The document discusses how the Future Internet can drive innovation in the smart agri-food sector. It describes the agri-food cluster as an important European economic pillar and outlines global food challenges. The document then discusses how more data and the Future Internet can help address issues like sustainability, food safety, and consumer concerns. It proposes using the Future Internet to enable seamless cross-organizational collaboration, transparency, and new applications across the agri-food supply chain from farms to logistics to retail. Finally, it outlines the objectives and approach of the SmartAgriFood project to boost Future Internet use in agriculture and food.
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.
Presentation for a group of employees of Centric, a large software consultancy company. It provides an illustration of how IoT is currently being developed in farming, agri-logistics and food consumption. It also addresses the technical and organizational challenges that have to be overcome to make IoT application in agri-food a success. Open platforms and software development and above all appropriate business models are key issues that have to be addressed. The new EU-project "Internet of Food and Farm 2020" will address these issues by fostering a collaborative IoT ecosystem to upscale the use of IoT in agri-food.
KG2 has been collecting, compiling and managing data for agricultural marketing professionals for over 20
years.It serves the markets and works with the leading organisations involved in crop production in Australia.
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.
Presentation for a group of employees of Centric, a large software consultancy company. It provides an illustration of how IoT is currently being developed in farming, agri-logistics and food consumption. It also addresses the technical and organizational challenges that have to be overcome to make IoT application in agri-food a success. Open platforms and software development and above all appropriate business models are key issues that have to be addressed. The new EU-project "Internet of Food and Farm 2020" will address these issues by fostering a collaborative IoT ecosystem to upscale the use of IoT in agri-food.
KG2 has been collecting, compiling and managing data for agricultural marketing professionals for over 20
years.It serves the markets and works with the leading organisations involved in crop production in Australia.
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.
Presented FIspace in a session at the 2nd European Conference on Future Internet (ECFI) where the FIware accelerators in agri-food were also presenting how they were planning to build upon FIWARE and FIspace.
New technologies such as the Internet of Things and Cloud Computing are expected to leverage the current
trend of Smart Farming, introducing more sensors, robots and artificial intelligence, encompassed by the
phenomenon of Big Data.
This presentation will give a quick insight into the state-of-the-art of Big Data applications in Smart Farming
and identify the related challenges that have to be addressed. It shows that the scope of Big Data
applications in Smart Farming goes beyond the farm; it is influencing the entire food supply chain. Big data
are being used to provide predictive insights in farming operations, drive real-time operational decisions, and
redesign business processes for game-changing business models.
It is expected that Big Data will cause major shifts in roles and power relations among different players in
current food supply chain networks. The landscape of stakeholders exhibits an interesting game between
powerful tech companies, venture capitalists and often small startups and new entrants. At the same time
there are several public institutions that publish open data, under the condition that the privacy of persons
must be guaranteed. The future of Smart Farming may unravel in a continuum of two extreme scenarios: 1)
closed, proprietary systems or 2) open, collaborative systems.
The development of data and application infrastructures (platforms and standards) and their institutional
embedment will play a crucial role in the battle between these scenarios. A major challenge is therefore to
cope with governance issues and define suitable business models for data sharing in different supply chain
scenarios.
Keynote IoT in Agriculture opening academic year CIHEAM ZaragozaSjaak Wolfert
Keynote presentation for the opening of the academic year at CIHEAM institute for Mediterranean agricultural research in Zaragoza. It is about how IoT and Big Data are transforming Agriculture in Europe and what the main challenges are: governance, business models and open infrastructures. This is illustrated from several use cases in the Internet of Food and Farm 2020 (IoF2020) project.
Future Internet and the FIspace Platform for Agri-Food business at WCCA2014Sjaak Wolfert
Presentation that was held at the World Congress on Computers in Agriculture and Natural Resources, 29 July 2014 San Jose, Costa Rica.
I presented work from all 3 phases of the FI-PPP program and how we started this from projects in The Netherlands.
