Robots Will Farm and Log the Future
The six-legged robotic logger featured in the above video is just the beginning of the infiltration of robots into logging and farming. Maintaining healthy forests and healthy crops is a lot of work. Physically demanding and often menial, these chores are almost perfectly designed for a robot's strengths.
The successful development of [agricultural] robots could potentially bring a two-fold advantage to modern agricultural techniques. Firstly, the specificity with which robots work – the ability to deliver nutrients directly to the plant on an as-need basis – could greatly reduce the amount of resources and money spent on crop maintenance. Second, the ability to harvest specialty crops could significantly lower the amount of time and back-breaking labor associated with picking fruits and vegetablesThis development is inevitable, particularly with the coming of biofuels from agricultural and forestry waste. Robots can be perfectly equipped to gather, compress, and otherwise densify agricultural and forestry waste biomass. After preliminary on-site densification, waste biomass can be economically transported to local and regional pre-processing and processing plants for conversion into various forms of portable energy such as torrefied biomass, pyrolysis oils, syngas, biomass cubes and pellets, etc. Or the compacted biomass may be co-fired with coal to produce electricity.
“Agriculture contributes a lot of damage to the land, the soil, the water and environment,” Rus explained. “So if we can figure out a way of using robots and automation to deliver nutrients to plants – pesticides, fertilizers, water when it’s needed – instead of sort of mass spreading them, then we hope we would have an impact on the environment.” _RedOrbit
Eveything depends upon the economical collection and densification of the waste biomass on-site. Robots -- perhaps solar-powered robots -- are potentially perfect for the task.
Cross-posted on Al Fin Energy
Labels: agriculture, biomass, food production
3 Comments:
While I am not anti-forest industry as such, the ability of this form of machine to add versitility to harvesting while greatly reducing damage to the remaining forest is a welcome advance.
This machine and the military "Big Dog" project seem to suggest that machines with legs may actually have more applications in uneven terrain. The humanoid service bots that were envisioned, like Honda's Aibo, will probably end up on wheels like Segways. While this division of morphologies makes perfect sense in hindsight it is funny that most people had seemed to envision wheeled robots spining their wheels in the forestry and military applications and bipedial bots slowly stomping arround in our nice flat hallways.
Yes, legs are good.
I particularly like the versatility of combining legs with wheels, so that you can zoom on wheels down the smooth roads, then negotiate your way around obstacles and uneven ground with versatile legs.
This could be used to end the supposed need for illegal aliens to work on our country's farms. Without the constant stream of future Democratic voters, a future where Obama gets reelected every four years for the rest of his life can be prevented.
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