• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to footer

ESN.net

event sharing network

  • Sponsored Post
  • Events
  • Markets
  • About
    • GDPR
    • Event Marketing: A Catalyst for Business Success
    • Leveraging Social Media for Event Promotion: A Winning Strategy
    • Targeting the Right Audience: The Key to Successful Event Promotion
    • The Power of Media: Maximizing Event Promotion through the Media
    • Capturing the Moment: The Importance of Photo and Video Coverage in Event Promotion
    • Voices of the Event: The Power of Interviews as a Promotion Tool
    • The Power of Podcasts: Using Audio as a Tool for Event Promotion
    • Bridging the Gap: How Virtual Events Complement Physical Ones and Expand Reach and Audience
    • The Future is Now: How Innovation is Revolutionizing Event Management and Promotion
  • Contact

Future of Agriculture at Barbican Event, London

August 28, 2019 By admin Leave a Comment

As part of the Barbican’s major summer exhibition AI: More than Human, the Connected Food panel brought together industry experts to discuss food production and farming, and how we will grow, harvest and distribute food in the near future. As part of the panel, Lindsay Suddon – Chief Strategy Office at Proagrica, one of the leading global providers of integrated digital connectivity solutions for the agriculture industry – made a strong call for improved connectivity in the industry in order to drive increased value and productivity.

“Data means absolutely nothing unless you have the means to ingest and analyze that data, compare it with other data, and come up with actionable insights,” said Mr Suddon. “Farming is increasingly producing a lot of data… however, you often find that what’s then being done with that data is very little, if anything. In itself, data is useless. You need the platforms through which data can be transformed into real insights that drive the valuable increases in compliance, productivity and profitability.”

In his responses, Mr Suddon addressed a key factor that has continuously undermined agribusinesses’ attempts to implement their own technological solutions: it’s simply not their strong point. “A lot of agribusinesses have spent quite a lot of money over the past few years coming up with their own data platforms,” he said. “A lot of the time that’s really been a bit of a distraction from their core business function. I think they’ve made a classic mistake in many instances of trying to create proprietary solutions and burning a lot of time and money doing it. Many are waking up to the fact that this is an unnecessary and costly distraction.”

Every link in the supply chain – from manufacturers through to farmers – stands to benefit from an industry that is connected and dynamic in their use of data. For farmers, this means a more informed and reliable supply chain behind them, in addition to the valuable data insights that help them to be more compliant, efficient, and profitable.

In particular, this will also help alleviate some of the pressures relating to climate change, making the required drastic structural shifts more accessible to the industry. For many agribusinesses, the will exists to mitigate the effects of climate change, but the solutions are out of reach. With complete insight into one’s own business practices and infrastructure – or, at the farming end, a firmer and more precise form of agriculture that lessens waste and boosts yields – these are made accessible and intuitive.

“Look at the drought affecting farmers in New South Wales,” said Mr Suddon. “Look at what happened to the farmers in the Mid-West of the United States with the frost and wet weather that just wouldn’t go away. We’ve got to actually start thinking in larger ways, understanding from a wide array of data sources what ‘good’ looks like and using an understanding of what happened during certain seasonal conditions in the past to instruct our predictive analytics and make more responsive and effective decisions.”

At its heart – as summed up by the chair, John Oswald – the debate focused on three main issues facing the agriculture industry. Firstly, agribusinesses usually don’t fully understand the value of the data they produce every day, primarily because the mechanisms by which to understand that value have largely been unavailable until recent years. Secondly, every party in the supply chain has certain responsibilities to one another, but those are often defined too vaguely and without robust systems to ensure all parties meet their obligations. Lastly, the concept of food production encompasses a lot more than we commonly believe: it’s soil, it’s climate, it’s water, it’s energy, it’s culture. We can forget the complexity of it. Whatever happens in agriculture, we need a solution ready to face those large implications.

Lindsay Suddon offered a more concise summary of Proagrica’s vision for the farming industry: “Connected, collaborative and insightful.”

Your business can become more informed, efficient and connected through improved data analytics. Visit Proagrica.com to learn more.

About Proagrica
Proagrica, part of RELX Group, is a global provider of independent connectivity and data-led insight across the agriculture and animal health markets. We deliver actionable intelligence to drive business growth across the value chain. Our superior products and services connect and empower industry participants to address their key needs around trading, productivity and compliance.