Digital Innovation Hubs – Digital Transformation of Agriculture at a Regional...Sjaak Wolfert
• Build local digital innovation hubs offering innovation services and access
to finance
• Organize regional challenges for initiating new Innovation Experiments
• Conduct multi-actor Innovation Experiments for a digital transformation
• Creating a pan-European network of Digital Innovation Hubs
and Competence Centres
Governance of Data Sharing in Agri-Food - towards common guidelinesSjaak Wolfert
Big Data is becoming a new asset in the agri-food sector including enterprise data from operational systems, sensor data, farm equipment data, etc. Recently, Big Data applications are being implemented, aiming at improving farm and chain performance. Many companies are refraining from sharing data because of the fear of governance issues such as data security, privacy and liability. Moreover, they are often in a deadlock or afraid to take the first step even though they expect to develop new business with data. To accelerate the development of Big Data applications, this paper analyses governance issues and introduces a set of guidelines for governance of data sharing in agri-food networks. A framework for analysis was derived from literature and used to identify lessons learned from recent projects or initiatives. From these results, a set of draft guidelines was developed. The framework and guidelines were evaluated in a workshop. The framework consists of factors that are related to governance on data sharing in networks. Internal factors are: efficiency, effectiveness, inclusiveness, legitimacy & accountability, credibility and transparency. External factors are: political, economic, social, technological, legal and environmental factors. For each of these factors, guidelines are provided in terms of: issues to be addressed, best practices and lessons learned from other projects and initiatives. It is concluded that the framework is complete in covering all relevant issues on governance in data sharing but the guidelines must be considered as a first set, which can be further improved and extended in the future. A wiki-type-of-website could help to upscale the guidelines at a global level. The guidelines could also be further refined accounting for different maturity levels of agri-food networks. The guidelines in this paper are considered to be a valuable step into the direction of solving governance issues in data sharing, which is expected to accelerate Big Data applications in the agri-food domain.
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)
Smart Agriculture & Food Security: Ensuring I(o)T all comes togetherRobert Ossevoort
The Wageningen UR pitch for Internet of Things (IoT) in smart agriculture. Our ideas on a IoT pilot in agriculture by connecting supply (technology providers) and demand (farmers, food processors).
Extentia designed for one of its global agribusiness clients, an Android mobile app which tracks farm cultivation and yields. The app enabled their field supervisors to collect data accurately and make real-time decisions in sync with the headquarters. This project serves as a good example of Extentia’s experience and expertise in digital transformation solutions, agriculture domain knowledge and enterprise mobility solutions.
Read more at: http://www.extentia.com/blog/digital-transformation-in-agriculture
http://www.extentia.com/agriculture/
IoF - Internet of Farms - How the digital revolution is changing the agricult...Product of Things
These are the slides from Izhar Gilad's workshop at Product of Things Conference in Tel Aviv on July 2018:
Who this workshop is for:
This workshop is for those who wish to understand how to sell ‘new’ products to an ‘old’ world by looking at how ‘traditional’ agriculture and other domains (IoT, Cars, and others) are changing, and what are the new opportunities emerging in the field
After this workshop you will be able to:
- Recognize opportunities in ‘traditional’ industries
- Understand the challenges of presenting innovative products to ‘traditional’ domains
- Foresee the challenges of launching a product in a conservative market
What is covered:
- Getting to know the threats and opportunities in IoF
- Catching up on the latest market dynamics and trends
- Learning the best practices and extensive GTM knowhow, in cracking the way for a successful product launch
In this workshop, Izhar will share his unique perspective on the challenges of introducing new technologies into the ‘traditional’ field of agriculture, that only someone that grew and breathed ‘traditional’ agriculture his entire life has.
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.
Presented FIspace in a session at the 2nd European Conference on Future Internet (ECFI) where the FIware accelerators in agri-food were also presenting how they were planning to build upon FIWARE and FIspace.
