Article Type
<>Regions
<>Topics

Moocall: Successful calving & sleep!

Submitted by vrobin on Sun, 07/23/2017 - 11:09

To listen to our entire conversation with Emmet, click on the player.

Tom:                           Emmet Savage is co-founder of Moocall, one of the 10 finalists in The Pearse Lyons Accelerator program and one of two out of Ireland. He has founded numerous companies in the construction, demolition and fashion sectors. Moocall, however, is quite different from all those. And, under Savage’s leadership, the Moocall team has expanded into 38 countries in 28 months. Thanks for being with us, Emmet.

Emmet:                       Thank you. Nice to be here, Tom.

Tom:                           So, what inspired this technology?

Emmet:                       It all came about when a guy who used to work with me on the demolition side came to me with an idea. He was a farmer’s son, and they lost a heifer and a calf, which was really a huge loss to the family both emotionally and financially. So, he had an idea that there was really something specific in the movement of the cow’s tail when she’s close to giving birth. He had done some really early stage testing on it, and then he brought it to me. I was able to put some seed capital behind it, and we proved the concept really quick. So, it was that original loss that spurred the thought process around how we could solve this problem, and Moocall was born.

Tom:                           Is this “tail switching” something that’s commonly known in the cattle industry?

Emmet:                       It would definitely be commonly known by the farmers that a tail moves in a specific way. No one had actually gone into scientifically looking at what those specific movements were. But, when we started to research the tail movements, we realized very quickly a contraction makes the tail move a specific way. So, our device measures contractions and can then accurately give a farmer an hour’s notice as to when the calf is going to be born.

Tom:                           Your website says, “Enjoy healthier cows and calves, more sleep and increased profits.” What is Moocall, and how does it deliver healthier cows, more profit and, above all, more sleep?

Emmet:                       Sure. Obviously, healthier calves are a direct result of the farmer being there when the birthing process is happening. In a lot of cases in calving, there are problems with getting the calf out, or there could be a leg back. There are all sorts of problems. At that point, if the farmer is there, he can then make a decision to intervene himself or to call the vet. So, in doing that, we’re increasing profits on farms, delivering healthier calves and helping the farmer.

                                       And sleepless nights are something a lot of farmers will understand. They set alarm clocks every few hours to check on their herd. Most times when you’re walking down to check on the herd, there’s nothing happening. So, it’s a wasted trip, and sleep deprivation happens. With Moocall, you have it on the cow’s tail. You go to sleep soundly with the knowledge that Moocall will wake you when you need to be awakened and not unnecessarily.

Tom:                           Could you describe exactly what the device looks like? It slips onto the tail, correct?

Emmet:                       It doesn’t actually slip on. What we have is a ratchet system that you’re going to open up. You wrap it around the cow’s tail. You put the strap back through the ratchet. We put it in what we call “hand tight,” which is basically pushing the strap in, and then you give it two or three clicks of a ratchet, which tightens it onto the tail just enough to hold it in place. It’s like a turtle shell, and it’s actually designed on the concept of a turtle shell because there are no hard edges for the sensor to catch when it’s on a cow’s tail. So, it’s a turtle shell-shaped green sensor that has a little ratchet strap for attachment.

Tom:                           And so, it sends data to a smart device — a cellphone, an iPhone or whatever, right?  

Emmet:                       Yeah. It sends to any phone that can receive a text message. That’s good enough to operate our device.

Tom:                           What if the farm is located in a weak area for cell service?

Emmet:                       Yeah. We’ve pretty much got around that as well. We have a roaming agreement with Vodafone, our connectivity supplier. These big telcos have lots of tier partners around the world. So, for example, in America, AT&T and a lot of other cellphone providers work with Vodafone and allow Vodafone’s internet of things (IoT) service to roam on to their services. So, in most cases, our device will roam on to another network provider because of a deal done higher up the chain with Vodafone themselves.

                                    We’re also sending a very small piece of data. It’s not really like a text message. We gather all the data. We send it to a server in the cloud and that then sends the text message. So, when it’s a smaller piece of data, it’s easier to get out. In nearly all cases, our devices will work even with the lowest cellphone signal.

Tom:                           Electronics are not known to be very moisture-friendly. What if it rains?

Emmet:                       We have a fully watertight product. We conformal coat all our electronics inside the device, and then we have an ingress protection rating on the device as well. So, it’s fully waterproof. It can even be washed in a bucket of water. There are no problems with moisture or rain.

Tom:                           Can more than one of these sensors be used at the same time?

Emmet:                       Oh, absolutely. The unit itself is fully transferrable. We recommend one unit for every 30–40 head of cattle depending on your calving pattern. If you’re calving year-round, it might go as high as one to 60 or 70 cattle. But if you’re compact calving or really tight calving, it might go as low as one to 20. So, what we ask our farmers to do is go out, have a look at what one or two sensors will do for them, and then they make the decision themselves how many they need.

Tom:                           And how about accuracy?

Emmet:                       We’re at 95 percent accuracy across all commercial and pedigree breeds. So, it’s only that 5 percent we miss that are the really easy calvers. So, if you can imagine a really old mature cow putting out a really small heifer calf, her contractions don’t hit the levels that would be required to trigger the device. So, in that case, that’s the 5 percent, and nearly always that calf will be born quite easily without stress, anyway.

Tom:                           Do you consider Moocall technology an industry disruptor, and in what way?

Emmet:                       I think it’s a huge disruptor. When we started to research what was available to farmers in calving detection, there was very little. There were very expensive inserted probes that use a base station. These were generally $4,000–$5,000.

                                    Then there were the old-fashion cameras, which are very expensive and only will work if the cow is facing in the right direction. They’ll never pick up an internal problem in the cow. And, obviously, the alarm clocks we mentioned earlier!

                                       Moocall retails at $299. So, that’s very disruptive against an offering that’s more than 15 times more expensive. And we’re accurate, easy to use. People understand what we’re doing very, very quickly. So, hugely disruptive. The internal probe company that had been operating in Ireland had literally moved out within a year of us launching, and we haven’t seen them since. So, we’re obviously disrupting a little bit!

Tom:                           Do you have other devices under development, ready to roll out?

Emmet:                       We sure do. What I’m really, really excited about is, we have a product going to launch in September. It’s an IoT device again, and it will be in the heat detection and breeding management space. This device will quite simply text you when a certain cow enters her standing heat. That is hugely valuable to any farmer. Once he knows she’s in heat, he can then get his artificial insemination guy or a bull. When the cow doesn’t cycle again three weeks later, we know that she’s pregnant and the exact due date of the calf she’s having. So, all that information will be available.

