Earlier this year, the prestigious I-NOV competition for French creative businesses and industry disruptors awarded EarthDaily Agro a significant grant of $1 million to address pressing agriculture challenges. With existing analytics capabilities and an upcoming next-generation satellite constellation, EarthDaily Agro has been recognized for major contributions to agricultural sustainability. EarthDaily Agro’s overall goal is to help transform large-scale agriculture by delivering metrics of high scientific quality from remote sensing and Earth Observation.
The grant will fund a program called EASY4Ag (EarthDaily Analytics for Sustainability and Agriculture). Its goal is to provide innovative, high-performance tools based on satellite data to support an agro-ecological transition on a global scale, and a move towards carbon neutrality by:
The new program will run through October 2024.
Earth Observation-based analytics have the power to significantly increase agricultural sustainability. For instance, EarthDaily Agro can quantify the effects of regenerative agricultural practices like crop rotation, cover crops, and no-till farming through ongoing monitoring, allowing farmers and businesses that support them to maximize their sustainability efforts while also maintaining healthy, successful operations.
With more than 35 years of experience, EarthDaily Agro processes analytics from local to regional scales, with near-real-time and spatially homogeneous data thanks to virtual and upcoming constellations.
The following parameters are particularly valuable to the project:
EathDaily Agro partners with ag cooperatives, seed producers and private input producers located in the different areas of the “high-potential carbon diagonal” of France.
In order to develop new indicators for carbon stockpiling agricultural practices over large areas and in different agronomic contexts, EarthDaily Agro has established a partnership with the Center for Space Studies of the Biosphere (Cesbio-INRAE), which has advanced the scientific literature on agricultural mechanisms for storing additional carbon in soils.
The main challenges of the project concern, firstly, the adaptation of the current platform to the arrival of the new EarthDaily images, leading to 20 times more data to manage as compared to the currently available public data sources Sentinel-2 and Landsat-9. In addition, the challenge is to maintain the same level of quality currently recognized by our customers (data quality, speed, and quality of service) for delivering pixels ready to ingest into AI/Ml pipelines that produce real-time analytics from field to country levels.
Finally, the design of models to extract the relevant information on the event to be detected (field practice) remains a major challenge, given the need for this detection to be reliable and consistent not only in France, but also in geographical areas of the world with very different agricultural systems (e.g., USA, Europe, Brazil).
The project is currently entering a vital phase, during which we are beginning to present our customers, prospects, and French partners with prototypes and initial results, in order to get their feedback and measure the applicability of our solutions in the field. This will help us fine-tune the remaining work on the project.
What This Means For Customers and Prospects
Today, carbon is becoming more and more of a topical issue for farmers and agribusiness, carbon credit stakeholders, institutions, and society. We invite you to consult this article to learn more about the benefits of satellite use in carbon approaches for your area of interest.
Aside from carbon, other areas where data from space is enabling us to broaden our perspective and scale up our efforts include biodiversity and water management. Contact us to learn more about these initiatives.