New technologies such as the Internet of Things and Cloud Computing are expected to leverage the current
trend of Smart Farming, introducing more sensors, robots and artificial intelligence, encompassed by the
phenomenon of Big Data.
This presentation will give a quick insight into the state-of-the-art of Big Data applications in Smart Farming
and identify the related challenges that have to be addressed. It shows that the scope of Big Data
applications in Smart Farming goes beyond the farm; it is influencing the entire food supply chain. Big data
are being used to provide predictive insights in farming operations, drive real-time operational decisions, and
redesign business processes for game-changing business models.
It is expected that Big Data will cause major shifts in roles and power relations among different players in
current food supply chain networks. The landscape of stakeholders exhibits an interesting game between
powerful tech companies, venture capitalists and often small startups and new entrants. At the same time
there are several public institutions that publish open data, under the condition that the privacy of persons
must be guaranteed. The future of Smart Farming may unravel in a continuum of two extreme scenarios: 1)
closed, proprietary systems or 2) open, collaborative systems.
The development of data and application infrastructures (platforms and standards) and their institutional
embedment will play a crucial role in the battle between these scenarios. A major challenge is therefore to
cope with governance issues and define suitable business models for data sharing in different supply chain
scenarios.
Keynote IoT in Agriculture opening academic year CIHEAM ZaragozaSjaak Wolfert
Keynote presentation for the opening of the academic year at CIHEAM institute for Mediterranean agricultural research in Zaragoza. It is about how IoT and Big Data are transforming Agriculture in Europe and what the main challenges are: governance, business models and open infrastructures. This is illustrated from several use cases in the Internet of Food and Farm 2020 (IoF2020) project.
Future Internet and the FIspace Platform for Agri-Food business at WCCA2014Sjaak Wolfert
Presentation that was held at the World Congress on Computers in Agriculture and Natural Resources, 29 July 2014 San Jose, Costa Rica.
I presented work from all 3 phases of the FI-PPP program and how we started this from projects in The Netherlands.
Digital Innovation Hubs – Digital Transformation of Agriculture at a Regional...Sjaak Wolfert
• Build local digital innovation hubs offering innovation services and access
to finance
• Organize regional challenges for initiating new Innovation Experiments
• Conduct multi-actor Innovation Experiments for a digital transformation
• Creating a pan-European network of Digital Innovation Hubs
and Competence Centres
Governance of Data Sharing in Agri-Food - towards common guidelinesSjaak Wolfert
Big Data is becoming a new asset in the agri-food sector including enterprise data from operational systems, sensor data, farm equipment data, etc. Recently, Big Data applications are being implemented, aiming at improving farm and chain performance. Many companies are refraining from sharing data because of the fear of governance issues such as data security, privacy and liability. Moreover, they are often in a deadlock or afraid to take the first step even though they expect to develop new business with data. To accelerate the development of Big Data applications, this paper analyses governance issues and introduces a set of guidelines for governance of data sharing in agri-food networks. A framework for analysis was derived from literature and used to identify lessons learned from recent projects or initiatives. From these results, a set of draft guidelines was developed. The framework and guidelines were evaluated in a workshop. The framework consists of factors that are related to governance on data sharing in networks. Internal factors are: efficiency, effectiveness, inclusiveness, legitimacy & accountability, credibility and transparency. External factors are: political, economic, social, technological, legal and environmental factors. For each of these factors, guidelines are provided in terms of: issues to be addressed, best practices and lessons learned from other projects and initiatives. It is concluded that the framework is complete in covering all relevant issues on governance in data sharing but the guidelines must be considered as a first set, which can be further improved and extended in the future. A wiki-type-of-website could help to upscale the guidelines at a global level. The guidelines could also be further refined accounting for different maturity levels of agri-food networks. The guidelines in this paper are considered to be a valuable step into the direction of solving governance issues in data sharing, which is expected to accelerate Big Data applications in the agri-food domain.