Our solutions are built around the key competences of data connectivity and data analytics delivering seamless supply chain management, supply chain standards compliance, and customer insight and engagement, essential for businesses looking to improve their value offering and expand in the modern marketplace.

Proagrica also encompasses performance-boosting farm management software brand Farmplan, and industry-leading media platforms, including Farmers Weekly.
Proagrica.com

About RELX
RELX is a global provider of information-based analytics and decision tools for professional and business customers. The Group serves customers in more than 180 countries and has offices in about 40 countries. It employs over 30,000 people, of whom almost half are in North America. The shares of RELX PLC, the parent company, are traded on the London, Amsterdam and New York Stock Exchanges using the following ticker symbols: London: REL; Amsterdam: REN; New York: RELX. The market capitalization is approximately £37.2bn, €41.1bn, $45.6bn
RELX.com

Filed Under: events Tagged With: agritech

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Footer

Recent Posts

  • Battery Ventures has closed a new $3.25 billion fund with a sharp AI lens
  • Networking at Cybertech 2026
  • IMTM 2026, February 2026, Tel Aviv Expo — Between Registration Counters and Real Expectations
  • 2026 Workforce Outlook Highlights AI Literacy as a Competitive Imperative
  • Deep Fission Selected for DOE Industrial Nuclear Pilot in Kansas
  • Travel Marketing Workshop in Eilat at Sunset
  • 360 Privacy Launches 360 Strata, October 13, 2025, Global Release
  • Quest Software Unveils AI-Enabled Security, Data, and Migration Capabilities at TEC 2025
  • Orchid Security Unveils Landmark IGA Capabilities at SailPoint Navigate 2025, Austin, September 29–October 2
  • Scality’s Laura Hirshman Named to CRN’s 100 People You Don’t Know But Should List 2025

Media Partners

  • Calendarial
  • Technology Conferences
  • Event Calendar
17th Annual CEO Investor Summit, July 9, 2025, San Francisco
The AI Summit New York, December 10–11, 2025, Javits Center, New York
ECOC 2025, 28 September – 2 October, Copenhagen
Upcoming Tech Conferences
The TaiSPO 2024 exhibition, set to take place from March 26–29 at the Taipei Nangang Exhibition Center Hall 2
Fiber Connect 2024, set to take place from July 28-31 in Nashville, Tennessee
Upcoming Tech Conferences in February 2024
IOT Solutions World Congress 2025: Forging the Future of Industrial Innovation
HumanX, 22–24 September 2026, Amsterdam
CES 2026, January 7–10, Las Vegas
INDEX, the world’s largest nonwovens exhibition, takes place on 18-21 April 2023 in Geneva, Switzerland
IFA 2024, taking place from September 6 to 10 in Berlin
Effective event registration and attendance management are fundamental to ensuring successful events
The inaugural NRF 2025: Retail’s Big Show Europe will be held Sept. 16 – 18, 2025, at the Paris Porte de Versailles
The Meteorological Technology World Expo 2024 will be held from September 24 to 26, 2024 in Vienna, Austria

Media Partners

  • Technologies.org
  • 3V.org: PR/Media Agency
  • Market Analysis
EdgeCortix Raises Over $110M in Oversubscribed Series B, Signaling Rising Confidence in Energy-Efficient Edge AI
Postman Unveils Agentic AI Tooling to Operationalize API-Driven Intelligence
Cyvl Raises $14M to Build the Infrastructure Intelligence Layer for America
NuScale Power and Oak Ridge National Laboratory Push SMRs Into the Industrial Core
Forrester Sees Global Tech Spending Hitting $5.6 Trillion in 2026 as AI Drives Growth Despite Tariffs
Storytelling is Everything
Sponsored Post
Case Study in Travel Marketing: Revitalizing a Family-Run Hotel in Bergerac, France
Disney+ Subscribers Can Now Explore Iceland's Thingvellir National Park with Apple Vision Pro
Photo Contests as a Powerful Marketing Tool with Huge Storytelling Appeal
Cloudflare Year in Review 2025: How the Internet Quietly Rewired Itself
Crisp’s $26M Series B1 Shows Why Vertical AI Is Pulling Ahead
Celero Communications Secures $140M to Push the Optical Frontier of AI Infrastructure
NTT R&D Forum 2025, Tokyo — When Quantum Stops Being Theory
Dassault Systèmes & Mistral AI: Europe Starts Building Its Own AI Backbone

Copyright © 2022 ESN.net

Media Partners: Technologies, Market Analysis & Market Research and Exclusive Domains, Photography