Daily imagery is a game changer in the digital ag space wade barnes president ceo farmers edge ready to get started.
Satellite imagery precision agriculture.
Until now the challenge with satellite imagery was that the data was simply not frequent enough to react to crop stress in a timely manner.
The first wave of the precision agricultural revolution came in the forms of satellite and aerial imagery weather prediction variable rate fertilizer application and crop health indicators.
Agriculture is a rapidly growing market x2 5 in the next ten years and becomes more and more mature in its use of geo information driven by the contradictive requirements to produce more manage inputs and safeguard the environment.
Earth observation has a key role to play in this growth now that data access is being solved both from a satellite and from a platform cloud digitalization.
Original satellite sensors such as landsat and spot have commonly been used for agricultural applications over large geographic areas since the 1970s but they have limited use for precision agriculture because of their relatively coarse spatial resolution and long revisit time.
The second wave aggregates the machine data for even more precise planting topographical mapping and soil data.
Abstract and figures over the last years the attention of satellites images providers on precision agriculture has increased leading to an enhancement of features resolution.