ICT in Agriculture: A Travel to Australias Outback Queensland
The Darling Downs (Photo: Paul Budde)
In October 2020, I went on a two-week tour into Queensland’s Outback, traveling through various landscapes from pastoral and agricultural lands to savanna and the desert.
Leaving Brisbane, past Toowoomba, you enter the Darling Downs. This is one of the richest agricultural areas in Australia. British Botanist Alan Cunningham first explored it in 1827.
H
owever, only after the penal colony of Moreton Bay (now Brisbane) was closed, free settlers were allowed in the area. By that time, Surveyor-General Thomas Mitchell entered the area and described the fertile pastures that the Squatters already started to move into. They claimed the land and asked for forgiveness later to get title to these lands.
Most of them came from the British landed gentry and rapidly became rich landowners.
What is known as Mitchell’s Grass proved to be perfect fodder for sheep and cattle, and large flocks started to arrive. This became the basis for the current cattle business. They are now internationally renowned for their top-quality breeds such as Santa Gertrudis, Droughtmaster, and Brahmans as well top quality (export) meat.
Cattle arriving at Roma Saleyards(Photo: Paul Budde)
In Roma, the center of this region, we visited the Southern Hemisphere’s largest sale yard.
At the sale yards, I received first-class information on this industry. I was not surprised to hear that the reason they have such a good reputation is significantly assisted by information and communications technology (ICT).
However, it confirmed again the massive ICT problems this industry has been facing for 20 years and continues to face because of a lack of quality broadband access.
Each cow and bull (or any other form of “cattle” for that matter) have their own data set, and everything gets recorded in a central database. This is based on the national livestock identification system (NLIS). This is a livestock identification, and tracking system uses radiofrequency identification devices (RFID) applied as ear tags to identify and track livestock, each assigned an individual and unique electronic and physical printed tag numbers.
There is an associated central electronic database used to record each animal’s residency and keeps track of the other animals it has interacted with. The system improves food safety and acts as a market export assurance program that improves Australia’s access to foreign export markets and assists with disease control, tracing, and management.
The Internet of Things (IoT) is increasingly used by the farmers to provide up-to-date information on the environment the cattle live in, climate information, and so on. Drones are used to check on cattle but also to check on the waterholes. A lot of this is video-based data. They are also looking at blockchain technologies to follow and register a cow’s life from birth to slaughter.
There is a clear need for specialized data centers closer to the main farming areas. The first autonomous machinery is now also arriving on some of the farms.
Amazingly, I was told that 95 percent of the cattle growers are small family farmers; most of them are husband and wife teams with perhaps a few children. Because of the competitiveness of the business, there is ongoing pressure on costs. Technology allows them to remain profitable without the need for more staff. The time of cheap labor from “swaggies” is long gone.
However, to participate in this high-quality, competitive business, all these families and their businesses need to use ICT, and all need to have access to high-speed data services.
The quality of the business also reflects the quality of the people involved in it. They are increasingly high-educated and are technology savvy. Not only do they need access for their business, but also for all the other social, educational, economic, financial, and often medical services.
Yet, most of them only have mediocre NBN, Australia’s broadband access network.
Satellite and fixed wireless are not providing the quality service they need. Most of them have complained about this for 10 to 20 years, and improvements have not taken pace with the increase in their business and private requirements. This dramatically limits the potential for uptake of technologies such as cloud computing, video-based surveying and monitoring, mapping, and AI and machine to machine applications.
At regular intervals, the Government has made grants available for improvement. However, within the latest Budget, that is always done on a haphazard basis, and there is no strategic and structural approach.
This does not just apply to the cattle business but also to Australia’s total $20 billion agriculture industry.
According to a recent report from the Australian Council of Learned Academies (ACOLA), sensors and the IoT have the potential to improve on-farm input management while reducing the cost of detection and control of biosecurity and food safety risks. IoT and machine-to-machine (M2M) technology can also facilitate the use of real-time information to enable timelier and efficient use of water treatments and other such inputs.
Sensor-enabled monitoring could even potentially allow for new advancements in land use that could change the notion of a “farm,” especially on indigenous lands. Examples of innovative IoT applications include virtual fencing designed to herd livestock back into their grazing areas using audio and sensory cues; and using soil sensors to enable the precision application of agriculture techniques such as spraying and fertilizer distribution.
One of the best options forwards to finally get truly high-speed access is through the previously mentioned LEO satellites and laser technologies.
