15. Sächsisches GI/GIS/GDI Forum und Club of Ossiach Workshops,
Dresden: 15. September 2015
ICT FOR A SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE AND FORESTRY STATUS AND MISSING
Walter H. MAYER, CEO PROGIS / Treasurer of CoO
CoO + GI2015 ppt_charvat ict for a sustainable agriculture – public support n...IGN Vorstand
15. Sächsisches GI/GIS/GDI Forum und Club of Ossiach Workshops,
Dresden: 15. September 2015
CLUB OF OSSIACH RECOMMENDATION FOR ICT FOR FAMILY FARMING
Karel CHARVAT, Club of Ossiach / CCSS (CZ)
Think Piece presented at the “ICTs transforming agricultural science, research and technology generation” Workshop - Science Forum 2009, 16–17 June, Wageningen, The Netherlands
OSFair2017 Workshop | The importance of open data in the Agro-Food sectorOpen Science Fair
Thomas Bartzanas talks about the importance of open data in the agri-food sector | OSFair2017 Workshop
Workshop title: The roadmap to better food: using ICT an open data to overcome barriers in the agriculture value chain
Workshop overview:
The session will discuss infrastructures for open science in the agri-food domain. It will also discuss the issue and the importance of open data for agricultural and agri-food communities and science.
Presentation abstract:
Half of the European Union's land is farmed. This fact alone highlights the importance of farming for the EU's economy, employment, energy use and environment. The globalization of markets has increased the competitiveness whereas the consumers’ needs for healthy, safe and locally produced products highlighting the need for high quality production.
According to Food Agriculture Organization (FAO) in the next 20 years world food production must increase by 50%, while 80% of that increase must come from intensification. However this vital and crucial sector for the European agriculture economy is a sector under pressure due to several challenges (world population, water shortage, climate change, use of pesticides and fertilizers, energy use, food safety).
Agricultural production systems, and the policies and institutions that underpin global food security, are increasingly inadequate. Modern IT and data analysis tools are powerful and can really help meet the challenge of feeding a growing population in more resource-efficient and sustainable ways. Smart farming presents a viable solution to such problems. However, as smart machines, automation systems, robots and sensors crop up on farms and farm data grow in quantity and scope, farming processes will become increasingly data driven and data-enabled.
Currently there are a lot of stakeholders involved in the data collection and management in agriculture (companies, organizations, public authorities, farmers). However the accessible on all these data is still questionable. In this context open data has become and should more widely used within the agricultural data environment. The context under which open data should be used and analyzed in agro-food sector is presented together with some so far success stories.
When: DAY 1 - PARALLEL SESSION 1
CoO + GI2015 ppt_charvat ict for a sustainable agriculture – public support n...IGN Vorstand
15. Sächsisches GI/GIS/GDI Forum und Club of Ossiach Workshops,
Dresden: 15. September 2015
CLUB OF OSSIACH RECOMMENDATION FOR ICT FOR FAMILY FARMING
Karel CHARVAT, Club of Ossiach / CCSS (CZ)
Think Piece presented at the “ICTs transforming agricultural science, research and technology generation” Workshop - Science Forum 2009, 16–17 June, Wageningen, The Netherlands
OSFair2017 Workshop | The importance of open data in the Agro-Food sectorOpen Science Fair
Thomas Bartzanas talks about the importance of open data in the agri-food sector | OSFair2017 Workshop
Workshop title: The roadmap to better food: using ICT an open data to overcome barriers in the agriculture value chain
Workshop overview:
The session will discuss infrastructures for open science in the agri-food domain. It will also discuss the issue and the importance of open data for agricultural and agri-food communities and science.
Presentation abstract:
Half of the European Union's land is farmed. This fact alone highlights the importance of farming for the EU's economy, employment, energy use and environment. The globalization of markets has increased the competitiveness whereas the consumers’ needs for healthy, safe and locally produced products highlighting the need for high quality production.
According to Food Agriculture Organization (FAO) in the next 20 years world food production must increase by 50%, while 80% of that increase must come from intensification. However this vital and crucial sector for the European agriculture economy is a sector under pressure due to several challenges (world population, water shortage, climate change, use of pesticides and fertilizers, energy use, food safety).
Agricultural production systems, and the policies and institutions that underpin global food security, are increasingly inadequate. Modern IT and data analysis tools are powerful and can really help meet the challenge of feeding a growing population in more resource-efficient and sustainable ways. Smart farming presents a viable solution to such problems. However, as smart machines, automation systems, robots and sensors crop up on farms and farm data grow in quantity and scope, farming processes will become increasingly data driven and data-enabled.
Currently there are a lot of stakeholders involved in the data collection and management in agriculture (companies, organizations, public authorities, farmers). However the accessible on all these data is still questionable. In this context open data has become and should more widely used within the agricultural data environment. The context under which open data should be used and analyzed in agro-food sector is presented together with some so far success stories.
