Company focused on innovation, sustainability and digital transformation.

September 18, 2018

4 Min Read
Bayer outlines vision for future of agriculture
United Soybean Board

Joined by farming stakeholders, academia, non-government organizations (NGOs) and industry experts from around the globe, Bayer this week outlined its vision for the future of agriculture, reaffirming its commitment to innovation, sustainability and digital transformation to help ensure that the world’s rapidly growing population can be fed without starving the planet.

“Farmers are hungry for innovation that will help them grow more with less and help ensure adequate access to safe, nutritious and affordable food now and in the future,” Liam Condon, a member of the Bayer board of management and president of the Crop Science Division, said during his presentation at the Future of Farming Dialogue 2018.

As the company’s first major event since its acquisition of Monsanto was completed, the Future of Farming Dialogue brought together thought leaders and stakeholders from all various angles of society to discuss ways to make the world’s food system more sustainable for the benefit of farmers, consumers and the planet.

“Our world faces enormous challenges, including a changing climate, limited natural resources and a growing population,” Condon said. “We believe agriculture is a crucial part of the solution, and we have a highly talented global team working responsibly together and collaborating with partners to find better solutions to these challenges.”

Digital transformation

Condon noted that digital transformation is one of the driving forces of innovation, giving farmers completely new ways to look at their fields and providing them with data and insights to make smarter decisions. “Digital tools have shaped many industries, and we are just scratching the surface on what it means for agriculture. Through the power of new digital tools and data analytics, we can help increase farmer productivity and sustainability.”

This month, The Climate Corp., a subsidiary of Bayer, commercially launched its industry-leading Climate FieldView digital agriculture platform in Europe. The platform, also available in the U.S., Canada and Brazil, enables farmers to easily collect and visualize field data, analyze and evaluate crop performance and manage their field variability through customized fertility and seeding plans to optimize crop productivity.

As part of the company’s commitment to help all farmers sustainably improve productivity with digital tools, Climate is currently delivering smallholder farmers in India relevant agronomic information and advice through a pilot launch of FarmRise Mobile Farm Care. The company intends to broadly launch FarmRise in India in 2019, with additional expansion plans in the future for Asia, Africa and South America.

Innovation

Climate’s digital platform is only one example of the type of innovation Bayer aims to deliver to farmers, according to the company.

“We now have thousands of employees dedicated to research and development around the world with market-leading expertise in breeding, biology, chemistry and data science,” said Bob Reiter, the new head of research and development for the Crop Science Division. “I know their combined creativity, collaborative spirit and passion for discovery will help drive tailored solutions for farmers while also driving our business. Breakthrough innovation always happens at the intersection of various scientific disciplines.”

Launching in 2019, vayego, a foliar and soil-applied insecticide for the use in rice, corn and horticulture crops, is an innovation in crop protection offering farmers a broad and multifaceted range of benefits for controlling destructive caterpillars as well as some beetles and sucking pests.

Upcoming launches include multiple varieties of seeds developed to deflect pests and work with crop protection tools to make each acre optimally productive. These innovations include second-generation insect-protected soybeans (a next generation of Intacta RR2 PROTM) and a Lygus and thrips control cotton. The vegetable seeds research and development team also provides more than 200 new variety introductions across 20 crops to improve produce choices for global farmers and the consumers they serve each year.

Sustainability

However, technological innovation alone will not be enough to help the world meet the future challenges in agriculture, the company said.

“In order to contribute significantly to the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, we need to ensure that our focus on innovation is not only concerned with technological innovation but also with social innovation that is inclusive and promotes truly sustainable and holistic growth for local communities,” said Jesus Madrazo, the new head of agricultural affairs and sustainability for the Crop Science Division.

In thinking about sustainability, he said it’s really about how the company can, for example, help both smallholder farmers in Africa as well as large soybean growers in the U.S. or Brazil protect the health and vitality of their land so they can pass it on to the next generation in better shape than it was when they took it over.

The company also underlined its strong commitment to transparency. By giving access to safety relevant crop protection studies, Bayer said it wants to explain what lies behind the registration of a crop protection product and how the safety of such a product is tested.

Societal trust in the work the company does enables us to continue to innovate, and we strongly believe transparency is a foundation of building that trust, Madrazo explained.

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