                                      The sensor is going to auto-populate the breeding management system as well, which is key for all the farmers. You will have a smartphone in your hand with all of your breeding information on it. You will have inputted none of the data. It’s all auto-populated by the sensor. We spoke about disruption a minute ago. This is equally as disruptive. The offering at the moment out there for heat detection again is base station-related and is in the region of $10,000–$15,000 for a system for 50 head of cattle. We’re going to come in one-tenth of that. And, it’s fully mobile.

                                       So now the beef guys have a full solution. Today, they’re using tail paint and very primitive ways of measuring heat. We will give them an option to adopt high-accuracy technology at a very affordable price.

Tom:                           It sounds to me as though there is just a wave of technology entering the agricultural realm. Big changes.

Emmet:                       Huge changes. I see a lot of changes in what I call our area of expertise, IoT, the ability to use the cell phone network to transfer data back to the farmer’s phone so he can act on making informed decisions. I see it in the accelerator that I’m involved in, such as magnetic spraying that reduces drift. You magnetize the water. You break up the particles much smaller. They stick to the plants you’re trying to spray and reduce chemicals and reduce drift.

                                       What you see in the accelerator is probably cutting-edge for what is happening, but there’s so much happening. It’s all about data. It’s all about recurring revenue. And it’s all about making the farmers’ lives easy.

Tom:                           And what about your work do you enjoy most?

Emmet:                       I just love the fact that I’m in a startup. Nothing ever goes as planned. There are so many highs and lows. You’ve got financial concerns and you’ve got staffing concerns. All these problems pop up at a minute’s notice. It’s never, you go in and you think, “Today is going to be clear. I’m going to get loads done.” But it’s that unpredictability of a startup that I love and the challenge of getting over these problems that arise on a daily basis. Keeps you on your toes!

Tom:                           Moocall co-founder Emmet Savage. Thank you so much for joining us.

Emmet Savage spoke at ONE: The Alltech Ideas Conference (ONE17). To hear more talks from the conference, sign up for the Alltech Idea Lab. For access, click on the button below.

<>Premium Content
Off
<>Featured Image
<>Date
<>Featured Image License
Off
<>Soundcloud
The SoundCloud content at https://soundcloud.com/alltech-1/moocall-successful-calving-sleep is not available, or it is set to private.
<>Hubspot
<!--HubSpot Call-to-Action Code --><span class="hs-cta-wrapper" id="hs-cta-wrapper-ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302"><span class="hs-cta-node hs-cta-ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302" id="hs-cta-ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302"><!--[if lte IE 8]><div id="hs-cta-ie-element"></div><![endif]--><a href="https://cta-redirect.hubspot.com/cta/redirect/745395/ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302" target="_blank" ><img class="hs-cta-img" id="hs-cta-img-ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302" style="border-width:0px;" src="https://no-cache.hubspot.com/cta/default/745395/ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302.png" alt="Sign up for Alltech Idea Lab"/></a></span><script charset="utf-8" src="https://js.hscta.net/cta/current.js"></script><script type="text/javascript"> hbspt.cta.load(745395, 'ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302', {}); </script></span><!-- end HubSpot Call-to-Action Code -->
<>Feature
Off
<>Primary Focus Area
<>Animal Nutrition Focus Areas
<>Article Type
<>Regions
<>Topics

Big data on the farm: Too much, too soon?

Submitted by vrobin on Mon, 07/17/2017 - 15:48

Big data is ready for the farm. But is the farm ready for big data?

Agriculture is the least digitized major industry in the United States, according to a recent study by the McKinsey Global Institute.  

Farmers sometimes struggle to see the benefits of new technologies. Some have been burned by investments that they feel did not deliver, making them reluctant to commit and invest again, according to Alltech chief innovation officer Aidan Connolly.

In Connolly’s view, however, agriculture, with its inefficiencies, offers greater opportunity for improvement than any other industry.

And there is recent evidence that the sector is now racing to catch up at a supercharged pace, spurring innovation that is virtually transforming farming.

However, as drones, sensors, artificial intelligence, autonomous vehicles, smartphones and high-speed mobile internet gather and analyze data, growers and producers are struggling to manage the resulting deluge of information.

Eighty-four percent of U.S. farmers who responded to a recent Stratus Ag Research (SAR) survey said they have high-tech equipment that captures reams of data from livestock, planting, harvesting or crop protection operations. Yet only 42 percent of them are actually transferring this information to a field data management software program for further analysis. 

Connolly has observed that technological solutions are sometimes over-engineered, capturing a lot of information that the purchaser doesn’t see as beneficial. He suggests that these technology companies would benefit by narrowing the focuses and applications of their innovations.

“Entrepreneurs are throwing out a lot of information and analysis and hoping some of it will stick, most of which doesn’t, and indeed it ends up distracting from the real value that they provide,” he said

Establishing that value creates an enormous frontier of opportunity.

For technological entrepreneurs like KEENAN, the Irish feed mixer manufacturer and Alltech acquisition, those circumstances invited a response: expansion into farm data analysis.

“We've been involved with the internet of things (IoT) since about 2011,” said Conan Condon, director of KEENAN’s InTouch. “At that stage, there wasn't much connectivity. There were about 12 million connected devices. Today, there are about 6.4 billion connected devices. So you can see the growth that has happened within six years.” 

Today, more than 2,000 livestock operations, ranging in size from tens to thousands of cows, use the InTouch system, a live review and support service that helps producers apply actionable intelligence to their operations, giving them the benefit of KEENAN’s access to data on more than 1.3 million monitored cows.

40.PNG

Data-gathering technology represents a profound departure from “the way it’s always been done.” John Fargher is a fifth-generation Australian livestock producer and the co-founder of AgriWebb, a late-stage startup producing farm and livestock management software.

“I identified the problem on our own family farm, which is a simple one: farmers and ranchers running their business off pencil and paper,” he said. “We can now track all the inputs and all the outputs across that business and then facilitate data-driven decisions.”

Who sees my farm’s data?

2016 saw investments in data-driven agriculture fall 39 percent from 2015, according to the SAR report.

“It plateaued for one reason: the inability of everybody to share data,” said Condon.

“We're very open to sharing data,” he continued. “Always have been and always will be. Too many people are holding onto what they think is their farm data, and the farmer is not benefitting from the sum of all data.”

