Robotic strawberry harvest is promising but will need improved technology and higher wages to be economically viable

While the prospect of robotic harvest in strawberry production has received much attention within the strawberry industry and the popular press, there is little available information on the economic feasibility of this technology. It is not clear how close the industry is to being able to profitably...

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Main Author: Timothy Delbridge
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of California Agriculture and Natural Resources 2021-07-01
Series:California Agriculture
Subjects:
Online Access:http://calag.ucanr.edu/archive/?article=ca.2021a0009
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spelling doaj-d4aebdcfb9c04fb499326486110ff4122021-08-03T02:23:03ZengUniversity of California Agriculture and Natural ResourcesCalifornia Agriculture0008-08452160-80912021-07-01576310.3733/ca.2021a0009Robotic strawberry harvest is promising but will need improved technology and higher wages to be economically viableTimothy Delbridge0T. Delbridge is Assistant Professor, Agribusiness Department, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo.While the prospect of robotic harvest in strawberry production has received much attention within the strawberry industry and the popular press, there is little available information on the economic feasibility of this technology. It is not clear how close the industry is to being able to profitably adopt robotic harvest systems; also unclear is the relative importance of wage rates, robotic harvest efficiencies and machinery field speeds on the adoption threshold. This study aims to clarify these issues by estimating the net income to strawberry production under robotic harvest scenarios, and comparing the values to standard enterprise budgets for strawberry production in California under different wage rates for harvest labor. Results confirm that robotic harvest remains economically unviable under current wage rates and the field speeds and harvest efficiencies achieved by leading robotic harvest development teams. However, results indicate that with expected increases in wage rates in the coming years, and with modest improvements in the technical parameters, use of robotic systems will likely become profitable in some form.http://calag.ucanr.edu/archive/?article=ca.2021a0009strawberriesautomationrobotsagricultural economics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Timothy Delbridge
spellingShingle Timothy Delbridge
Robotic strawberry harvest is promising but will need improved technology and higher wages to be economically viable
California Agriculture
strawberries
automation
robots
agricultural economics
author_facet Timothy Delbridge
author_sort Timothy Delbridge
title Robotic strawberry harvest is promising but will need improved technology and higher wages to be economically viable
title_short Robotic strawberry harvest is promising but will need improved technology and higher wages to be economically viable
title_full Robotic strawberry harvest is promising but will need improved technology and higher wages to be economically viable
title_fullStr Robotic strawberry harvest is promising but will need improved technology and higher wages to be economically viable
title_full_unstemmed Robotic strawberry harvest is promising but will need improved technology and higher wages to be economically viable
title_sort robotic strawberry harvest is promising but will need improved technology and higher wages to be economically viable
publisher University of California Agriculture and Natural Resources
series California Agriculture
issn 0008-0845
2160-8091
publishDate 2021-07-01
description While the prospect of robotic harvest in strawberry production has received much attention within the strawberry industry and the popular press, there is little available information on the economic feasibility of this technology. It is not clear how close the industry is to being able to profitably adopt robotic harvest systems; also unclear is the relative importance of wage rates, robotic harvest efficiencies and machinery field speeds on the adoption threshold. This study aims to clarify these issues by estimating the net income to strawberry production under robotic harvest scenarios, and comparing the values to standard enterprise budgets for strawberry production in California under different wage rates for harvest labor. Results confirm that robotic harvest remains economically unviable under current wage rates and the field speeds and harvest efficiencies achieved by leading robotic harvest development teams. However, results indicate that with expected increases in wage rates in the coming years, and with modest improvements in the technical parameters, use of robotic systems will likely become profitable in some form.
topic strawberries
automation
robots
agricultural economics
url http://calag.ucanr.edu/archive/?article=ca.2021a0009
work_keys_str_mv AT timothydelbridge roboticstrawberryharvestispromisingbutwillneedimprovedtechnologyandhigherwagestobeeconomicallyviable
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