I am very impressed with both the cattle business and the other agriculture businesses we saw on our trip to this part of Queensland. Their farms look impressive and are all well maintained, their homesteads are looking good, and the people are highly professional about their business. Written by Paul Budde, Managing Director of Paul Budde CommunicationFollow CircleID on TwitterMore under: Access Providers, Broadband, Mobile Internet, Wireless
Author: Paul Budde
Date: 2020-10-28
URL: http://www.circleid.com/posts/20201028-ict-in-agriculture-a-travel-to-australias-outback-queensland/
circleid.com
2020 Hindsight After 20 Years at ICANN (2020-10-21) | After two decades of involvement with ICANN I am stepping down from the Board of Directors where I served for nine years I have spent considerable time of late reflecting on the past 20 years and I have isolated some memories that help frame my time with ICANN November 2000 ICANN07 in Marina del Rey California With only a scant idea of what ICANN is all about I am warmly welcomed by the flag-weari.. |
The JavaScript Ecosystem (2020-10-31) | Screenshot of Netscape Navigator in 1995 Image credit: Wikipedia JavaScript started out as a simple extension for the browser but has become so much more In part this is true in building on rich concepts going back to Lisp Along the way it has challenged the givens of programming and given us a high-performance flexible language along with rich libraries and rich tools Were just beginning to disco.. The JavaScript Ecosystem |
WIPO Arbitration and Mediation Center Registers Its 50,000th “Cybersquatting” Case (2020-12-01) | The WIPO Arbitration and Mediation Center on Monday announced it had registered its 50000th cybersquatting case The 50000th case just received by WIPO coincides with the organizations 20th anniversary on November 20 2020 WIPO reported that to date it has administered 50000 UDRP-based proceedings covering almost 91000 domain names involving parties from over 180 countries Noteworthy highlights: Inc.. |
Speculating in Domain Names: Pricing War(e)s (2020-11-18) | Speculation in one form of another has an ancient and honorable history It not only creates entrepreneurial activity but fuels markets for selling wares and offering services but also generates competition for consumers and wars over loyalty The commercialization of the Internet in the 1990s which extended market activity into virtual cyber space has many of the virtues of the actual but also its .. |
What Will 6G Look Like in a Geopolitical Divided World (2020-11-27) | A recent session of the Australian Computer Society ACS and the Australian Smart Communities Association ASCA masterclass on 5G featured Dr Ian Oppenheimer the NSW Governments Chief Data Scientist and one of the countrys most respected experts in radio technology Ian is also the Chair of the scientific advisory board of the 6G Flagship organization a global research organization based in Finland T.. What Will 6G Look Like in a Geopolitical Divided World |
The Good Old Days in the Cryptography Wars (2020-10-24) | Colossus the worlds first electronic computer used to help decipher the Lorenz-encrypted Tunny messages between Hitler and his generals during World War II Photo: John Levine The 20th century was the golden age of surveillance High-speed communication went either by telegraph and telephone which needed a license from the government or by radio which anyone can listen to Codes were manual or electr.. |
Going Postal (2020-10-20) | When a service is constructed using diverse components then the way in which service revenues are distributed to the various suppliers of the components of the service can follow a number of quite distinct models There are various forms of revenue redistribution models where the revenue per transaction is distributed to the various suppliers according to their inputs to support each transaction An.. Going Postal |
Donuts Acquires Afilias (2020-11-19) | Donuts and Afilias announced today that Donuts is acquiring Afilias in a deal that is expected to close in December 2020 for an undisclosed amount The combined entities will support over 25 million domain names spanning well over 400 TLDs The deal will not include certain Afilias businesses such as the mobile software and registrar businesses which will remain with Afilias original group of invest.. |
DDoS Attacks Are Surging Both in Frequency and Sophistication (2020-11-23) | Network-Layer DDoS Attacks Distribution by Month / Cloudflare Cloudflares new report warns about the significant increase of DDoS attacks and their level of sophistication The numbers doubled from Q1 to Q2 and doubled again in Q3 resulting in a four-fold increase compared to the pre-COVID level in the first quarter Other trends observed in Q3: Most attacks are under 500 Mbps and 1 Mpps but still c.. |
Authenticated Resolution and Adaptive Resolution: Security and Navigational Enhancements to the DNS (2020-11-19) | The Domain Name System DNS has become the fundamental building block for navigating from names to resources on the internet DNS has been employed continuously ever since its introduction in 1983 by essentially every internet-connected application and device that wants to interact online Emerging from an era where interconnection rather than information security was the primary motivation DNS has g.. |