TECHNOLOGY AND INNOVATION

SwarmFarm raises $12 million to develop integrated autonomy

SwarmFarm raises $12 mill to progress integrated autonomy system.

Staff writer

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The money was raised through a Series A funding round, led by Emmertech, an AgTech fund from Conexus Venture Capital based in Canada. SwarmFarm is based in central Queensland.

The funding also sees new investment from Tribe Global Ventures and Access Capital. Also joining the round are SwarmFarm's existing investors, including Tenacious Ventures, and GrainInnovate, the Grains Research and Development Corporation (GRDC) venture capital fund managed by Artesian.

"There is enormous demand for autonomy in agriculture, but today, most solutions unlock minimal potential," said SwarmFarm chief executive officer, Andrew Bate.

"The current equipment providers believe that farmers just want to be plucked from the cab or replaced by robotic arms. We believe that farmers want more," Bate said.

"They want a technology ecosystem built to address the issues in their locality, a farm-centric system that leaves the lowest possible footprint on their fields, helping them do more with less. They want integrated autonomy, so that's what we're building."

SwarmFarm says integrated autonomy is a new approach to autonomy on-farm that unlocks the full potential of driverless technology by providing specialty robotics solutions with an open platform with scope to be further developed.

"While many companies are making driverless tractors and developing niche robotics solutions in agriculture today, we believe that there is a third category of autonomy that combines the robot and the application within a development framework that will allow farmers to customize their equipment for their needs and allow developers to bring their innovations to life much more rapidly," Bate said.

"It's the best of both worlds. For the farmer, we provide customized autonomy in a box. For the developer, we provide a streamlined path to the grower with a tight feedback loop."

SwarmFarm says last year its SwarmBots had successfully been deployed to farmers who covered over 526,000 commercial hectares, operated for 64,000 hours, and reduced pesticide inputs by an estimated 780 tonnes.

SwarmFarm works with a range of businesses including WEED-IT, Bilberry, Weedseeker, Hayes Spraying, Rasmussen Brothers Engineering, Goldacres, and Croplands.

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