Some farmers express concerns about the security of their information. How might companies and government officials exploit and profit from their data? Who gets to access it? Who owns it? Does having data somewhere in the cloud leave it vulnerable to attacks and misuse?

All these questions remain largely unanswered, even as the technology pushes ever forward. Yet Connolly believes it is essential that data clients “are willing to trade this level of privacy in return for gaining greater value from what they are using.”

“Certainly, individual farm data is first in importance, especially to make proper variable-rate decisions and to build data on individual fields,” said SAR survey project manager Krista Maclean. “Better long-term decisions, however, may come from incorporating aggregated data into the decision mix.”

Farmers responding to the SAR survey consider data specific to their farm more useful than aggregated data. But, as application of the technology evolves, observers are seeing room for both.

Aggregated data can predict weather, report the condition of soils and crops, and alert to the presence of pests on a sub-regional basis.

“However, if the data is to be truly actionable and valuable, we need to drill down to the farm level,” said Connolly. “There is no reason to dumb down our offering by trying to make it into something that is not specific to the decisions being taken on an acre-by-acre or even an inch-by-inch basis.”

He suggests machine vision technology as an example. The monitoring and analysis of cattle and pig behaviors, especially in large-scale operations, is challenging, but vital. Pig and cattle behavior can provide information about the barn environment, food and water adequacy, health, welfare and production efficiency. Imaging-based inspection and analysis can offer an automated, non-contact, non-stress and cost-effective option.

“It appears to be capable of generating a benefit of up to $300 per cow,” Connolly said. “It is inconceivable that a producer would not consider using this technology if they are competing with a neighbor who has a $300 benefit over them on a per cow basis.” 

Grape growers and winemakers are also gravitating to high-tech solutions, contracting with firms like the drone-based SkySquirrel of Halifax, Nova Scotia, to keep watch over their grapes using a unique disease detection technology.

“Grapevines infected with disease produce lower quality wines and can cost a winery up to $40,000 per hectare in lost profits,” said Emily Ennett, marketing and business development manager of SkySquirrel. “Our disease detection is 100 times more efficient and significantly more accurate and cost-effective than scouts on the ground.”

SkySquirrel also provides triple-calibrated “Vine Vigour” zone maps for fertilizer applications and to improve the aromatics of wines, drive homogeneity and optimize harvest segmentation.

Big data, from seed to salad

A key driver of farming’s embrace of digital technology is the depth of transparency enabled by data collection and analysis.

Increasingly, Connolly said, consumers — millennials, in particular — are demanding this traceability in their food, such as: where and how it was produced; its environmental footprint; and its benefits with respect to the welfare of animals and farm workers.

“With that in mind, I believe that these technologies allow farmers to connect directly with the end user in a manner that can only be good for both sides, giving the consumers more confidence in the food chain and hopefully allowing producers/farmers to capture more of that value for themselves,” said Connolly.

With the arrival on the farm of big data, the work of the 21st century grower or producer is rapidly being fine-tuned like never before. Out with the guesswork and the questions left open to interpretation, in with unassailable hard facts, an entirely new degree of precision and a sense of reassurance that only a decade ago might have been dismissed as wishful thinking.

"I see a lot of changes in our area of expertise, IoT; the ability to use the cell phone network to transfer data back to the farmer’s phone so he can act on making informed decisions,” said Emmet Savage, co-founder of Moocall, a calving sensor that signals a farmer’s smart device when a cow is going into labor.

“There’s so much happening,” he continued. “It’s all about data. It’s all about recurring revenue. And it’s all about making the farmers’ lives easy.”

<>Premium Content
Off
<>Featured Image
<>Date
<>Featured Image License
Off
<>Feature
Off
<>Primary Focus Area
<>Animal Nutrition Focus Areas
<>Crop Science Focus Areas
<>Article Type
<>Regions
<>Topics
<>Programs and Services

AgriWebb: No more pen & paper farm management

Submitted by vrobin on Sat, 07/15/2017 - 11:02

To listen to our entire conversation with John, click on the player.

Tom:                           John Fargher is chief operations officer for Australia-based AgriWebb. The company is among 10 startups selected from a field of more than 180 applicants to take part in The Pearse Lyons Accelerator program. We thank you for joining us, John.

John:                           Thank you for having us.

Tom:                           What is AgriWebb? How did it get started?

John:                           AgriWebb is a farm management and herd management software. We’re specifically focusing on the livestock industry, particularly red meats, so sheep and cattle producers, based down in Australia.

                                    I’m originally a fifth generation livestock producer myself, so I identified the problem on our own family farm, which is a simple one: farmers and ranchers running their businesses off pencil and paper. They’re recording their data down in that notepad. So, we built an app to digitize those farm records. We can now track all the inputs and all the outputs across that business and then facilitate data-driven decisions through reports and insights.

Tom:                           Does this enable you to carry a device throughout the operations and record data and so forth?

John:                           That’s absolutely right. We’ve built an app that you can run on your mobile device. It works right in your pasture, in the field. You can be recording all of your business information. And then when it hits that connection, it’s going to sync to the cloud. And through the portal, you can actually then start doing some insights and some reporting. We present that data back to make those data-driven decisions, increase the efficiency and productivity of that business.

Tom:                           You know, a number of the folks who have come in for an interview for these podcasts have mentioned in one way or another how important data has become in farming. And it seems to me as though you’re catering to that interest.

John:                           Yeah. That’s right. We’re looking at these businesses, some of them multimillion dollar businesses. And they are run through archaic methods. You know, “Why are you making these decisions? Well, ‘cause dad and grandpa did it that way.” And now, there’s a desire and a need for these businesses to do more with less, increase those efficiencies and start making data-driven decisions to really refine the process, track those performances and then make decisions based on what’s performing. We look at all other industries that have benefited from the use of data and through the use of these process improvements. And that’s what we’re doing in this space.

Tom:                           A number of the people who we have spoken with have mentioned the rise of “big data” and how it has become so important in agriculture. Would you agree with that, and is that really what AgriWebb addresses?

John:                           Yeah. Absolutely. For us, there are two aspects to that. The first one is the data collection and management at the farm level to help that producer manage their business, make those data-driven decisions, track inputs and outputs, and drive their business forward with software results.

                                    The second component is across the supply chain. The data now shows that the consumer is driving a lot more demand for traceability in their food for security, health reasons, health risks. So, this information we’re collecting, sure, it’s useful for a farmer to help their business, but it’s also useful because it’s been collected on-farm. That data can then go through the supply chain into the processing so the meat processors can really secure that traceable supply chain.