When: DAY 1 - PARALLEL SESSION 1
presentation of the Foresight Study in the AKIS-3 report on the future of the Agricultural Knowledge and Innovationn System, given in the EAAE seminar in Igls,Austria
GFAR / GODAN / CTA webinar #1 "Data-driven agriculture. An overview" - Dan Be...GCARD Conferences
[Webinar recording in last slide or at https://youtu.be/bsicKqHZIz4, 22/2/2018]
As part of its work on farmers’ data rights and following up on the face-to-face course on Farmers’ Access to Data organized in Centurion in November 2017, GFAR collaborates with the Global Open Data for Agriculture and Nutrition initiative (GODAN) and the Technical Center for Agricultural and Rural Cooperarion (CTA) on a series of webinars on data-driven agriculture, its opportunities and its challenges.
Overview of webinar #1
Precision agriculture is a promising set of technologies that is data intensive, but which has limited adoption by small holder farms in Sub-Saharan Africa. Concurrently, current trends in sustainability, traceability, and compliance reporting demand that an ever-increasing amount of data be gathered as part of everyday operations in modern production agriculture.
The use of farm management information systems (FMIS) for decision support has shown great promise for improving farm yields and profitability. However, growers are often unsure of the value of the data that they are providing and/or receiving. How does this data help them make the right decisions to improve their yield and profitability? How do growers and service providers work together to simplify the design and use of farm data? How can smallholder farmers take advantage of data in a mutually valuable relationship with data providers?
Webinar Goals
Provide attendees a foundation for understanding the use of data for farming and across the agricultural value chain. Attendees should be able to apply the core concepts of using data for field operations, as well as how data is used across the value chain. Attendees will be introduced to the opportunities and challenges of using data, especially for smallholder farmers.
About the presenter
Dan Berne is a highly regarded professional business growth strategist with over 30 years’ experience. Dan led the effort to create an Ag Irrigation market strategy for the Northwest Energy Efficiency Alliance (NEEA). He also conducted grower experience studies to help identify barriers to grower adoption of energy saving practices. Dan wrote or co-wrote many of the NEEA Ag Irrigation reports. Dan serves as the Project Manager on AgGateway’s Precision Ag Irrigation Language data standards project. He is an affiliate of the Chasm Institute, and a certified practitioner of Innovation Games.
Dan started the “Lagom Ag Initiative” within his company to help accelerate the adoption of precision farming practices and improve the use of digital agricultural methodologies. Lagom is a Swedish word that means “just enough.” It is also used to mean “simply perfect.” It fits our philosophy of helping farmers use just enough water, just enough fertilizers, just enough energy to be profitable while increasing or maintaining yield.
presentation of the Foresight Study in the AKIS-3 report on the future of the Agricultural Knowledge and Innovationn System, given in the EAAE seminar in Igls,Austria
GFAR / GODAN / CTA webinar #1 "Data-driven agriculture. An overview" - Dan Be...GCARD Conferences
[Webinar recording in last slide or at https://youtu.be/bsicKqHZIz4, 22/2/2018]
As part of its work on farmers’ data rights and following up on the face-to-face course on Farmers’ Access to Data organized in Centurion in November 2017, GFAR collaborates with the Global Open Data for Agriculture and Nutrition initiative (GODAN) and the Technical Center for Agricultural and Rural Cooperarion (CTA) on a series of webinars on data-driven agriculture, its opportunities and its challenges.
Overview of webinar #1
Precision agriculture is a promising set of technologies that is data intensive, but which has limited adoption by small holder farms in Sub-Saharan Africa. Concurrently, current trends in sustainability, traceability, and compliance reporting demand that an ever-increasing amount of data be gathered as part of everyday operations in modern production agriculture.
The use of farm management information systems (FMIS) for decision support has shown great promise for improving farm yields and profitability. However, growers are often unsure of the value of the data that they are providing and/or receiving. How does this data help them make the right decisions to improve their yield and profitability? How do growers and service providers work together to simplify the design and use of farm data? How can smallholder farmers take advantage of data in a mutually valuable relationship with data providers?
Webinar Goals
Provide attendees a foundation for understanding the use of data for farming and across the agricultural value chain. Attendees should be able to apply the core concepts of using data for field operations, as well as how data is used across the value chain. Attendees will be introduced to the opportunities and challenges of using data, especially for smallholder farmers.
About the presenter
Dan Berne is a highly regarded professional business growth strategist with over 30 years’ experience. Dan led the effort to create an Ag Irrigation market strategy for the Northwest Energy Efficiency Alliance (NEEA). He also conducted grower experience studies to help identify barriers to grower adoption of energy saving practices. Dan wrote or co-wrote many of the NEEA Ag Irrigation reports. Dan serves as the Project Manager on AgGateway’s Precision Ag Irrigation Language data standards project. He is an affiliate of the Chasm Institute, and a certified practitioner of Innovation Games.
Dan started the “Lagom Ag Initiative” within his company to help accelerate the adoption of precision farming practices and improve the use of digital agricultural methodologies. Lagom is a Swedish word that means “just enough.” It is also used to mean “simply perfect.” It fits our philosophy of helping farmers use just enough water, just enough fertilizers, just enough energy to be profitable while increasing or maintaining yield.