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)
Smart Agriculture & Food Security: Ensuring I(o)T all comes togetherRobert Ossevoort
The Wageningen UR pitch for Internet of Things (IoT) in smart agriculture. Our ideas on a IoT pilot in agriculture by connecting supply (technology providers) and demand (farmers, food processors).
Extentia designed for one of its global agribusiness clients, an Android mobile app which tracks farm cultivation and yields. The app enabled their field supervisors to collect data accurately and make real-time decisions in sync with the headquarters. This project serves as a good example of Extentia’s experience and expertise in digital transformation solutions, agriculture domain knowledge and enterprise mobility solutions.
Read more at: http://www.extentia.com/blog/digital-transformation-in-agriculture
http://www.extentia.com/agriculture/
IoF - Internet of Farms - How the digital revolution is changing the agricult...Product of Things
These are the slides from Izhar Gilad's workshop at Product of Things Conference in Tel Aviv on July 2018:
Who this workshop is for:
This workshop is for those who wish to understand how to sell ‘new’ products to an ‘old’ world by looking at how ‘traditional’ agriculture and other domains (IoT, Cars, and others) are changing, and what are the new opportunities emerging in the field
After this workshop you will be able to:
- Recognize opportunities in ‘traditional’ industries
- Understand the challenges of presenting innovative products to ‘traditional’ domains
- Foresee the challenges of launching a product in a conservative market
What is covered:
- Getting to know the threats and opportunities in IoF
- Catching up on the latest market dynamics and trends
- Learning the best practices and extensive GTM knowhow, in cracking the way for a successful product launch
In this workshop, Izhar will share his unique perspective on the challenges of introducing new technologies into the ‘traditional’ field of agriculture, that only someone that grew and breathed ‘traditional’ agriculture his entire life has.
KG2 develops campaigns to target growers who require insurance cover at seasonally receptive times. The direct marketing techniques assist clients to accurately target the right customer.
Diptic curs innovacio alimentaria Uvic / Smart Food InnovationGerard Pujol
Informació relativa al curs organitzat per la Uvic i Smart Food Innovation adreçat a PIMES del sector alimentari. El curs és teòrico-pràcticc i s'inicia el 06 de Març i té una duració de 50 h.
Masterclass 16 april 2015: Port Innovation: the internet of things Maurice Jansen
On 16th of April, STC-NMU organised a Masterclass for students and young port professionals on the implications of internet of things for the ports and logistics sector. What is it and is it really changing the port and logistics
industry? Speakers from PortBase, UTi Worldwide and RDM Centre of Expertise explored how the connected world is changing the logistics landscape and how it can make supply chains smarter, better and more reliable.
Based on the discussion that followed after the speakers presented their part, innovation on the basis of IoT is not so much a technology issue, but more a matter of innovation of new business models. These propositions will have to be built upon trust and mutual benefits between partners, which will unlock the true value of data in the supply chain.
The Industrial Data Space aims at establishing a virtual data space in which partners in business ecosystems can securely exchange and easily link their data assets. The presentation puts the Industrial Data Space in the context of recent developments in the area of Smart Service Welt and Industrie 4.0 and sketches a reference architecture model and functional software components. Furthermore, the presentation introduces the Industrial Data Space Association which institutionalizes the user requirements and drives standardization. The presentation was given at the Industry 4.0 session at MACH 2016 on April 14, 2016, in Birmingham, UK.
FIWARE for Smart Cities: City of Ancona - Parking AdvisorFIWARE
FIWARE for Smart Cities: City of Ancona - Parking Advisor presentation, by Prog. Ing. Gian Marco Revel.
Smart City / Smart Mobility. Conference track. 1st FIWARE Summit, Málaga, Dec. 13-15, 2016.
FIWARE: the best is yet to come presentation, by Ulrich Ahle. CEO FIWARE Foundation.
Conference track, final word. 1st FIWARE Summit, Málaga, Dec. 13-15, 2016.
FIWARE for Smart Industry panel discussion, by Ulrich Ahle, CEO of the FIWARE Foundation.