Tom:                           Will that information in some way be made available on the consumer end?

John:                           I think in time there’s a huge opportunity for that. We’ve got to get through a few stages. But it’s about linking it from farm to that next stage and then really having that end-to-end solution, which may be made up of other products and solutions along the way. But I think that’s where the industry is going to go. And I think that that’s what the consumer is going to demand.

Tom:                           How does this systematic collection of data change a farm’s operation?

John:                           It’s all traditional decision-making, typically. It’s decisions made because that’s the way dad it or that’s the way grandpa did it. So, what we’re doing is decisions made off what’s performing and what’s not: the inputs, the outputs, looking at yields, looking at cost. The decisions now are run purely on what the data is telling them. It’s a big shift from the day-to-day activities to actually relying on these tools and then having trust in these tools to deliver a better result.

Tom:                           So, it really tightens the efficiency?

John:                           Absolutely.

Tom:                           How is the industry responding to your product?

John:                           It’s a very, very exciting time to be in the ag-tech space. There’s a shift in demand, and people are starting to look for tools that can help their businesses. There’s also a shift from these younger generations coming back in. They may have had other careers in other areas, and they’re now driven back to agriculture. So, they’re looking for tools that exist in other industries to help with their businesses.

                                    We see a huge increase in awareness of the technology, and a prime example is, our best ROI on our marketing and sales is through digital and social media. So, people are looking for it. It’s a perfect age bracket between the sort of 30- to 50-year-old. So, I think the timing is perfect for these solutions.

Tom:                           What was it like for you to learn that AgriWebb is one of only 10 out of 180 finalists in The Pearse Lyons Accelerator program?

John:                           Well, we’re obviously very, very excited to be a part of this program. You know, we’re the only company out of Australia to be selected. On a global stage, it gives us great awareness. It opens up opportunities to look at new territories, look at what’s happening out there in the market, understand how other producers are running their business. So, for us, it’s going to be a big step in helping us shift, and develop, and really look to expand.

Tom:                           Since you grew up in the business looking at the need for this data and now your own company is producing it, that must be enormously satisfying.

John:                           Yeah, it is. It’s very, very exciting to see our own family business developing and evolving and also now to see some of our customers that have been with us for 12 or so months and the results that I’m seeing. They’re getting an increase in productivity by up to 18 percent. To see those results and deliver those results for our customers is very rewarding.

                                    We’re all about trust and building relationships with our customers. That’s proven by the fact that we haven’t had any customers leave us through the journey. And so, I think it’s about building trust and lasting relationships and showing that we can deliver some good results for them.

Tom:                           John Fargher is chief operations officer for Australia-based AgriWebb. We thank you for joining us.

John:                           Thank you so much.

John Fargher spoke at ONE: The Alltech Ideas Conference (ONE17). To hear more talks from the conference, sign up for the Alltech Idea Lab. For access, click on the button below.

<>Premium Content
Off
<>Featured Image
<>Date
<>Featured Image License
Off
<>Soundcloud
The SoundCloud content at https://soundcloud.com/alltech-1/agriwebb-no-more-pen-paper-farm-management is not available, or it is set to private.
<>Hubspot
<!--HubSpot Call-to-Action Code --><span class="hs-cta-wrapper" id="hs-cta-wrapper-ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302"><span class="hs-cta-node hs-cta-ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302" id="hs-cta-ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302"><!--[if lte IE 8]><div id="hs-cta-ie-element"></div><![endif]--><a href="https://cta-redirect.hubspot.com/cta/redirect/745395/ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302" target="_blank" ><img class="hs-cta-img" id="hs-cta-img-ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302" style="border-width:0px;" src="https://no-cache.hubspot.com/cta/default/745395/ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302.png" alt="Sign up for Alltech Idea Lab"/></a></span><script charset="utf-8" src="https://js.hscta.net/cta/current.js"></script><script type="text/javascript"> hbspt.cta.load(745395, 'ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302', {}); </script></span><!-- end HubSpot Call-to-Action Code -->
<>Feature
Off
<>Primary Focus Area
<>Animal Nutrition Focus Areas
<>Article Type
<>Regions

MagGrow: Reducing chemical spray drift 80%

Submitted by vrobin on Sat, 07/08/2017 - 10:38

To listen to our entire conversation with Gary, click on the player.

 

Tom:                           We’re talking with one of the 10 finalists in The Pearse Lyons Accelerator program, MagGrow. Gary Wickham is CEO and founding member of the Irish ag-tech startup. We wanted to talk with Gary about the company’s technology, which uses magnetic fields to reduce the waste of water in spraying crops. We thank you for joining us, Gary.

 

Gary:                           Thank you.

Tom:                           So, tell us about this technology.

Gary:                           MagGrow, as you said, is an Irish-based company. We were set up in University College Dublin in an incubation center to solve this particular problem around pesticide spray drift. It’s a consistent problem worldwide.

                                    Using conventional technology, 70 percent of water sprayed is waste. There’s $60 billion of pesticides sold worldwide, but 70 percent does not reach its target.

                                    The way farmers solved the problem of drift, driven by increased regulation, is to add water to the droplets, and they use coarse nozzles. All that does is create a secondary problem. You get runoff into the soil, rivers and streams, and you get massive contamination. So now, you’re wasting water and you’re creating waste.

                                    So, only 30 percent of what they spray goes to the crop. All farmers are very clever. They know that if you use smaller droplets, you get better efficacy. Conventional technology does not deliver both. Up to now, we didn’t have a solution to control drift and also give you excellent coverage, until MagGrow came along.

Tom:                           So, you’re employing magnetic fields to make this happen. How does that work?

Gary:                           Effectively, electromagnetic fields. So, it’s actually similar to the principles of generating electricity, where you pass currents through magnets.

                                    What we do is use permanent rare-earth magnets, the strongest magnets known to man. We retrofit a tractor boom, and we pass the fluid through that under turbulent flow conditions. That creates a positive-negative charge into the liquid. We basically transform the physical properties of the liquid, making it easier for those droplets to attach to the crop. Then, we can use the off-the-shelf nozzles for smaller droplets that are readily available, but farmers don’t use them because of drift. But, with our technology, you can spray without the drift. In fact, we reduced drift by over 80 percent using small droplets.

Tom:                           I was going to ask you, if you were to do them side by side, conventional versus the MagGrow method, what would you see?

Gary:                           We’ve done that worldwide with the major research centers and our customers worldwide as part of our validation. It’s a patented new technology, so that was vital. But, basically, you’ll just see a massive cloud with conventional technology, and you can hardly see the spray using the MagGrow system. We have a video on our website, which clearly shows that, on maggrow.com.

