Artificial Intelligence technology to optimise welfare in pigs,
agri-robots to help speed up vegetable harvests and automation to
increase fruit crop yields are just some of research and
development projects to receive funding through the Farming
Innovation Programme, it was announced today (Monday 22 August).
Details of these new innovative projects comes as further support
was announced for farmers and growers with novel ideas to help
grow food production, encourage sustainable practices and
increase productivity, with the next rounds of the Feasibility
Projects and the Small
R&D Partnership Project competitions due to open shortly.
The £16.5 million of funding will help drive innovation in
agriculture and horticulture and is part of the Government’s £270
million Farming
Innovation Programme.
It is run in partnership with UK Research and Innovation,
building upon their successful Transforming Food Production
challenge.
Farming Innovation Minister said:
We want to help unlock greater potential in our already brilliant
farming and horticulture sector. Today’s first round of projects
demonstrate how - with the right funding and support - there are
great productivity and environmental sustainability gains to be
made.
Our £270 million investment in farming innovation is designed to
help take the UK’s world-leading research ideas and turn them
into practical solutions to support healthy soils, abundant
pollinators and clean water alongside profitable food production.
Katrina Hayter, challenge director for the Transforming
Food Production challenge, said:
You only need look at the sheer breadth of projects that have
received funding to see there are so many opportunities for
innovation across the food sector. From animal health to crop
productivity, the introduction of strategic support technology
and the precise application of chemicals, it’s exciting to see so
many concepts beginning to come to life.
When brought together, it shows how the whole food system can
benefit from new ideas, with knowledge-sharing and collaboration
at its core. We are keen to ensure farmers and growers remain at
the heart of projects, bringing their valuable real-life
experiences to the project consortia to ensure that each
innovation stays focused on helping improve the day-to-day
challenges faced by those in the food sector. We now look forward
to supporting these projects further as they develop.
The Farming Innovation Programme aims to spark new ideas and
collaboration across the sector to address long-term challenges
such as producing nutritious food more efficiently whilst helping
the sector to reduce greenhouse gas emissions to achieve net zero
goals. Farmers, growers, foresters, businesses and researchers
are being invited to collaborate and submit applications for
these two new competitions:
- A £5.5 million competition for ‘Feasibility projects’ will
offer grants for projects worth between £200,000 and £500,000 to
support research and development through the difficult testing
phase of an idea to see if it is worth investing in further
- Winners of the ‘Small R&D Partnership’ competition will
receive a share of the £11 million grant funding for industrial
research projects worth between £1 million and £3 million to
further develop new solutions that will ultimately address major
on-farm or immediate post farmgate challenges or opportunities
such as enhancing productivity and sustainability.
Details of the successful applications from the first round of
Small R&D Partnership Projects, Feasibility Projects and
Research Starter Projects, that were launched in October 2021
were shared
by UKRI today. These include:
- Farmsense’s use of innovative sensor technology and AI to
optimise welfare in pigs;
- Blue Planet II, a new project which aims to build upon its
highly successful autonomous technology to further increase fruit
crop yield and quality;
- A new project from ‘Muddy Machines’, whose agri-robot
concepts aim to speed up vegetable harvesting with sustainability
and reliability at their core.
Altogether Defra expects to spend around £600 million on grants
and other support for farmers to invest in productivity, animal
health and welfare, innovation, research and development over the
next three years.