In Toronto, an entire waterfront district full of smart innovations is planned. Among the developments is an exclusively autonomous transit system using significantly narrower streets. As it turns out, unmanned vehicles can navigate much more precisely than humans. Conserved land will be used, instead, for green spaces and more generous pedestrian walkways.
While self-driving vehicles will be motoring around cities soon, they’ve been working the farm for decades. Successful autonomous tractor tests date back to 1997, when a prototype created perfectly straight beds accurate to within an inch. Today’s farmers might still ride in the cab, but the tractor does most of the driving.
Automation is freeing up the farmer’s time for other tasks, and helping to tackle another problem for growers. For every agriculture job seeker in the U.S., there are two open positions. And it’s getting harder, not easier, to fill them.
Agricultural robots, or agbots, are being designed to help out on the farm, enabling growers to increase productivity and reduce crop loss while offering alternatives in a labor crunch. Automated harvesters are already able to identify and pick only the ripe apples, strawberries, and tomatoes, all without bruising. By 2024, robots are forecast to navigate the farm to the tune of an estimated $5.7 billion agbot industry. That’s five times the market size as of 2016, with an almost 25% compound annual growth rate.