Tom:                           This sounds like a bonafide agricultural technology disruptor.

Gary:                           Absolutely. Hugely. Because if $60 billion of chemicals have been sold annually and growing…70 percent of that is not needed.

                                    And, of the ingredient they spray, 99 percent of it is water. In California, Africa and Asia, we’re using over 80 percent of the total available water for agriculture right now.

                                    The world needs 70 percent more food. Africa needs 300 percent more food. We need sustainable innovation, using less to grow more, and that’s where MagGrow steps in.

Tom:                           You mentioned that you manufactured a device that’s attached to a tractor boom. What about portability? Backpack sprayers, that kind of thing.

Gary:                           Yeah, we did two water products. One for greenhouses. Backpack for greenhouses. The fluid is piped into the system, and it goes through a MagGrow magnetic manifold. We basically then use the small nozzles again.

                                    We have customers in East Africa who are the fourth- and fifth-biggest flower growers in the world that are using 50 percent less water, 50 percent fewer chemicals. They’re getting uniform coverage under the leaf as well as above the leaf and less disease pressure because there’s less humidity in the room.

                                    And again, they are problems that we can solve.

                                    Finally, we’ve developed a product for the small farm holder, which is 500 million farms worldwide. This is really exciting because they’re the poorest of the poor. We’re using a technology in East Africa right now that’s produced 300 percent higher yields because they’re working off a low base, using the same amount of chemicals they currently use right now because we make the chemical last four times longer with small droplets. Current technology would just waste and blow away. With our system, it’s very efficient, and we allow them to use six-nozzle systems instead of a one-nozzle system. We are trialing that with the World Bank, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and the Dutch government and other interested parties in East Africa right now.

Tom:                           Was it a challenge to make it cost-effective to bring the technology to the point where it’s affordable even to the small farmer?

Gary:                           For the small farmer, basically, they use a simple knapsack, which is $40. The air system is $1,000, but you don’t need one for each farm.

                                    We’re using a pay-per-spray model for those small farm holders to take the (in)affordability away. Basically, what we do is we supply the equipment under license to an agent who is selling the inputs to them. We make sure the input is of the correct quality because you need to have the correct chemicals that are not diluted. Then we train the agent to spray for the farmers. We’re getting 300 percent higher yield for the same money. Africa needs 300 percent more food. And we’re saving 50 percent water.

Tom:                           I’ve read that attracting U.S. investors is a desire of many an Irish startup. What does it take to attract American investment?

Gary:                           We, from the very beginning, were solving a problem, not developing a technology and trying to find a problem. I think that’s a big distinction. We had a problem to solve that was worldwide and universal in a market that’s worth over $8 billion. So, that attracts the big U.S. investors, the size of the market. They also look at the team.

                                    This is my second startup. My previous startup is now a $60 million business that I set up myself. It serves apartment business that’s operating all over Europe. I exited it two years ago to try and set up MagGrow, which is what we’ve done successfully. I brought a team of people that have over 50 years of collective startup experience as well as multinational experience.

                                    You can have a wonderful product, but you need to have a world-class team. Then, you’ll need a business model that makes sense to the investors. So, we were very clear working with large customers, working with the leading research centers to validate our technology, get the patents in place and then start selling direct so that we could control the sales process, to get customers doing the early adapting, doing field demos and then find local distributors to scale and partner.

Tom:                           There were in excess of 180 applicants for The Pearse Lyons Accelerator program. What was it like to get that e-mail, or phone call, or letter in the mail telling you that you were one of the 10?

Gary:                           It was fabulous. It was fantastic because, actually, since we invented this technology, Alltech was on our radar, and we were trying to get to the top people in Alltech because I knew our technology would interest them as they’re in the crop protection space, especially in the biologics space, which is opposite to the petrochemical-based pesticides. With those products, too much of it gets blown away, so it’s not affordable for our farmers. The holy grail is those biologics for use for farms; you don’t even need to wash the crop. MagGrow can solve that problem.

                                    I knew I needed to get in front of them. To be actually selected and now going to the mentorship program, having a very good mentor, getting access to their network, their channel partners, and now we’re working with them all over the world…so we were absolutely delighted and chuffed to achieve that.

Tom:                           For the listener whose focus may be more on the consumer end than on the producer end, how would you say that your technology, MagGrow technology, affects the average consumer’s dinner table?

Gary:                           There’s a number of ways we help the consumer. One, for the people that work in agriculture, we’re making their lives safer. They’re not breathing in these products because it’s going straight to the crop. We’re stopping the 70 percent waste going into our rivers and streams. We’re not contaminating. Pesticides blow into other fields and cross-contaminate. It’s called a minimum residual level problem. So, we’re not cross-contaminating other food with other pesticides. We’re making sure it only goes to the crop and nowhere else. So, water is not contaminated. Water is cleaner and healthier.

                                    And, because you need fewer inputs, we can drive the cost of food down. That’s affecting the consumer in terms of having higher quality food, better use of scarce resources and making it more affordable when the world needs 70 percent more food.

Tom:                           Gary, what would you say you enjoy most about your work?

Gary:                           Myself and the team are very passionate about what we do because the world, as I said at the beginning, needs 70 percent more food, and it’s using 80 percent of all water. There’s a massive challenge over the next 30 years: 2 billion more people on this planet.

                                    We get up every day excited because we know we’re doing our bit to solve some of the biggest food and water challenges this world is going to face, and we’re working with small farm holders. That makes us feel good every day.

Tom:                           Gary Wickham, CEO, founding member of MagGrow. Thank you so much for being with us.

Gary:                           Thank you.

 

Gary Wickham spoke at ONE: The Alltech Ideas Conference (ONE17). To hear more talks from the conference, sign up for the Alltech Idea Lab. For access, click on the button below.

<>Premium Content
Off
<>Featured Image
<>Date
<>Featured Image License
Off
<>Soundcloud
<>Hubspot
<!--HubSpot Call-to-Action Code --><span class="hs-cta-wrapper" id="hs-cta-wrapper-ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302"><span class="hs-cta-node hs-cta-ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302" id="hs-cta-ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302"><!--[if lte IE 8]><div id="hs-cta-ie-element"></div><![endif]--><a href="https://cta-redirect.hubspot.com/cta/redirect/745395/ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302" target="_blank" ><img class="hs-cta-img" id="hs-cta-img-ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302" style="border-width:0px;" src="https://no-cache.hubspot.com/cta/default/745395/ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302.png" alt="Sign up for Alltech Idea Lab"/></a></span><script charset="utf-8" src="https://js.hscta.net/cta/current.js"></script><script type="text/javascript"> hbspt.cta.load(745395, 'ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302', {}); </script></span><!-- end HubSpot Call-to-Action Code -->
<>Feature
Off
<>Primary Focus Area
<>Crop Science Focus Areas
<>Article Type
<>Topics

Paul Groenewegen: Transforming nutrition through the food chain with algae

Submitted by vrobin on Sun, 07/02/2017 - 10:22

To listen to our entire conversation with Paul, click on the player.

