He highlighted the company's many advancements in technology, including precision farming and self-steering machines that use GPS. Innovations that are now more than 20 years old.
"This precise location-sensing technology (already) enables farmers to place seeds, spread nutrients and harvest their crops without having to touch the steering wheel," he noted. "Without this self-driving technology, farming is incredibly exhausting mentally and physically. GPS technology allows farmers to spend their time in the cab of a tractor looking at the real-time data they are collecting during the job they are doing and making adjustments."
Until recently, agriculture had always been about doing more with more, Hindman noted, more horsepower, more inputs and more acres. But the digital era is changing all of that, he added, and it's coming at a critical time, as labor shortages are making it difficult for farmers to find people to help do the work.
Driverless tractors can help farmers overcome that obstacle and more with their precision technology, making it possible to take on one of the world's biggest challenges—feeding our growing population.
"The world's population is expected to grow from about 8 billion to nearly 10 billion people by 2050, increasing the global food demand by 50 percent," Hindman noted. "Farmers must feed this growing world population, and it's our job at John Deere to help them. The future of Agriculture starts now!"
Source : John Deere