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InnerPlant Helps Farmers Reduce Pesticides and Agricultural Waste
InnerPlant Helps Farmers Reduce Pesticides and Agricultural Waste
InnerPlant Helps Farmers Reduce Pesticides and Agricultural Waste
CLE A N STA RT
KEY POINTS
InnerPlant’s technology uses fluorescents to emit a signal in the leaves when a
plant is in distress.
Farmers then know what to treat and don’t waste money on chemicals, which are
over-applied by up to 30%, InnerPlant CEO Shely Aronov said.
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VIDEO 03:18
What if plants could talk to farmers and tell them when they’re distressed? That would
not only help the plants but also reduce the amount of agricultural waste that threatens
the planet’s health.
Much of agriculture may look green, but the industry is one of the world’s biggest
carbon offenders. It accounts for at least 10% of global greenhouse gas emissions,
according to 2021 data from the Environmental Protection Agency. Agricultural waste
adds to the problem.
Even with the use of pesticides, up to 40% of most food crops globally are lost to disease
and pests, according to a 2023 report from the National Institute of Food and
Agriculture. Now companies like SatAgro, Climate FieldView, and a California-based
startup called InnerPlant are working to reduce agricultural waste.
Using genetic engineering, InnerPlant helps crops communicate with their farmers. The
technology uses fluorescents that emit a signal in the leaves when a plant is in distress.
That signal is detectable from devices that can be attached to satellites, drones or
tractors.
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“As the plant is reacting to the stresses in your environment, like fungal pressure insects
or nitrogen deficiency, it will start to signal and then we can help farmers understand
what areas of the field need something and what areas are fine and don’t need
additional chemicals,” said Shely Aronov, CEO of InnerPlant.
From that signal, farmers know what to treat, meaning they don’t waste money on
chemicals, which are over-applied by up to 30%, Aronov said.
“We want to eliminate all the unnecessary applications of chemicals into our food
system, into our soils, and also the additional cost that comes to farmers that they don’t
get any benefit from,” added Aronov.
This technology is highly scalable and could be licensed to major seed companies.
InnerPlant would earn royalty revenue, which makes it enticing to investors.
“If you can get this technology into every single corn seed or soybean seed across North
America and South America, that is many hundred millions of acres, and you can think
about a few dollars per acre from a revenue perspective. That all of a sudden ends up in
a lot of revenue for this business,” said Tom Biegala, founding partner of Bison
Ventures, an InnerPlant investor.
InnerPlant is now working closely with small farmers and some of the nation’s largest
agriculture producers. Some have paid to get early access to the technology, which will
start with soybeans and then expand to other crops.
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