From fish to humans: Algae's impact throughout the food chain 

Luther:                        Paul Groenewegen is the director of innovation and nutrition at Masterfeeds, an Alltech company. He’s here to talk with us about how algae might transform the way people and animals obtain essential nutrients. What are the benefits of algae?

Paul:                            Well, it’s a great question, Luther. The main benefits of algae are to provide a very sustainable, renewable source of the essential omega-3 fatty acids we hear a lot about in the industry, in consumer press. The main essential fatty acid that we’re going after with algae is DHA. So, we hear about the omega-3 fatty acids that we need to increase our omega-3 fatty acid intake, but the true fatty acid we need to consume is DHA, traditionally consumed through fatty fish, marine fish.

                                      So, how marine fish get this DHA-enriched meat is by eating as they go further up the food chain, starting with algae, the DHA. The algae go into the tissues of one species of fish that’s consumed by another, all the way up to, for instance, having pieces of marine salmon that are high in DHA.

                                      We always say that, you know, our mothers always told us that it was good to have fish once a week. And I believe on our food guides — I know the Canadian food guide indicates — that we have to have a meal of fatty fish at least once a week, and that’s to get the DHA. That’s where we’re coming from, from an algae perspective. So now, we have a sustainable source of nutritionally enhanced food that provides DHA from algae.

Luther:                        What are some important ways algae production can disrupt the status quo?

Paul:                            The main way we’ve traditionally received or utilized DHA in the food chain is through fish oil and fish meal that were harvested from the ocean. Utilizing algae that are produced in a very controlled, sustainable fashion, we now have a renewable source of DHA to enhance food products through meat, milk and eggs that is not depleting world stocks of fish.

                                      That’s the true disruptor: How do we maintain world stocks of fish while producing these larger quantities of a very sustainable, very digestible, very good source of food that once fed to animals enhances the DHA content of meat, milk and eggs?

Luther:                        So, what you’re saying is, instead of going from further down the food chain, we’re going up to a source, and we can either consume that or —through feeding to other animals — consume it when we consume those animals.

Paul:                            Absolutely. As I mentioned earlier, fatty fish, marine fish that we consume to get DHA in our diets, they have to consume the algae. So, we’re just circumventing that, and now we can put DHA into terrestrial animals — layers, pigs, chickens, etc. — that we can then consume and have a DHA-enriched source of terrestrial food (i.e., meat, milk and eggs) that we traditionally haven’t had before.

 Beyond nutrition: Algae in energy and baby formula

Luther:                        Algae has been a buzzword in the biofuel industry. Can you give me some ways in which it is disrupting that industry?

Paul:                            Yeah. The key component is algae. There are thousands of species of algae that you can grow under specific conditions to harvest carbon dioxide, which the algae then convert into fats, which then can be harvested and used in biofuel. By utilizing algae, it does give us a renewable source of energy. Whether it’s economical or not at this stage of the game is a whole other discussion, but it does allow for sequestering carbon into a fuel source.

Luther:                        Fascinating. What are some other product applications for algae?

Paul:                            Oh, the product applications for algae are widespread, from food sources (that) different parts of the algae can be used and extracted for, from cosmetics to all different kinds of food sources.

                                      If we think about human infant formulas, algae have been grown for years to produce DHA that then goes into human infant formulas. And for those listeners out there who have young infants, if you do have some infant formula in your house, take a look at the label. You’re going to see DHA on the label. In most cases, that will come from algae.

Luther:                        What items out there can algae replace?

Paul:                            The main items that they can replace from a food perspective are fish oil, fish meal and some different types of oils.

                                    Obviously, algae can produce different types of oils at different levels depending on how they’re grown. And you can replace oils for cosmetic reasons. You can replace oils for biofuel reasons. You can replace protein sources if you grow algae to produce protein.

                                      Obviously, from a nutritional perspective, we can utilize algae to produce a number of different products that can then displace typical products that we use to extend the overall lifespan of our more traditional products: from an oil perspective, for instance, or from a cosmetic perspective. And we can continue to grow algae very quickly, very economically. And it’s very sustainable. And it’s a renewable resource. 

Growing algae 

Luther:                        Can you bring us up to date on the status of Alltech’s algae research?

Paul:                            Our algae research has allowed us to register the technology across the globe in a number of countries, allowing us to make very specific claims on the enhancement of meat, milk and eggs with DHA. Regulatory bodies around the world stipulate that we have to have efficacy trials. And all the research that we have done globally has pointed directly to the fact that when you feed All-G Rich® to chickens, pigs, dairy cows and a number of other species that we’re doing research on now that we do enhance the DHA content of the meat, milk and eggs that they produce.    

                                      We are also looking at positive attributes to animal health from a welfare perspective and just an overall health perspective in the animals.

Luther:                        What of the future challenges of growing algae commercially?

Paul:                            How we grow it is extremely important.

                                      People think of algae and see pond scum and layers of algae, or we hear about algal blooms in the Gulf of Mexico, for instance. That’s not the type of algae that we’re talking about.

                                      The big focus that we have now is growing very specific strains of algae under very controlled conditions to give us the very specific product we need.

                                      Algae are incredibly good at cleaning up the environment, and it just concentrates whatever contaminants you’re trying to clean up, and that’s one thing we’re not trying to do. We’re trying to grow algae very specifically to give us a very specific end product to enhance human food and animal feeds.

Luther:                        Are there challenges with the rising billions who are moving into the middle class (China, India, other parts of Asia, Africa) with the demand that’s going to be placed and meeting that demand in terms of production?

Paul:                            Oh, absolutely. And as the middle class continues to grow and as our world population continues to grow, we have to produce more food that’s very nutritious. And traditional global stocks of DHA through fish and fish oil are not only decreasing, but they’re not going to be able to meet the demands that are coming down the pipe.