Digital Adoption by SMBs: A Preview of BIA/Kelsey’s Latest SMB Research - Loc...BIA/Kelsey
During the webinar, BIA/Kelsey's Steve Marshall and Abid Chaudhry, shared five initial takeaways from our Local Commerce Survey (LCM) survey that tracks the marketing and advertising behaviors of small and medium-sized businesses (SMBS), which included:
Takeaway 1: Spend on advertising media has plateaued.
Takeaway 2: Spend for online presence and engagement is increasing strongly.
Takeaway 3: SMBs are integrating their online properties.
Takeaway 4: Discounts and promotions are growing and evolving.
Takeaway 5: Social media has become a pivotal platform.
This deck includes a full analysis of these takeaways. LCM Wave 18 will publish on September 15, 2014 and be available for purchase from the BIA/Kelsey website: http://www.biakelsey.com/Research-and-Analysis/SMB-and-Consumer-Research/Local-Commerce-Monitor/ or by emailing info@biakelsey.com.
APPLICATION OF BIG DATA IN ENHANCING EFFECTIVE DECISION MAKING IN AGRICULTURA...Sjaak Wolfert
The agriculture production system increasingly becomes data-driven and data-enabled based on the cyber-physical management cycle. This paper describes several IoT-applications of the EU-funded IoF2020 project in which data and data-sharing plays a crucial role. It provides an integrative framework aiming at cross-fertilisation, co-creation and co-ownership of results. Technical integration, business support and ecosystem development are key mechanisms to realize this.
#Organic Companies like #Sresta & #Timbaktu-Collective are always working to ensure only the very best reaches their customers. They have adopted Cropin #smartfarm and are always connected with their farms 24X7 from anywhere!
They have gained customers' trust by empowering them with #traceability: "Customer can take a walk through your farms by a simple scan of a QR/Bar code".
Read for more: http://eepurl.com/btxZZz
Try it at: smartfarm.cropin.in
key note on Big Data in Horticulture, for Vineland Research and Innovation, November, Ontario Canada. (overlaps considerably with the earlier presentation for USDA NIFA in Chicago)
Livestock farm Data Acquisition-Processing and management ..pdfHari Om Pandey
Livestock data acquisition essentially used in Smart Farming where a large amount of connected technologies produces a huge amount of data in order to maximize productions by reducing: human efforts, environment impact and wasting natural resources. It helps in improving livestock production, animals’ welfare, and farming processes, allowing to ease monitoring operations that can help farmers.
How IoT is changing the agribusiness landscapeSjaak Wolfert
Smart Farming involves many sensing and monitoring devices, intelligent software for analysis & planning and mechatronics/robots closing the cyber-physical farm management cycle. Big Data on prices, markets, consumer behavior, etc. increasingly affect the whole agribusiness providing predictive insights in farming operations, drive real-time operational decisions and redesign business processes for game-changing business models. Major shifts in roles and power relations among different players in food supply chain networks can be expected. This presentation will briefly describe the IoT developments in agri-food business and present the changing business landscape with special attention to the role of software ecosystems in this development.
Presented FIspace at a matchmaking event in The Netherlands for the FIWARE Accelerator FInish. Also the other accelerators SmarAgriFood, Fractals and SpeedUP!Europe were mentioned.
Farm Management System - Delivering a Precision Agriculture SolutionHPCC Systems
Jeff Bradshaw & Graeme McCracken, RBI, present at the 2016 HPCC Systems Engineering Summit Community Day.
In this session, we will share our use case on how we have collected data from remote Farm Management Systems (used by the Farmers/Growers to manage their farms), and overlaying that with weather data and actual machinery data (IoT) and using this data to feed Agronomists and Crop Protection/Seed Manufacturers to get recommendations back. The goal is to deliver a precision agriculture solution which helps the Farmer to increase his yield and helps us to feed the growing population of the world.
Jeff Bradshaw is the founder of Adaptris and Group CTO of Adaptris/F4F/DBT within Reed Business Information. He has spent his career integrating data wherever it resides and in-flight across a number of industries including Agriculture, Airlines, Telecommunications, Healthcare, Government and Finance.
Jeff has worked with and contributed to a number of international standards bodies and continues to work with large enterprises to help them extract value from their data silos and share data seamlessly with their trading partners to achieve business benefit. For the last few years Jeff has been focusing on Big Data and how to gather that across a wide range of sources to help gain insight into the agri-food supply chain.
Graeme is the Chief Operating Officer for Proagrica, the global agricultural and animal health division within RELX covering Media, Software, Integration & Connectivity and Data & Analytics. Prior to this role, Graeme was the CEO of RELX’s Construction Data & Analytics business in North America with a background in data, product and IT innovation across a complex portfolio of companies in Europe, North America and Australasia.
Graeme has been in RELX for 24 years driving a range of strategic initiatives and building strong teams that are well motivated, involved and having fun. As part of overall strategic alignment, successfully delivered the divestment of a number of divisions whilst ensuring that these units were well set for the future. Impressive track record in transforming a range of business units across RELX and setting them on a successful growth path.
