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posted by cmn32480 on Monday April 27 2015, @10:26AM   Printer-friendly
from the we-welcome-our-new-robot-overlords dept.

Ilan Brat reports at the WSJ that technological advances are making it possible for robots to handle the backbreaking job of gently plucking ripe strawberries from below deep-green leaves, just as the shrinking supply of available fruit pickers has made the technology more financially attractive. “It’s no longer a problem of how much does a strawberry harvester cost,” says Juan Bravo, inventor of Agrobot, the picking machine. “Now it’s about how much does it cost to leave a field unpicked, and that’s a lot more expensive.” The Agrobot costs about $100,000 and Bravo has a second, larger prototype in development.

Other devices similarly are starting to assume delicate tasks in different parts of the fresh-produce industry, from planting vegetable seedlings to harvesting lettuce to transplanting roses. While farmers of corn and other commodity crops replaced most of their workers decades ago with giant combines, growers of produce and plants have largely stuck with human pickers—partly to avoid maladroit machines marring the blemish-free appearance of items that consumers see on store shelves. With workers in short supply, “the only way to get more out of the sunshine we have is to elevate the technology,” says Soren Bjorn.

American farmers have in recent years resorted to bringing in hundreds of thousands of workers from Mexico on costly, temporary visas for such work. But the decades-old system needs to be replaced because “we don’t have the unlimited labor supply we once did,” says Rick Antle. "Americans themselves don't seem willing to take the harder farming jobs," says Charles Trauger, who has a farm in Nebraska. "Nobody's taking them. People want to live in the city instead of the farm. Hispanics who usually do that work are going to higher paying jobs in packing plants and other industrial areas."

The labor shortage spurred Tanimura & Antle Fresh Foods, one of the country’s largest vegetable farmers, to buy a Spanish startup called Plant Tape, whose system transplants vegetable seedlings from greenhouse to field using strips of biodegradable material fed through a tractor-pulled planting device. “This is the least desirable job in the entire company,” says Becky Drumright. With machines, “there are no complaints whatsoever. The robots don’t have workers' compensation, they don’t take breaks.”

 
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  • (Score: 4, Interesting) by Covalent on Monday April 27 2015, @02:11PM

    by Covalent (43) on Monday April 27 2015, @02:11PM (#175708) Journal

    There are two jobs currently employing many thousands of unskilled laborers that may be going the way of the dinosaur: Picking fruits and vegetables and driving a car / bus / taxi / truck. I know the buggy whip manufacturers went on to make cars, but what jobs CAN truck drivers and fruit pickers do, and will there be anywhere close to enough of those jobs to make employ all of them?

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  • (Score: 1, Touché) by Anonymous Coward on Monday April 27 2015, @03:17PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday April 27 2015, @03:17PM (#175734)

    And massive economic upheavals lead to political upheavals. But don't worry, the police state is ready to reap a terrible harvest. The drones are rearing to go.

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday April 27 2015, @04:38PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Monday April 27 2015, @04:38PM (#175764)

      As long as they're not raring to go, I think we're okay.

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday April 27 2015, @04:06PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday April 27 2015, @04:06PM (#175760)

    Your reference to Buggy Ship Manufacturers made me think perhaps you've read this book "After Thought" by James Bailey

    If not, give it a spin.. very much influenced my perspective.

    http://www.amazon.com/After-Thought-Computer-Challenge-Intelligence/dp/0465007821 [amazon.com]

    It's about Artificial Intelligence (from a philosophical/cultural/historical perspective and it's on point to this very topic.