CROPPING

GoMicro launches new AI grain assessment technology

New grain assessment tool should help manage grain grading and pricing

Staff writer

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GoMicro is based at Flinders University's New Venture Institute (NVI) at the Tonsley Innovation District in Clovelly Park, Adelaide, and the new technology is called GoMicro Assessor.

GoMicro chief executive officer, Dr Sivam Krish, said the multi-grain assessor gives growers and domestic and export markets a quick and better way to grade crops, accurately testing more than 1200 grains in one sample - compared to the existing scanner-based method which assesses about 200 well-separated grains at a time.

"GoMicro relies on the excellent quality of phone cameras and Amazon web services to deliver low-cost, high-precision quality grain and other produce assessments to farmers worldwide," said Dr Krish.

GoMicro's grain assessment technology is also being trialled in wheat grown in India, corn in Ghana and negotiations are well advanced to expand the assessor rollout with a large Indian ag-tech company to use on grain, corn and soy procurement.

"Accurate verifiable assessment will greatly reduce quality-related assessment risks for all parties in the supply chain," said Dr Krish.

The new system reduces the risk of wasted production and trade disputes which often involves more subjective human quality assessment.

"This direct digital manufacturing facility, at Flinders University, is working with Queensland grain, seed and pulse trader PB Agrifood to assess the quality of soybeans sold by local farmers," Dr Krish said.

In the first Australian trial, PB Agrifood field officer, Kate McIntyre, said the Toowoomba, Queensland-based company hopes the GoMicro Assessor will be "very useful in day-to-day operations", making digitisation solutions accessible to the company as well as growers to produce fair pricing based on objective assessment.

"When PB Agrifood heard about GoMicro and the use of AI technology to classify grain and pulses, we thought about how this technology could improve efficiency and accuracy in our intake of soybeans," said McIntyre.

"We believe that the implementation of the technology developed by GoMicro will allow us to establish the quality of the soybeans at intake more quickly and accurately," she said.

The GoMicro technology assesses soybeans into five categories and creates a table of results for each defect, including the percentage of defective beans in each category.

"It will enable us to match these percentages to our intake standards and categorise the beans," McIntyre said.

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