                                      By utilizing fermentation technologies that allow us to grow algae in large quantities of very specific strains that produce very high-quality human food and animal feed technologies, that’s going to fill that gap as we grow up through the global population of the 6 to 7 billion; people are going to reach the 9 billion mark and are going to have that good sustainable food source as well.

Luther:                        What are the new markets (you’ve addressed some of those) for algae that it’s either disrupting or it’s starting from scratch or are new markets that it might be emerging into?

Paul:                            What we see is, we can utilize these technologies through algae. The biggest one I would say is functional foods and enhanced foods.

                                       At Alltech, we’re about enhancing food to better people’s lifestyles down the road and utilizing algae to produce functional foods for infants and the elderly.

                                      There are also some applications from a DHA perspective looking at different health conditions that, as we improve our human health, it’s going to have a positive impact on the health care system so we can utilize these technologies to have an overall benefit to society.

The health benefits to algae 

Luther:                        You’ve touched a lot upon DHA and its definite health benefits. Are there any specifics that DHA actually addresses in terms of our health, that it promotes health, or it may be a condition that it helps to treat or to improve?

Paul:                            We know that DHA is required in infants for brain development.

                                    If we think about our brain, it’s a very fatty substance, and we require a lot of DHA fat in our brain for membrane integrity. So, as young children are developing, they require DHA in their diet to develop the brain. There are cardiovascular issues in adults, there are eye issues, and DHA has a positive impact.

                                      I think from a sports perspective, concussions are a big concern in football and hockey. Being a Canadian, yes, hockey — we follow it very closely. And knowing that a lot of sports players run into concussion issues, I truly believe that utilizing DHA for sports injury repair is something that’s coming down the road as well.

                                      Just think about it: You get a concussion, your brain is damaged. You need to replace and rejuvenate the membranes of your brain. Some of the research is showing that this is going to have a huge impact.

                                      So, it’s brain development in human infants. I believe there are impacts on brain repair through sports injuries or automobile accidents or whatever injury. People fall, and they hit their head sometimes. So, there’s an application there, as well as cardiovascular disease. That’s all part of the omega-3 concept and increasing our omega-3s and overall improving human health.

Luther:                        What opportunities are there on the horizon? What do you see either today or tomorrow or maybe an interesting fact we haven’t touched upon when it comes to algae?

Paul:                            The biggest impact we’re going to have is: How do we produce large enough quantities at economical rates and then have those technologies registered to be used for animal and human food products?

                                      Our regulatory bodies have to look at these conditions extremely closely so that we can move fast enough so that these technologies can replace depleting stocks of the traditional feed stocks or food stocks that we have to meet the demands of the growing population in the world. So, that’s going to be the biggest roadblock: How do we scale up production fast enough and get acceptance through the industry to utilize new technologies? We have to adopt these technologies not only from a regulatory perspective, but from an application perspective as well.                  

 

Luther:                        And, finally, bringing this back home, how do algae affect the average consumer’s kitchen table? You’ve talked a lot about DHA. Other than just DHA, are there other ways that it’ll affect the average consumer, their kitchen table, their health, the food they eat?

Paul:                            Yeah. By enhancing the food that consumers eat, we know we have a very safe supply of ingredients, low in contaminants. Global regulatory agencies and governments around the world are watching the food we eat more and more to make sure there are no contaminants in there.

                                Utilizing a technology like algae that’s grown under very specific conditions allows us to produce a much more consistent and much safer human food product.

                                As well, there are potential attributes not only looking at the fatty acid component of algae, but maybe some of the other structural components that are coming down the pipe that we can say, by utilizing the structural components of algae, the carbohydrates in algae, the protein in algae, we can enhance our overall diet, broaden our spectrum of nutrients and ingredients that we consume to give us a healthier population.

Luther:                        Paul Groenewegen, director of innovation and nutrition at Masterfeeds , an Alltech company. Thank you for your time.

Paul:                            Thank you.

 

Paul Groenewegen spoke at ONE: The Alltech Ideas Conference (ONE17). To hear more talks from the conference, sign up for the Alltech Idea Lab. For access, click on the button below.

<>Premium Content
Off
<>Featured Image
<>Date
<>Featured Image License
Off
<>Hubspot
<!--HubSpot Call-to-Action Code --><span class="hs-cta-wrapper" id="hs-cta-wrapper-ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302"><span class="hs-cta-node hs-cta-ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302" id="hs-cta-ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302"><!--[if lte IE 8]><div id="hs-cta-ie-element"></div><![endif]--><a href="https://cta-redirect.hubspot.com/cta/redirect/745395/ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302" target="_blank" ><img class="hs-cta-img" id="hs-cta-img-ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302" style="border-width:0px;" src="https://no-cache.hubspot.com/cta/default/745395/ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302.png" alt="Sign up for Alltech Idea Lab"/></a></span><script charset="utf-8" src="https://js.hscta.net/cta/current.js"></script><script type="text/javascript"> hbspt.cta.load(745395, 'ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302', {}); </script></span><!-- end HubSpot Call-to-Action Code -->
<>Feature
Off
<>Primary Focus Area
<>Animal Nutrition Focus Areas
<>Article Type
<>Regions

Aidan Connolly: Accelerating innovation

Submitted by vrobin on Sun, 06/18/2017 - 09:49

To listen to our entire conversation with Aidan, click on the player.

 

Tom:                As Alltech's chief innovation officer, Aidan Connolly is responsible for the commercialization of Alltech's global research efforts. And as a company vice president, he oversees corporate account strategy. He led the implementation of The Pearse Lyons Accelerator, a late-stage agri-tech accelerator, and he joins us to talk about it. Thanks for being with us.

Aidan:              Thank you.

Behind the scenes of the first Pearse Lyons Accelerator program

Tom:                First, who originated the idea of establishing this accelerator program?

Aidan:              I think it's actually hard to remember exactly where it starts. I know the genesis, as always, came from Dr. Lyons himself. He has tasked us with trying to make the ONE conference the biggest, the greatest, the reason to come to Lexington in May, and obviously 4,000 people have responded to that. But this accelerator was to help people like himself, back 20, 35 years ago, starting their own businesses to have the help that they need to be successful.

Tom:                Okay. And we'll get into what you're looking for in just a minute. First of all, Alltech has partnered for this program with Dogpatch Labs of Dublin. What does each company bring to the project?

Aidan:              Well, Alltech, for those not familiar, is headquartered here in Lexington, Kentucky. We employ (approx.) 5,500 people, and we're in (approx.) 130 countries. So, clearly, from an agricultural perspective, from a food production perspective, we've got a very big footprint.