Similar to CoO + GI2015 ppt_mayer ict for a sustainable agriculture - status and missing (20)
15. Sächsisches GI/GIS/GDI Forum
Dresden, 15. September 2015
GI29015 – INTRODUCTION TO OPEN DATA MANAGEMENT IN EUROPE OF REGIONS –
Doz. Dr. Frank HOFFMANN, CSc – Vorstandsvorsitzender IGN e.V.
Academician of International Eurasian Academy of Sciences (IEAS)
15. Sächsisches GI/GIS/GDI Forum und Club of Ossiach Workshops,
Dresden: 15. September 2015
CLUB OF OSSIACH & GI2015 WORKSHOPS
PROGRAMME & PROCEEDINGS
Edited by F. HOFFMANN (IGN)
15. Sächsisches GI/GIS/GDI Forum und Club of Ossiach Workshops
COPERNICUS PROGRAMME AND SENTINEL DATA FOR AGRICULTURE AND FORESTRY
Lenka Hladíková, CENIA, Czech Environmental Information Agency (CZ)
15. Sächsisches GI/GIS/GDI Forum und Club of Ossiach Workshops,
Dresden: 15. September 2015
THE ADDED VALUE OF COPERNICUS AND GALILEO FOR GEO-INFORMATION AND LBS AT THE SERVICE OF AGRICULTURE & FORESTRY IN THE REGIONS
Stefaan DE MEY & Grazia FIORE, EURISY / Paris, France
Have you ever wondered how search works while visiting an e-commerce site, internal website, or searching through other types of online resources? Look no further than this informative session on the ways that taxonomies help end-users navigate the internet! Hear from taxonomists and other information professionals who have first-hand experience creating and working with taxonomies that aid in navigation, search, and discovery across a range of disciplines.
Acorn Recovery: Restore IT infra within minutesIP ServerOne
Introducing Acorn Recovery as a Service, a simple, fast, and secure managed disaster recovery (DRaaS) by IP ServerOne. A DR solution that helps restore your IT infra within minutes.
Sharpen existing tools or get a new toolbox? Contemporary cluster initiatives...Orkestra
UIIN Conference, Madrid, 27-29 May 2024
James Wilson, Orkestra and Deusto Business School
Emily Wise, Lund University
Madeline Smith, The Glasgow School of Art
This presentation by Morris Kleiner (University of Minnesota), was made during the discussion “Competition and Regulation in Professions and Occupations” held at the Working Party No. 2 on Competition and Regulation on 10 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found out at oe.cd/crps.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
0x01 - Newton's Third Law: Static vs. Dynamic AbusersOWASP Beja
f you offer a service on the web, odds are that someone will abuse it. Be it an API, a SaaS, a PaaS, or even a static website, someone somewhere will try to figure out a way to use it to their own needs. In this talk we'll compare measures that are effective against static attackers and how to battle a dynamic attacker who adapts to your counter-measures.
About the Speaker
===============
Diogo Sousa, Engineering Manager @ Canonical
An opinionated individual with an interest in cryptography and its intersection with secure software development.
This presentation, created by Syed Faiz ul Hassan, explores the profound influence of media on public perception and behavior. It delves into the evolution of media from oral traditions to modern digital and social media platforms. Key topics include the role of media in information propagation, socialization, crisis awareness, globalization, and education. The presentation also examines media influence through agenda setting, propaganda, and manipulative techniques used by advertisers and marketers. Furthermore, it highlights the impact of surveillance enabled by media technologies on personal behavior and preferences. Through this comprehensive overview, the presentation aims to shed light on how media shapes collective consciousness and public opinion.
CoO + GI2015 ppt_mayer ict for a sustainable agriculture - status and missing
1. INTEGRAL MANAGEMENT DI Walter H. MAYER, CEO PROGIS
PRIVACY AND CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE
Information contained in this communication is confidential, legally priviliged, patented or under patent registration and is proprietary
to PROGIS. The receiving party agrees that it is not permitted to sell, license, develop or otherwise exploit any parts, products or
services, documents or information of this document in whole or in part. The recipient is informed not to take any action in
reliance on the content of this information.
SMART FARMING AND SMART VILLAGES – A WIN-WIN SITUATION
ICT for a sustainable agriculture
– status and missing
Club of Ossiach and GI 2015 workshops
15.9.2015 Dresden/Germany
2. TECHNOLOGY AND KNOW-HOW BEHIND
GIS – WinGIS and
AX-Development environment
System integrator for partners with
meteo-sensors, GNSS, i-net, mobile
technologies, RFID, GPRS / UMTS
communication, GPS/dGPS, ….…..
MICROSOFT
BING Geodata
(worldwide)
or any other
Geodata
(vector/raster)
AGROffice - applications integrating
GIS + time, DB, expert data
PROGIS has sector know how:
-Agro-forest-environment-risk
- technology and org-know how
- visions how to solve problems!
