Zoom calls and online shopping: Life on Canadian farms in 2020 - Action News
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Zoom calls and online shopping: Life on Canadian farms in 2020

The pandemic has sped up innovation as farmers spend more time with digital tools and programs.

Digital tools are improving efficiency and sustainability for many farmers

During a break in harvest, grain farmer Tom Senko says he's been more efficient and focused this year during the pandemic, and is spending more time using digital tools on his farm. (Don Somers/CBC News)

Whether he'sin a field with histruck, tractor or combine, if Tom Senko has some spare time, he's usually on his iPhone, which has become an essential part of farming, especially this summer during the pandemic.

With the device in his hand, the 50-year-old farmer from Humboldt, Sask, monitors the moisture and temperature of his fields, spends time marketinghis crops to buyers,and keeps an eye on advanceweather information, so he knows which parts of his land may receive rain and how much.

The pandemic has sped up the adoption of technology in the agricultural industry asfarmers spend more time with digital tools and programs and less time having face-to-face meetings.

Just as mostpeople have turned to online shopping this year because of the pandemic lockdown and spent much more of their work day on video calls, the same trends are happening on the farm.

Senko,who grows grain and oilseeds on about 4,000 hectares, ordered much of his seed and other supplies online this year, for the first time, and he also started usingZoom and other video conferencing programs tocommunicate with experts if he has a problem with a particular weed or pest.

Senko collects a variety of data about his crops, including yield trends,water use, and the temperature and humidity levels of his fields. (Don Somers/CBC News)

"I was really hesitant at first," Senko said about video calling. "I thought,'Oh this is going to be a train wreck,' but it's been really good. Ihaven't beenZoom-bombed yet."

'Complicated business'

Digital technology has played a growing role in agriculture in recent years, fromusing data to monitor the health of livestock to employingmobile apps to control the irrigation of fields or the temperature of a barn, among many examples.

Nutrien makes the kind of softwareused by farmers. The Calgary-based international fertilizer company says it has seen a noticeable rise in uptake of its data collection tools designed for farmers, such as tracking the amount of water being consumed on a farm or how much carbon is being emitted and how much sequestered.

"Farmers need help to make a lot of decisions. This is a very complicated business, especially trying to balance productivity of their land and climate change," said Nutrien chief executive Chuck Magro.

A bucket of freshly harvested grain on Senko's farm. (Don Somers/CBC News)

Nutrien set a goal at the beginning of the year to reach $500 million in online sales in 2020, but easily blew through that target a few months into the pandemic.Beyond e-commerce, Magro says, the digital tools can improve efficiency and sustainability in the industry.

"It's a great set of tools that I think are very timely and very important, because we have to work through how agriculture is going to contribute to improving climate change."

The pandemic has sped up the industry's transition, though it hasn't been without challenges. Access to high-speed internet is still unreliable in some parts of rural Canada, and the problem has been more apparent than ever this year.

"This year, it made you realize how important the internet is," said Greg Stamp, a seed farmer in Enchant, Alta., about 200 kilometres southeast of Calgary.

"Our rural internet just can't keep up. It gets bogged down and sometimes is just unusable.We definitely noticed that. It's a weakness in rural infrastructure."

WATCH | Innovation on the farm is more than just online shopping:

The new digital tools farmers are using

4 years ago
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