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Largest farms most likely to adopt precision ag

USDA Economic Research Service
Mar. 03, 2023 2 minutes read
Largest farms most likely to adopt precision ag

Ken Hammond

U.S. farms are adopting precision technologies at different rates, with the largest farms adopting auto-steer guidance technology at significantly higher rates. USDA’s Economic Research Service (ERS) researchers used data from four successive Agricultural Resource Management Surveys to assess the adoption of precision agriculture technologies across four major field crops.

After sorting farms into five equally sized groups based on farm size, they found that the largest farms across all commodities had adopted guidance at the highest rates. Specifically, of farms growing corn in 2016, 73% of farms in the largest size category adopted guidance.

The rates were similar for the group of largest farms growing other commodities in later years: 82% of the largest winter wheat farms in 2017, 68% of the largest soybean farms in 2018 and 67% of the largest cotton farms in 2019.

Conversely, among the smallest farms, adoption of guidance systems was much lower: 10% of the smallest corn farms in 2016, 11% of the smallest soybean farms in 2018 and 7% of the smallest winter wheat farms in 2017, with the exception of cotton, which starts at a relatively high rate of 50% for the smallest cotton farms in 2019.

Adoption rates vary based on field terrain, soil characteristics, the scale and scope of production and farmers’ risk preferences. Other factors affecting adoption rates include the type of crop produced and farmers’ socioeconomic characteristics, such as age, education level and years of experience. USDA ERS

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