big data implications - terry griffin

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Big Data Implications for Agriculture Terry Griffin, PhD, CCA Cropping Systems Economist Department of Agricultural Economics @SpacePlowboy #PrecisionAg #BigData #FarmData Eastern Ontario Crop Conference Kemptville, ON February 14, 2017

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Page 1: Big Data Implications - Terry Griffin

Big Data Implications for Agriculture

Terry Griffin, PhD, CCA Cropping Systems Economist

Department of Agricultural Economics

@SpacePlowboy #PrecisionAg #BigData #FarmData

Eastern Ontario Crop Conference Kemptville, ON February 14, 2017

Page 2: Big Data Implications - Terry Griffin
Page 3: Big Data Implications - Terry Griffin

Farmer’s Use of Precision Ag

0

25

50

75

100

1995 1997 1999 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015

Perc

ent o

f Far

ms

Automated Guidance Lightbar Automated Section Control Precision Soil Samplin

Yield Monitor Yield Monitor with GPS Variable Rate Fert. Variable Rate Seed

Page 4: Big Data Implications - Terry Griffin

Service providers’ use of technology

• 16% of service providers use UAVs

• Most common (72%) soil grid size = 2.5 ac – Smaller grid sizes used only 13% of time

• 20% use telematics in 2015 – Up from 15% in 2013

Erickson & Widmar, 2015

Page 5: Big Data Implications - Terry Griffin

Data Analysis Service Offerings

82.0%

38.7%

19.5%

12.3%

9.2%

0% 50% 100%

Print Maps for Customers(Yield/EC/Soil Maps, etc.)

No Aggregate Data; Individual FarmData Only

Data Aggregated Among Farmers ButNot Outside the Dealership

Data Aggregated Among FarmersIncluding Those Outside the

Dealership

Do Not Help Customers With TheirFarm-Level Data

% of Respondents

2015 Base: 261 respondents

Erickson & Widmar, 2015

Managing Farm-Level Data to Assist Customers in Decision Making

Small data

Big data

Big data

Page 6: Big Data Implications - Terry Griffin

Precision profitability over time

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2011 2013 2015

% of

res

pond

ents

off

erin

g pr

ecis

ion

serv

ices

mak

ing

a pr

ofit

Soil SamplingSingle Variable Rate ApplicationMulti Variable Rate ApplicationSatellite ImageryYield Monitor Data AnalysisTotal Precision Package

2015 Base: 261

Erickson & Widmar, 2015

Page 7: Big Data Implications - Terry Griffin
Page 8: Big Data Implications - Terry Griffin

www.presentationmagazine.com

Page 9: Big Data Implications - Terry Griffin

www.presentationmagazine.com

Page 10: Big Data Implications - Terry Griffin

www.presentationmagazine.com

Page 12: Big Data Implications - Terry Griffin

Thinking about Farm Data

• Data is intangible and irreplaceable – “non-rival” – “Excludable” and/or “non-excludable”

• Copies of digital data identical to original • Value lies in its use, not in the possession

– Data tombs are common (and worthless) – ‘data has no value’

• Anonymity does not exist with big data

Page 13: Big Data Implications - Terry Griffin

Community Data Analysis

• Community Participation: Value to Farmer vs Network • Value of primary use < value of secondary use

Image credit: Fox Photos/Getty Images

Page 14: Big Data Implications - Terry Griffin

Data Primary Use Secondary Use

Yield monitor data Documenting yields On-farm trials Splitting crop shares

GxExM analyses

Soil sample data Fertilizer decisions Regional compliance Algorithm development

Scouting Spray decisions Regional analytics Early alerts

As-applied fertility On-farm trials Compliance

Algorithm development

Single Field vs Community

Are value of secondary uses > primary uses?

Need 1 field Need many fields

Page 15: Big Data Implications - Terry Griffin

Farm Data as a Resource

• Reluctant to share data • Data is intangible resource • Ramification of relinquishing control?

– Gives up bargaining power – Fear own data used against them

Source: Shanoyan and Griffin

Page 16: Big Data Implications - Terry Griffin

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

2010 2015

Mbi

t pe

r se

cond

Are FCC-Defined Broadband Speed Enough?

down up

Page 17: Big Data Implications - Terry Griffin

Broadband Speeds Enough?

• UAV imagery example (Buschermohle, U of Tennessee) – 40 acre field with 17 pictures ~ 111 MB (almost 3 MB/acre) – 92 acres with 152 pictures ~ 450MB (almost 5 MB/acre)

• Other sensor and prescription data (Shearer, tOSU) – Spraying 0.3 MB/acre – Planting 5.5 MB/acre – Yield data 4.2 MB/acre – Soil/Fertility Data 0.6 MB/acre – Prescription files 0.01 MB/acre

0

10

20

30

2010 2015M

bit

per

seco

nd

down up

Page 18: Big Data Implications - Terry Griffin

FCC Broadband Definition: 2010 to 2014

Source: http://www.broadbandmap.gov/speed

Page 19: Big Data Implications - Terry Griffin

Opportunities

Stolen from: Shannon Ferrell

Page 20: Big Data Implications - Terry Griffin

“Future” of Farm Data

• Wireless infrastructure impacts farmland values

• Secondary uses recognized as valuable – If yield monitor malfunctions, harvester stops for repair

• Data quality viewed as important

– Small data at the grower:farm:field level – Big data at the community level

• Going off grid not sustainable

Page 21: Big Data Implications - Terry Griffin

Acknowledgements

Dr. Shannon L. Ferrell Associate Professor, Agricultural Law Dept. of Agricultural Economics Oklahoma State University

Dr. Aleksan Shanoyan Assistant Professor Department of Agricultural Economics Kansas State University

Page 22: Big Data Implications - Terry Griffin

Terry Griffin Cropping Systems Economist [email protected] 501.249.6360 @SpacePlowboy