Conference track. 1st FIWARE Summit, Málagada, Dec. 13-15, 2016.
Libby Bernick, Vice President, TerraChoice, shares best practices in product-focused sustainability metrics. Current practices in developing greener product sourcing frameworks by B2B procurement experts and B2C category managers might not be what you expect. Are they aligned with what customers and consumers want, the products that suppliers make, and the biggest global sustainability challenges sustainability experts see ahead? This presentation explores the results of some recent benchmarking on product metrics and sustainable sourcing, and discusses strategies and challenges for today’s sustainability leaders.
6.1 jan van_der_lee-collection_processing_marketingSilvia Sperandini
On December 8 and 9, a Dairy Expert Roundtable Meeting on “Competitive Dairy Value Chains in Southeast Asia” was held in Muak Lek, Thailand. In this regional meeting, participants from six countries in Southeast Asia discussed how the relatively small dairy value chains could be more competitive and sustainable.
A presentation made to IFAD (International Fund For Agriculture Development) country office on creating market linkages for rural poor farmers as a means to increase their livelihood and sustainability.
Presentation Isabel Martinho Sustainability Ii Debate Lisbon 2008Dianova
Sustainabilty approach at Portugal Telecom, presentation by Isabel Martinho, CSR/Communication Department at Portugal Telecom, at the II Regional Debate EACD Lisbon, 4th december 2008, under the theme "Challenges of Integrated Communications"
1. Smart Food and Agribusiness:
Future Internet as a source for innovation
Krijn J. Poppe
LEI Wageningen UR
e-mail: krijn.poppe@wur.nl
www.smartagrifood.eu
2. The agri-food cluster is an important economic European pillar
– With about 40 % of the EU’s land area being farmed, agriculture has a very
important impact on the natural environment (Eurostat 2010)
– The food and drink industry is representing 13% of EU manufacturing sector
turnover (CIAA 2010, data 2007)
– The EU is the world’s largest food and drink exporter with a share of EU
exports to world markets of 17.5% in 2008 (CIAA 2010)
– Share of agri-food logistics in the EU road transport is about 20%
(Eurostat/TLN 2008, data 2007)
3. Global Food Challenge:
two times more with two times less
Food production
We are here now
Ecological Footprint
4. Current key competition issues / drivers / business models
Logistics
Farmer solution Food processor
Input industries Software Retail / consumer
Provider providers
Transport Transport Transport
Retail brand
Innovation GRIN Service loyalty (also
technologies concepts versus food
service and on
Small, local line)
farm
support
Internationalisation,
Reduce costprice
Consumer driven innovation
Cope with legislation and
Cope with power retail,
paper work
Sustainability issues
5. Public issues / consumer concerns (motivates public interest)
Logistics
Farmer solution Food processor
Input industries Software Retail / consumer
Provider providers
Transport Transport Transport
GRIN Small Cost price Service Cope with retail Loyalty
Sustainability: pollution and waste Health
Feed the growing world Food Safety
6. How more data contributes to this:
Logistics
Farmer solution Food processor
Input industries Software Retail / consumer
Provider providers
Transport Transport Transport
GRIN Small Cost price Service Cope with retail Loyalty
Feed the growing world Sustainability Food Safety Health
Segment
Precision Farming:
products and
better control,
input suppliers; Consumer
Better management
Benchmark with decision support
decision
competitors (pre- and after
Sophisticated sales)
Technology,
Better service concepts, e.g. in
More advise
logistics (less waste) and store
replenishment
7. Which innovations and new business models are possible ?
Logistics
Farmer solution Food processor
Input industries Software Retail / consumer
Provider providers
Transport Transport Transport
GRIN Small Cost price Service Cope with retail Loyalty
Feed the growing world Sustainability Food Safety Health
Precision Farming Better management Service ++ Segment Cons. support
Open farm management Measure, pay Personalized advise
Paperless chain,
systems with specific apps. sustainability with new apps
Store
Distance advise on diseases etc. Better Tracing Online shops
replenishment,
Computer aided advise and and tracking
Category
decisions management
Regionally pooled data analysis Short supply chains, feed
for science and advise back consumer-producer
8. State of the art and bottlenecks of ICT in agri-food
• Known state of the art regarding ICT
– large amounts of data and fragmented applications
– poor level of integration
– insufficient support for intelligent user support
• Underlying issues:
– Semantic interoperability, data integrity, reliability, trust, scalability, capability to
process large amounts of data in global networks.
