Water and agriculture, technologies to reduce water waste in EIMA


Image: Pixabay


Drought and climate change bring the issue of water management in agriculture back to the forefront.

Drought and climate change bring the issue of water management in agriculture back to the forefront. From satellite data analysis to precision agriculture technologies now ready for large-scale application, here are all the techniques for increasing water supplies and limiting waste.

Last summer's prolonged drought and climate change have made it clear to everyone what a precious commodity water is and how its scarcity can harm harvests. “But intervention strategies must be integrated”, says Francesca Todisco, professor of Agricultural Hydraulics and Hydraulic-Forest Restructuring at the University of Perugia, “that is, they must take into account soil conservation, hydrogeological risk, the reduction of pollutants and the protection of ecosystems.

{module Form RD}

Todisco is responsible for presenting today at Eima, the world agricultural machinery exhibition, a report on sustainable strategies and technologies for the management of water resources in agriculture. An illustrated report is part of the presentation of the 54th edition of Agriumbria, the national agriculture, livestock and food exhibition scheduled from March 31 to April 2, 2023. The theme is, in fact, very current. Suffice it to say that in recent months the drought, according to Coldiretti's estimates, caused losses of 10% of Italian agri-food production, for a value in excess of 6 billion euros. “We wanted to focus on one of the fundamentally important themes for the challenges of the future in agriculture”, explains Stefano Ansideri, president of Umbriafiere. So what should be done? According to Todisco, first of all, we need adequate planning, which takes into account the complexity of the problem. In particular, the increase and improvement of supply systems, the protection of the availability and quality of water resources, the modernization of irrigation systems and education for the conscious use of water are essential. Monitoring distribution networks to combat leakage is also crucial. While the dissemination of management techniques based on the principles of precision irrigation is essential. “And precisely with regard to precision agriculture”, highlights Todisco, “the technology is ready for large-scale application. Available high-tech techniques include the analysis and processing of satellite data to identify and characterize bodies of water.

Source: agrolink 

 
Facebook
twitter
LinkedIn

Aboissa supports

Stay up to date with news
and the best opportunities in
agribusiness – sign up now!

Asia

Saudi Arabia

Bangladesh

China

South Korea

United Arab Emirates

Philippines

Hong Kong

India

Indonesia

Iraq

Jordan

Lebanon

Malaysia

Oman

qatar

singapore

Türkiye

Vietnam

America

Argentina

Bolivia

Brazil

Canada

Chile

Colombia

Costa Rica

Cuba

Ecuador

U.S

Guatemala

british virgin islands

Mexico

Nicaragua

Panama

Paraguay

Peru

Dominican Republic

Suriname

Uruguay

Venezuela

Africa

South Africa

Angola

Algeria

Cameroon

Costa do Marfim

Egypt

Ghana

Mauricio Islands

Liberia

Morocco

Nigeria

Kenya

Senegal

Sierra Leone

Sudan

Togo

Tunisia

Europe

Albania

Germany

Belgium

Bulgaria

Cyprus

Spain

Estonia

Finland

France

England

Ireland

Italy

Lithuania

Poland

Portugal

Romania

Russia

Serbia

Sweden

Switzerland

Türkiye

Ukraine

Oceania

Australia

New Zealand

Request a quote!

Fill out the form and get support for your business needs.
Our experts are ready to offer customized solutions.

*We are currently not working with intermediaries.

By providing my data, I agree with the Privacy Policy.