• AGROffice
• DokuPlant
• LOGISTIC
• mobGIS
• Precision
farming
• Virtual farming
• ForestOffice
• EnvirOffice
• Z-GIS (LAND-CONSOLIDATION)
• On demand
• Consulting
4. Graz, Austria
UltraCam development
Commercial software
Computer vision research
Streetside
UltraCam
UltraCamP
BlockView
Oblique
Vectors
TERRESTRIAL
17-Oct-15
Boulder, Colorado
Bing Maps data center
Software development
Acquisition management
AERIAL
AUSTRIAN TECHNOLOGY - 2 CONTINENTS IN 30 MONTHS
JRC CERTIFICATION -
Conclusion Bing
Geometric
accuracy:
• Data is compliant
according EU
standards for LPIS
(land parcel info
system) and IACS
(Integrated Agri
Control System)
• Color and CIR
orthoimages fit
correctly
Tallin, November 2011
6. Orthoimages Weatherstations PROGIS-IT technologies
+ +
• Ministry
• Regional and local admin
• Advisory organizations
• Subsidy organizations
• Chambers if av.
• Land consolidation units
• R&D and education
• Farmers, cooperatives
• Agro banks, insurance
• Certification bodies
• Control organizations
• Supply agencies
• Transport sector
• Food – feed industry
Geoinfo – maps: LPIS – WinGIS - orthoimages
Precision Farming: many PF-tools &machinery
Land consolidation, enviro-, risk-mgmt: tools
Logistic: Logistic-HQ & mobGIS & communication
Farm- & Forest-management: DokuPlant & ForestOffice
Individual projects
Standardized
3-4 y
STAKEHOLDERS AND PROCESSES
7. DOKUPLANT - USER-INTERFACE
locationtime
information
WHERE
WHEN
WHAT
patents pend.
EXPERT-INFO AGRO: machines, crops, fertilizers,
herbicides, cultivation methods, ….
EXPERT-INFO FOREST:
machines, trees, growth-
tables,methods, ….
EXPERT-INFO ENVIRO/RISK:
torrent, mudflow, drought, flood,
avalanche, rockfall, …
COOP with LOCAL EXPERTS (GROUPS)
MANAGED SUSTAINABLE (UPDATE!!!)
COOP WITH internat. ORGANISATIONS
patents pend.
patents pend.
8. LOCAL EXPERT DATA and TRUST CENTER
2,7 ha
Crop
A
4,6 ha
Crop
B
2500
Machinery data
KTBL
2500
Organic/Inorganic
fertilizer
PROGIS / ZALF
850 Pesticides
PROGIS / BMR
to be
modified
with
local
partner
for all
countries
1.3.2014 5.5.2014 30.9.2014
Tractor
plough
Tractor
Seeding machine
NPK fertilizer
Tractor
Sprayer
Pesticide
Harvester
Farmer decides, what can be downloaded
by controller , certifyer, buyer etc.TRUST
CENTER
.
.
.
Expert-
and/or
user-
defined
crop
models
4000
seeds/varieties
PROGIS / BMR
Crop db =
model
12. 1. Farmers: better advise, better management, nutrient and pesticide reduction,
better harvest result, less logistic costs, higher quality etc.
2. Farm-Advisors: tools suport advise, better management of farmers, higher ROI
at customers = more benefits = better income + motivation
3. Ministry: just in time and precise statistical data, precise subsidy mgmt.
better control, use farmers for environment- & natural risk-management
4. Bank: Businessplans for (micro-)finance, better customer understanding
5. Insurance: easy link to insurance policy sales, many farmers linked, data
available for micro-insurance, better ROI due to better information
6. Telecoms: providing infrastructure = more traffic in rural areas due to heavy IT
use, start for sms-based payment, flat rate for logistic services
7. Industry: (food, feed, wood) logistics increases quality, guarantees just in time
delivery, better information about customers, statistical data for optimisation
8. Cooperatives: member management support, services for members like
logistic for transport, harvest ..; support smallholder precision farming setup
of new advisory services, support farm help, machine use, …
9. Certicifation companies & Controller: easy data access via trust center
10. R&D: know how transfer into practical use, feedback for further optimize
11. Envrionment- and naturalrisk-management: Optimize environment with
farmer´s social responsibility and local know how
12. Marketing: IT-supported; split of advise- & sales
BUSINESSMODEL - ROI - FINANCING
13. ERP SOFTWARE incl. WinGIS from DATALAB
Farm activity information
Status and calendar
• Number of animals
• Overall by category
• Divided by production status
• Calendar + important dates
• Automatic inputs (expected
calving date)
• Manual inputs
Control panel
Fast and reliable farm
overview
Custom made information
Agricultural holding information
General information
• Agricultural holding details
• Data import from state-registries (where possible)
• Holding details
• Possible more than one holding
• Sorting animals by group, flock…
• Parcel details
• Parcel ID connected with state LPIS system
• Land details for agri-environmental records
• Parcel divided into subdivisions for different crops
• Household members
• Connected with personnel files
• FADN status for FADN reports
• Consultant services
• Data about consultant services and consultants
• Veterinary services
• Data about veterinary services and veterinarians
14. ACCOUNTING with PANTHEON
