June 17, 2020

 

Syngenta to launch new digital agricultural tools in Brazil

 

 

Based in Basel, Switzerland, Syngenta has chosen Brazil as the initial market for a new digital agriculture services platform for local grain growers to keep up with advancing technology, a company executive said to Reuters.

 

Because of lockdowns and social distancing, crop consultants including seed advisers and agrochemical distributors have been unable to visit farms, making technology more important to assess field conditions, said Greg Meyers, the company's chief information and digital officer.

 

The digital agriculture tools being launched in Brazil include software and satellite imaging of crops, he said. They are intended to drive yields, save costs and promote sustainable farming in the world's largest grower and exporter of soybeans.

 

Brazil was chosen as launch market after Syngenta acquired Brazilian agriculture tech company Strider in 2018, which already worked with about 2,500 producers in Latin America. Syngenta, a seed and crop protection company, is owned by China National Chemical Corp.

 

Later this year the platform will be available in the US, Russia and Ukraine, Syngenta said.

 

Syngenta helps Brazilian farmers monitor about 4.5 million hectares (11.1 million acres) mainly dedicated to cultivating grains and oilseeds. The company hopes to double its Brazilian customers within a year, Meyers said.

 

Globally, farmers use Syngenta digital technology to monitor 32 million hectares.

 

Germany's Bayer AG, a direct competitor, said it helps growers monitor about 36.4 million hectares worldwide using digital technology.

 

Digital agriculture, referring to tools that digitally collect, store, analyse and share electronic data related to crops, has become more important during the COVID-19 pandemic.

 

In May, the use of Syngenta's digital offerings such as satellite photos to check field conditions increased by 400% in Brazil, Meyers said.

 

"COVID has actually created an opportunity for growers who were maybe not comfortable with information technology, (but) are starting to use it because they have to," he said.

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