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You know I can't harvest your 'Ghost Vines'

Tuesday 17 January 2023, 9:22AM

By Cropsy Technologies

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AUCKLAND

Cropsy Technologies has been awarded a $534k project grant through the Ministry for Primary Industries’ (MPI’s) Sustainable Food and Fibre Futures (SFF Futures) fund and a $200k AGMARDT Agribusiness Innovation grant to lead a project titled ‘You know I can’t harvest your Ghost Vines: Vineyard-scale monitoring of unproductive vines’.

“The project will develop tools to help growers understand the health and productivity of every vine in their vineyards in order to identify missing, dead, dying or otherwise unproductive grapevines,” says Cropsy’s Head of Product & Innovation Dr Gareth Hill.

“These vines receive all the labour, water, and other vineyard inputs that other vines do without contributing to the overall productivity of the vineyard. For all intents and purposes these vines are either missing or may as well be, which is why we call them ‘Ghost Vines’.

“There are over 40,000 hectares of New Zealand vineyards with many tens-of-millions of vines, so ghost vines pose a hidden threat to the sustainability of the industry, both environmentally through inefficient land use and financially through lost production and avoidable vineyard expansion. Monitoring the health and productivity of this number of vines reliably and scalably right now is simply impossible.”

Cropsy’s current vision system can measure the current state of grapevines. By also measuring and analysing the state of every vine and its neighbours over time, the Ghost Vines project will enable the diagnosis of declining productivity and disease at the earliest possible stage.

“We are building up a ‘patient history’ of all the vines in a vineyard,” explains Dr Hill. “By putting each vine’s performance into context we’ll be able to make more accurate forecasts about its productivity and the future of the vineyard as a whole.”

The two-year project is a collaboration with prominent wine companies Pernod Ricard Winemakers, Indevin Group, and Cloudy Bay Vineyards, and viticultural consultancy Fantail Consulting.

Pernod Ricard Winemakers believes the collaboration offers benefits for the whole industry. “Improving the utilisation of resources such as land and water is something that would benefit the entire industry” said David Allen, Viticulture Transformation Manager.

“We are a proud industry partner,” says Indevin’s Group Technical Viticulturist Rhys Hall. “We believe the project will push the boundaries of agritech in New Zealand vineyards.”

Cloudy Bay is also delighted to be part of the project. “It has the potential to provide us with the tools we need for decision making regarding long-term productivity and re-development,” says Cloudy Bay viticulturist John Flanagan.

MPI’s Director of Investment Programmes Steve Penno says this innovation is unprecedented in New Zealand vineyards. “The technology-based and data-driven services developed through this project will enable the wine industry to manage their vineyards in a way that’s not currently possible, and has the potential to lift productivity significantly – that’s a very exciting prospect.”

As new tools are developed within the project, they will be released to the wine industry as expansions to Cropsy Technologies’ existing vineyard insights platform.

 

About Cropsy Technologies

Founded in 2019, Cropsy is a New Zealand-based start-up unlocking the full potential of vineyards and orchards with a unique and scalable AI-enabled vision system. This enables growers to achieve the ‘impossible’; understanding the needs and performance of millions of plants at all times, delivering insight-driven crop management to global enterprise companies.

Each of Cropsy's hardware units attaches to an existing tractor. The system sees and understands every single plant while a grower runs their daily crop operations; profiling every leaf, fruit, shoot, cane, and trunk in real-time as the tractor passes by.

The result is a 'digital twin' of the vineyard or orchard; a map clearly showing areas of concern and patterns across the entire crop, so growers know precisely how their crop is performing and changing over time.

Cropsy's proprietary hardware opens an untouched realm of AI-driven crop monitoring that’s grounded by growers’ needs, delivering real-time, geo-tagged data for insight-driven vineyard management. With an initial focus on grapevines, the product development roadmap will see Cropsy branch into apples and oranges. Outcomes include:

  • Early pest and disease identification to target crop protection products and reducing crop loss
  • Identifying missing, slowing and dead vines to flag re-planting opportunities with unprecedented precision
  • Vine phenology – bud, shoot, bunch and berry counts for yield estimation and to track vine growth
  • Time-savings – a digital scout that assists vineyard managers
  • Eventually forecasting vine issues before they happen by analysing every variable in the growing operation.