Accounting
Each inserted task generates own
document
Document can be later posted
• By user with his own SE license
• By accountant with his SE or ME
license
Different chart of accounts
• Standard for agriculture
• Adjusted by user needs
VAT account
• Electronic reporting (where applicable)
15. ANIMAL HUSBANDRY incl. WinGIS AND FADN
Animal husbandry
Different animal categories (Cattle,
Sheep, Goat, Pigs)
• Possible data import (where applicable)
Animal records (information about
individual animal)
• Family tree
• Milking records by lactations
• Health status
• Reproduction details with calf records
• Movement details
• Linear score
Animal register
• According to state registers
• For aggregate movements entries and views
Milking records
• Milk production input with labor usage
• Milking information by individual animal
• Importing from milking robot
•Veterinary journal
• By animal category
• For aggregate entries and views
Farm Accountancy Data Network (FADN)
Automatic report generating
By month, at the end of the year
FADN Farm return
Stores FADN specific information
FADN Farm return report generated
Financial reports
Generated from purchase and sales information
Calculation done and transferred automatically
Animal, crop and workforce
Animal FADN status changes automatically
Animal movement and status changes tracked
Crop production tracked (FADN status determine)
Workforce time usage tracked automatically
manual additions of missing data
16. ANDROID APPS and WINDOWS MOBILE APPS
Android app
WinGIS
Windows
Mobile app
My location
PROGIS Villach
Postgasse 6
18. Harvester
GPRS/UMTS
Truck
Mobile Office
Largest EC project: 45 cooperatives,
using 100+ harvesters with mobGIS
handling 100K+ datasets for 40.000
farmers on 40.000km² – all online with
update all 30 seconds!
Loader/Forwarder
PLAN: 2015 GERMANY
• Country coverage in 2015 (170 stations)
• Precision farming on top
• Mobile devices (tablet-PC, smartphone)
• links farmers to logistic. ……….…
AGRO – FOREST - LOGISTIC
19. WinGIS + BING
DokuPlant + Contract
Logistics Central Unit (CLOUD)
mobGIS
Interface to terminals (e.g. AMATRON+,…)
LABs + NIRS
PRECISION FARMING DETAILS
Not the tractor, the map is
intelligent, PF for all – today!
20. 1. GIS-linked sensors-agrometeorological climate station (+soil,water):
3. Trust centres for food chains, for banks/insurance, for ministries/authorities:
Sensors for temperature, relative humidity, water level, rain gauge, solar radiation, wind speed and
direction, water temperature, barometric pressure, soil moisture etc.
2. Mobile and GPS based operating data logging:
Time, activities, locations, tracks, link to cost centres,
with PDAs or Handys, HTTP or GPRS, Inter-, Intranet, CSV
export, modelling, locating, geo-objects, time-server with
calender, reporting, …..
• trust centres for storing selected farmers data acc. legal or bilateral agreements for (geo-)traceability
4. Consulting companies (public, private, NGOs):
• The PROGIS model is configured to cooperate and integrate local experts like institutes, universities, etc.
• The PROGIS model is configured to cooperate with international reputated consultancy companies
• The PROGIS model is configured to cooperate with NGOs, international organisations, …
PESSL
FUJITSU, MICROSOFT, FOODIE, GFAR, CoO, PUBLIC
• track and trace technologies for tracking along the whole food chain – from farmer-forwarder-foodsupplier
• integration models for banks (businessplans) and insurance companies (index insurance data, policy data,…)
• public-private organisation models for integrating ministries or other agro-forestry-environment organisations
TECHNOLOGY BEHIND - PARTNERS
21. Global Forum of Innvation in Agricul LAB INTEGRATION
LOCATION BASED
CIRCULAR FLOW
MANAGEMENT
For:
• soil
• manure
• feed
with NIRS and
Precise statistical
calibration
methods ….
…. ICT supported
…. With GIS & GPS
24. FARMERS AS PART OF
ENVIRONMENTAL CARETAKING
RISK-MANAGEMENT
MANAGING COMMONS
ENVIRONMENT- & RISK-MANAGEMENT
25. Forestry failures!Agricultural failures!
Agricultural Failures!
Bioremediation= costs+time
Bioremediation= costs+time
SERVICES
CO2 - SEQUESTRATION
WATER QUALITY, -STORAGE, -SUPPLY
SOURCE OF BIO-ENERGY
RECREATION
LOCAL CLIMATEAIR QUALITY
FOREST & AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS
RISK MANAGEMENT – RISK REDUCTION
AGRICULTURE & FORESTRY = S E R V I C E S
Forestry failures!
ENVIRONMENT- & RISK-MANAGEMENT
26. According SwisssRE: Prof. Dr.Dr. Peter HÖPPE
• Since 1980 large problems (storms/floods) increase: 400 to 1000 = X 2,5
• Worldtrend 1980:2010 = 60 : 150 Bio $
• Ceres/US: plus small: 380 Bio$/year
• World has 15 bio ha land-mass or 1,5 bio ha arable land = damage per hectare
• = $ 10,-- ($25) per ha per year on landmass or $ 100,-- ($250) on arable land
• versus technology costs of US$ 0,5 - once + 15-25%/year !!!
