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Contest aims to bridge gap between tech and farming

CAAIN launches smart farm network competition.
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CAAIN’s mandate from Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada is to fund technological responses to important challenges facing the nation’s agri-food producers and primary processors.

EDMONTON, Alta.  – The Canadian Agri-Food Automation and Intelligence Network (CAAIN) has launched a smart farm network competition designed to encourage the adoption by farmers of emergent agricultural technology.

“This competitive process will help our team identify and support organizations committed to evaluating technologies and research that will boost the productivity, profitability, and environmental sustainability of our nation’s agricultural operations,” said CAAIN CEO, Darrell Petras. “We’ve been funding extraordinary innovation for three years. Now we’re building the infrastructure that will allow producers to judge for themselves if agtech of interest can deliver sufficient ROI to make their adoption economically feasible.”

CAAIN’s mandate from Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada is to fund technological responses to important challenges facing the nation’s agri-food producers and primary processors. That means supporting promising efforts with the potential to provide socio-economic and/or environmental value. The competition announced today builds on the $30M CAAIN has committed to 30 projects whose total value exceeds $100M. It is an extraordinary track record of success that will generate a significant return on investment for Canadian taxpayers.

“Our first funded project was a network of smart farms that has grown from three sites in two provinces to eight locations distributed across Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, and Ontario,” explained Petras.

“We intend both to add to that group and create additional networks spread out across the nation and specialising in a range of produce. Canada’s agroclimatic diversity is both blessing and curse. Mostly, it contributes to our greatness. But there is a downside. Technology of value to a hog operation in Quebec may not be so useful to a similar outfit in Manitoba. There are variations in factors such as temperature, precipitation, and soil composition. We will support different types of networks, and will link them by means of an integrated online platform that will allow participants to share data, best practices, and lessons learned.”

Details of this program, descriptions of the projects CAAIN has funded, and information about how to join our free member-driven network are available online at caain.ca.

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