                        Conversely, Dogpatch is all about startups. It's all about people with ideas. Usually, they start on their own. Maybe a couple of people decide they're going to form a company, and they have been very good about helping those companies get started. We felt they would help us with the companies we selected, typically who are a little bit further down the process, but would provide some of that mentoring and help that we were looking for.

Tom:                So you put out this call for accelerator applications, and you got quite a response. What did it look like?

Aidan:              To put it in context, we got 183 applicants from 38 countries. In the agricultural technology field, that would already make it the number one program in the world. So just overnight, it became the number one program. And Dogpatch has connections with Google, and they have connections with many of the top organizations in the world as well. So, clearly, they brought something to the table. But I think there's a lot of attraction for these startups and partnering with Alltech and seeing that as part of their successful future.

Tom:                183 applicants and you had to pare this down to 10. It must have been quite challenging.

Aidan:              We did. It was a big task, and I think some dropped off fairly quickly, as can be the case. But I still think we had about 150 really good applications, which is remarkable. And when you're looking at them, you are looking to think, “Is this the next Alltech?” It was very exciting to be part of that, and I know that's a big thing to think about, but I think from their side as well. They were very happy to be evaluated on that basis. They were very excited about what they are doing.

Tom:                And we have potential investors coming to town to listen to their pitches. Any estimate of how many?

Aidan:              Well, the part of the conference that's specific to investors will be attended by almost 200 people who are uniquely coming to the investor part. Of course, there's a further 3,500, close to 4,000 people, who are coming to the conference for the overall conference. But, yeah, those 200 people would represent some of the bigger investors in agriculture and indeed in startups. They're not just coming from overseas, not just coming from California, of course, but even from Louisville and Cincinnati and Nashville. There are quite a lot of these startup hubs and investors who are both angel investors and venture capitalists really excited about the idea of being here.

Tom:                And does Dr. Lyons himself get involved while they're here?

Aidan:              He does indeed. In fact, he got involved with the program at every stage of it. Of course, he remembers starting Alltech in 1980 with $10,000. When you have somebody, a live person who actually built their own business, who has created something the size of Alltech, it's exciting, I think, if you're an entrepreneur, to imagine yourself being that person in the future.

Tom:                You touched on this earlier, but maybe you could expand on the benefits of this accelerator program?

Aidan:              Everybody sees things through their own eyes. But what I could say is, the 10 companies came back and said they had all raised an excess of $3 million each already, from finance rounds. So $30 million over 10 companies; they didn't really need more money. What they did need was help with sales and marketing strategy to find customers. So this was a very big deliverable for them. Frankly, being in front of 4,000 people in Lexington is a very big deal for them. What's better than when you have a great idea to get that level of exposure?

                        At Alltech's global footprint…that is something that if you're starting out with two people, 10 people, or 15 people, you just don't readily get access to. I'd say those are the three deliverables that they highlighted primarily that they saw coming from the program.

Finding a home for agri-tech and food innovation

Tom:                Dr. Lyons has suggested that Lexington should become a hub of agricultural technology innovation. Do you agree with that? Tell us what you envision.

Aidan:              I think Kentucky can sometimes underplay Kentucky's role in terms of agriculture. It obviously has a tradition of tobacco. It has a tradition of beef cattle. It recently has become a pretty big producer of chickens, soybeans, corn. From that aspect, there's a lot going on in Kentucky with some of the larger farms. But Kentucky is also very much focused, or has a tradition of small farms as well. And I think you see consumers looking increasingly for local, fresh, to know the name of the producer, the farmer, to be able to go and visit them. So I think opportunities for cheeses, et cetera.

                        What we're looking at in farming is basically 12,000 years of doing the same thing. And this digital disruption, this explosion in using sensors and using robots and using drones. It's changing every aspect of our life. But it's changing agriculture even more than it does the rest of life.

                        Lexington, and Kentucky in particular, has an opportunity to be front and center in this, as it wants to be. Alltech is doing its best to make sure that that happens. We would love for more people to join us. We're hoping to see people there at the conference. And if they come up and say, "How are we going to help make this happen together?” we're all ears; that's our goal.

Tom:                From what I gather talking to various folks from Alltech, there's a great deal of enthusiasm about the work at hand. And I'm asking everybody, "What is it about what you do that you enjoy most?"

Aidan:              Well, if you didn't have fun, then you weren't enjoying it, you shouldn't work for whoever you're working for, but you will find that Alltech people have a disproportionate level of enjoyment in their company.

                        Clearly, we as locals will know here, we do make our beer, our own whiskey and bourbon, and that does help of course, as well. But the food business has become a very exciting business to be in. Some people call it a sexy business, which it traditionally was not. For the last whatever number of years, certainly in my career, it never seemed as though my mom was proud of what I did. Now, when you ask her, she's very proud that I don't work for the traditional industries of banking or real estate or whatever else, because food is critical. And people understand, and have a relationship with what they're consuming. They want to understand more about it. They want to be healthy. They want to be natural. And they want to do good for their body and for the bodies of their children. So yeah, it seems to be really the right time to be in this business.

Tom:                Alltech chief innovation officer, Aidan Connolly. Thank you so much for joining us.

Aidan:              Thank you.

Aidan Connolly spoke at ONE: The Alltech Ideas Conference (ONE17). To hear more talks from the conference, sign up for the Alltech Idea Lab. For access, click on the button below.

<>Premium Content
Off
<>Featured Image
<>Date
<>Featured Image License
Off
<>Hubspot
<!--HubSpot Call-to-Action Code --><span class="hs-cta-wrapper" id="hs-cta-wrapper-ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302"><span class="hs-cta-node hs-cta-ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302" id="hs-cta-ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302"><!--[if lte IE 8]><div id="hs-cta-ie-element"></div><![endif]--><a href="https://cta-redirect.hubspot.com/cta/redirect/745395/ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302" target="_blank" ><img class="hs-cta-img" id="hs-cta-img-ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302" style="border-width:0px;" src="https://no-cache.hubspot.com/cta/default/745395/ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302.png" alt="Sign up for Alltech Idea Lab"/></a></span><script charset="utf-8" src="https://js.hscta.net/cta/current.js"></script><script type="text/javascript"> hbspt.cta.load(745395, 'ccf8fe0b-a8a5-45a3-9e0d-eefcfd4bf302', {}); </script></span><!-- end HubSpot Call-to-Action Code -->
<>Feature
Off
<>Primary Focus Area
<>Article Type
<>Regions
Subscribe to Technology
Loading...