• Highest probability human influenced, high probability for more heat, drought,
extreme rains etc.
• Prevention is a must
• Agriculture can support, has to support and will support !!!!
ENVIRONMENTAL DAMAGES WORLDWIDE
27. ENVIROFFICE - USER-INTERFACE
locationtime
information
WHERE
WHEN
WHAT
patents pend.
ENVIRO-OFFICE: expert data depending on needs
defined by local experts and integrated into WinGIS
EXPERT-INFO FOREST:
machines, trees, growth-
tables,methods, ….
EXPERT-INFO AGRICULTURE:
Machines, fertilizer, pesticides,
seeds, varieties, methods, ….…
COOP with LOCAL EXPERTS (GROUPS)
MANAGED SUSTAINABLE (UPDATE!!!)
COOP WITH internat. ORGANISATIONS
patents pend.
patents pend.
Rockfall
Drought
Landslide
Erosion
Torrent
Avalanche
ENVIROFFICE:
• Experts define
• when, where and
what must be done
• to fulfil a target
• Farmer does
• target control
• Achievements of
objectives
28. • Area covering risk warning system and risk reduction possible with farmers
• AMA data country covering (owner=farmer),
• Forest data via forest inventory (public or private)
• Bottom up crow data via farmers
• Soil maps country covering (2x in Austria: MoF and MoA)
• Weatherstation network possible to setup country covering – business model!!!
• Based on interzeption (covering by plants) and soil + humus data for
• a precise and actual runoff situation and warning system
• AGRO-business-models: integral performance for forest stocking and humus increase
• Carbon certificates from industry with local value creation (e.g. 45,-- €/t)
• Insurance premium: linked to humus increase or stock of wood increase
• 1% more humus: buffers 10mm rain, 50t CO2, stores 20-30 times his weight
• 1 m³ log: buffers avg. 0,92 t CO2, 20% increase on stocking in A = 150-200 Mio t
• More humus with compost, crop rotation, cover crops, winter crops
• Less humus with plowing, chemistry, monoculture, pesticides
• In future sensors for N,P,K and possibly humus available
• Labs with NIR technology can reduce costs 90%
• New business models with stakeholder cooperation will be supportive!
• Quantification and identification of risks possible – zoning possible - HORA
• Bettering with the above model possible
RISK MANAGEMENT with PROGIS EXPERT DATA MODEL
29. ELINOR OSTROM, COMMONS and INCLUSIVE ADVISE
Elinor Ostrom – Nobel-price for business science 2009
Codification of the common law was necessary:
–1. Trial: ABGB 1811 in Austria
- Liberation of the farmer since 1848/49
–2. Trial: Reichsgemeindegesetz 1862 (Community admin §§)
–3. Trial: provisorische Gemeindeordnungen (Commune law)
–4. Trial: Neuanlegung des Grundbuches 1871 (new groundbook)
- 1883: 㤤 partitioning of common ground and define use rights
- 1883 – 1925 general regulation and implementation
CARINTHIA (Southern region of Austria):
- 1885: 3013 Cooperatives in 230 Communities
- 1913: 2065 Cooperatives with 136.175 ha
- 2014: 1715 Cooperatives with 138.083 ha
According Ostrom we need:
- Precise defined borders
- Congruence between rules of acquisition and
- rules of allocation
- Local requirements
- Org-structures for collective decisions
- Control and penalty
- Conflict solving mechanism
- Minimum organization structure
- 12 Alpine Centres
- 5-6 x way-length
- 5-6 x water-pipes
- More fountains
- 5000m+ fences
CARINTHIA (Southern region of Austria):
- A cooperative acc. Austrian legislation is able to
manage commons acc. the rules of Elinor Ostrom!
COOPERATIVES
30. Land Consolidation with ZGIS
ACCESS Application
ZUS_ABB
WINGIS Application
ZGIS
SOLUTION
Z-GIS FOR THE AUSTRIAN GOVERNMENT
32. • WinGIS gives detailed size of the fields/forest areas as base for exact calculation
• WinGIS gives an exact location of the field or forest area for later logistics use
• DokuPlant allows with underlaying expert data planning and documentation
• DokuPlant allows nutrient- and CO²-balance and is a subsidy tool if needed
• ForestOffice for forest inventory (plot or statistical model) on local growth tables
• DokuPlant and ForestOffice allow calculations (cost, contribution margin etc.)
• DokuPlant&Forest Office: access to traceability(§§), document sustainability(§§)
• Forest Office, DokuPlant and WinGIS allow setup of modern advisory services
• Logistic and mobGIS allow detailed logistic planning of complete regions
• Logistic and mobGIS serve farmers-foresters AND chain partners with mobCOM
• WinGIS integrates meteodata = better decisions: Precision Farming/Forestry
• WinGIS – Fertilizer, pesticide optimisation - Precision Farming
• DokuPlant/ForestOffice: businessplans for banks and infos for insurance comp.