• This hinders development of the sector on critical issues like food safety, food
quality, tracking and tracing, the efficiency in the use of scarce resources, etc.
• The (global) actor network is complex to organize
• Margins are small, competition is large, different business types, public debates,
etc.
Common approach such as FI-PPP is needed to meet the challenges
9. General objectives (Phase I)
To boost the application and use of future internet ICTs in the agri-food
sector by:
• identifying and describing the technical, functional and non-functional FI-
specifications for experimentation in smart agri-food production as a
whole system and in particular for smart farming, smart agri-logistics and
smart food awareness
• identifying and developing smart agri-food-specific capabilities and
conceptual prototypes, demonstrating critical technological solutions
including the feasibility to further develop them in large scale
experimentation and validation
• identifying and describing existing experimentation structures and start
user community building, resulting in an implementation plan for the next
phase
11. SmartAgriFood: 3 use case domains – 6 pilots
• Quality Controlled Logistics in the Flower Supply chain
• Quality Controlled Logistics in the Fruits & Veg. chain
• Tailored Shopping
Experience
• Tracking & Tracing for
Meat Awareness
• Smart Spraying
• Smart Greenhouse Management
12. Farm-level: lack of integration and who cares?
Several problems:
• Suppliers and clients not
interested in data integration
• as farms are heterogeneous
• Small IT suppliers lack
investment capacity
• but precision farming (IoT)
overloads farmers with data
Network-(hybrid) centric
solution is needed !
12
13. Vision for FI application potentials
Process Controls any (all) ag machines,
Intelligence Anywhere in Variable Ad-Hoc-Networks
Vehicles “order” fuel,
spare parts, transfer
trailers
Process controller
calculates and
broadcasts directives
to operators
Dispatcher is informed about
approaching thunderstorm and
can trigger new optimization
criteria
Central system calculates
routing on field and road.
13
14. Scenario for a machine breakdown: User Interface in Cabin
15. Use Scenario - John Deere Machine Breakdown Service
Automatic assistance in real time – Notification of hardware malfunction
16. Use Scenario - John Deere Machine Breakdown Service
Automatic assistance in real time – Defect details of hardware malfunction
17. Use Scenario - John Deere Machine Breakdown Service
Automatic assistance in real time – Prepare solution choices
18. Use Scenario - John Deere Machine Breakdown Service
Automatic assistance in real time – Status of settled problems
19. Small scale pilot – farmer interface (1)
Welcome John! Sign out
Home My profile Mail(3) Hot News! Search Engine
My farms
Hot News!!!
The National Milk Quota
for the year 20011 is…. My friends
Subsides are given to …
Community My friends
Aaron H.
You!: Yes Nick, I am Adele W. URGENT!!!
fine!!! I called Jack Agatha C.
Bayer for spraying my Allan G. Soil Humidity is
crops. He is Alex L. low. You should
awesome!!! Alton K. irrigate your…
Nick: Jack Bayer? ?? Betty F.
How did you find Brand S.
him? Candy C.
You!: You go to the Carmel C.
search engine and Celia G.
ask for spray Charles E.
contractors in the Clark U.
neighborhood. I Dale W.
checked the ratings Daniel F.
and I decided to call Daniel G.
him. Man, he helped Daniel R.
me a lot. You should Dixon R.
call me RIGHT NOW! Elliot B.
