There is significant opportunity for growers to increase farm profits and conserve water by quickly detecting and correcting common drip irrigation issues like plugs, leaks and pressure issues.
Ceres Imaging, the irrigation performance management provider that uses aerial imagery and data analytics to help growers improve their irrigation practice, has released a study quantifying the extent and impact of drip irrigation issues in agriculture across the western U.S.
The report finds that there is significant opportunity for growers to increase farm profits and conserve water by quickly detecting and correcting common issues like plugs, leaks and pressure issues.
“Many of the challenges facing the agriculture sector are incredibly complex and can feel maddingly zero-sum. This study is so exciting because it unearths a large opportunity for improved water use efficiency that is farmer friendly and relatively simple to solve,” said Ceres Imaging Founder and CEO Ashwin Madgavkar.
The report uses aerial imagery to quantify the extent and impact of irrigation issues across a vast geography. Ceres Imaging reviewed anonymized data from more than 1 million acres of drip-irrigated specialty crops across California collected over the course of the 2020 growing season.
The study quantifies the answers to five questions about common irrigation issues like plugs and leaks:
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According to Ceres Imaging, there are considerable opportunities to improve grower profits and increase agriculture resource efficiency by acting on irrigation issues quickly.
Also read: Drip irrigation definitely viable for large farms
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