• Machine interfaces (IsoBUS) allow further integration of Precision FF
• DokuPlant/ForestOffice for advisors allow statistical regional analysis
• EnvirOffice: upgrade with environmental caretaking incl. farmers integration
• EnvirOffice: upgrade with risk management solutions incl. farmers integration
• Trust Centre allows to integrate countrywide agro-forest-enviro-information
• Z-GIS as tool for land consolidation for complete countries
• Allover fights poverty, supports rural areas, reduces risks (rural areas & cities)
VALUABLE & SUSTAINABLE BENEFITS
33. ASSUMPTION
• Calculation, planning, documentation optimizes farm-forest-management - 10% costs
• Nutrient and CO2 balance and meteo integration lowers input costs - 10% costs
• and increase (quality-)growth +10%revenue
• Documentation and trust center opens new markets +10% revenue
• Logistics saves costs - 10% costs
• better advise saves costs and increases revenue - 10% costs
• +10% revenue
• Banks and insurance integration allow startup of business and saves risk neutral but nec.
• Precision farming / forestry and virtual farming allows cost reduction - 10% costs
• 1. ECONOMICAL BENEFITS ROI: 4% - 50% costs
+ 30% revenue
• (at assumed costs of €200,--/ha= -€100,-- and €300,--/ha revenue = +€100,-- = total +€200,--/ha)
• (investment at country licence of 0,3-2,5/avg.0,5 €/ha + local advisory costs)
• 2. ECOLOGICAL + RISK-MINIMIZED BENEFITS: 4% HIGH
• As most of the costs are linked to energy and CO²; reduction is equal to better CO² balance
as well as other environmental and risk targets to be reached give additional benefits.
• There is an environmental caretaking benefit of maybe much more then 80% change
• 3. INCREASED VALUE OF THE LAND BENEFIT: 6% 80% change
VALUATION OF BENEFITS
34. We have to work and produce SAFER
Sustainable
Agriculture
Forestry
Environment
Risk-management
With an integrated & cooperative approach, we need:
1. Technology and technology integration
2. Support for environment- & risk-management
3. Business model also integrating chain partners and
4. Advisors supported by regional experts and ICT
5. POLITIC must set FRAMEWORKS for creative destruction!
(Schumpeter, Austrian scientist in political economics)
CONCLUSION
35. SMART FARMING +
SMART VILLAGE =
SMART RURAL AREA +
SMART CITY =
SMART COUNTRY
BENEFITS OF STAKEHOLDERS
36. VALUABLE & SUSTAINABLE BENEFITS
• Smart farmers as the fundament for smart villages – agriculture must become “sexy”:
• MASTERPLAN ON TOP
• ECONOMIC AND ECOLOGIC SUSTAINABLE
• Plus green construction in villages with local construction material
• Plus water and energy with local renewables – energy positive
• Plus smart food with local food plus food with “green” ecological footprint
• Plus smart waste transfer to location based circular flow management models –
• Feed/food – manure – soil
• Plus smart village products – food, handicraft, construction, small industries
• Plus a social and ecological sustainable direction incl. children, elderly, gender-neutral
• Plus optimized education incl. MOOCs plus communication
• Plus risk management – protect and generate – plus insurance
• Plus zero carbon – nutrient balance – carbon balance - ..
• Plus entrepreneurship needed plus (micro-)financing plus employment
• Plus recovery of natural resources plus local/regional marketing
• Plus labs and science support plus village sustainability manager
• Feasibility plus impact assessment plus soil maps plus risk assessment
37. VALUABLE & SUSTAINABLE BENEFITS
• PROGIS group of products for agriculture and forestry
• PROGIS group of products for village management
• PROGIS group of products for logistics and precision farming
• PROGIS groups of product for pipeline-management (water – wastewater)
• PROGIS groups of experts due to
• Membership at Austrian civilengineers (2.000 experts)
• Membership at Auistrian experts at the court (1.000 experts)
• Membership and cooperation with
• GFAR – Global Forum for Agricultural Research (10.000 members)
• YPARD – Global agro Youth association (8.000 members)
• We can do it:
• ONLY TOGETHER
38. NEXT STEPS
PROGIS´ FUTURE DEVELOPMENTS:
All PROGIS solutions on internet and local
Partner within the EU Project FOODIE (6.0 Mio €)
New environment-solutions for farmers integration
Worldwide expert models in coop with Universities
and in coop with EIP/EU, with GFAR/FAO, „Club of Ossiach“
Feedback analysis of expert models integrated
Education - master program in coop with Universities
Education in cooperation with agro - field schools
„Internet of things“ realized with sensors (soil, meteo)
Vizualisation on maps – mobile + worldwide
Trustcenter: food/feed-industry+consumers
LAB for feed, liquid manure, soil =
location based circular flow management
Animal modules and ERP integration with DATALAB
Carbon balancing agriculture – forestry with partners
New business concepts to be realized
New environmental and risk- targets integrated
Marketing cooperation with GFIA Abu Dhabi
39. WinGIS - software that shows !
KONFUZIUS: Search for a job you like and you will never have to work again!