Jack: Thanks for the Celia G.
advice! You already Charles E.
know that the last Clark U.
disease ruined my
You are right!!! Send
19
20. Small scale pilot – farmer interface (2)
Welcome John, Sign out
your friends are Home My profile Mail(3) Hot News! Search Engine
waiting for you!
My farms
My friends
LIST of my friends
Aaron Hemilton GO!!!
URGENT!!!
Aphids has
infected Jack’s
Add friend crop. He … URGENT!!!
URGENT!!!
Soil Humidity is
Friend Request(2) Aphids has low. You should
infected Nicks irrigate your..
crop. He …
Friends Alarms
Community Blog
Farming Issues
Area Statistics
Chat
History
Privacy
20
24. Cloud Event Management System
Virtual Virtual Virtual
Location A Plant Location B
Environ
Environ ment
Location Ament Location B
update
update
Plant
location
update
25. Mock-up quality monitoring screen
• Overview of conditions
• Overview of cultivars in
docking area
• Quality of cultivars
• Appropriateness of
storing conditions for
cultivars present
• Alarms for problem
notification
26. Mock-up quality simulation screen
• Historic quality trajectory
based on measurements
• Simulated quality based
on decay models
• Alarms for expected
quality problems
• Advices for interventions
27. Live demo
User interface
1. Search and select
objects
2.
2. Location of the
1. object
3. 4.
3. Environmental
conditions
5.
4. Representative
picture of the
object
5. Historic trajectory
6. of environmental
conditions
6. Expected quality
trajectory
29. Open platforms,
Food Awareness anonymization,
security/privacy
IoT, open
infrastructure
Mobility, device
independence,
recommendations,
social networking
Interoperability, Open
semantics, big platforms
amounts of data
30. Vision for FI application potentials
hybrid network architecture
30
31. Aspects of the super scenario
agri-food supply chain stakeholders
functionalities for information exchange and collaboration support
enabling technologies
enabling policies
32. Detailed super scenario aspects
farms trade/logistics retail consumers society
service discovery, configuration, and delivery
identification business relations product information certification
information sharing and interoperability in the cloud
FI, generic enablers, and standards
location semantic
Internet of Things image recognition
technologies technologies
common ontologies trust, privacy, and security
33. Super scenario: generic services
Identification Certification
services services
Business relations Product information
services services
Generic and SmartAgriFood specific Enablers
35. How will the super scenario work?
Product Information Service enables information
exchange
consumer
exception notification
tailored information ;
feedback to enhance
quality and delivery
semantic technologies
data bases data bases data bases
GS1 and other standards
farms logistics retail
business
services
arrangements
Business Relations Service enables collaboration
36. To be continued in cSpace (under negotiation)
Forwarder
Future Internet
Consultants
Carriers
will facilitate:
■ … seamless cross-organizational
Production collaboration (information
Plants Consumers exchange, communication,
Features coordination of activities)
New Services & Apps
Collaboration & Communication ■ …unprecedented transparency,
End-2-End Visibility
Machine-2-Machine Communication visibility and control of processes
(using Internet-connected sensors and
High-Quality Customer Applications
Banks IoT devices)
Ports
Insurances ■ …rapid, easy, low cost
Customs Authorities
development and deployment of
customized solutions (apps and
services)
■ …agile formation of business
Agri-Food, Transport and Logistics: networks and ecosystems (social
• EU turnover: 1,500 billion € networks and app/service markets)
• Efficiency: 148-220 billion € savings
• Sustainability: 26.5% of CO2 emissions
37. To conclude
• The SmartAgriFood project will
– boost the application and use of future internet ICTs in the
agri-food sector
– increase the competiveness of the European agri-food
cluster and related (ICT) service industry in order to meet
the global challenges for food production
– enhance the dialogue between the user community and
the ICT community to identify, develop and test new
concepts for better exploitation of the Future Internet in
the agri-food sector
38. Thank you for your attention!
More information:
www.smartagrifood.eu