Will Monsanto Become The NSA Of Agriculture?
from the big-ag,-big-data dept
Monsanto
is best-known for its controversial use of genetically-modified
organisms, and less well-known for being involved in the story of the
defoliant Agent Orange (the company's long and involved story is well
told in the book and film "
The World According to Monsanto",
by Marie-Monique Robin.) Its shadow also looms large over the current
TPP talks: the USTR's Chief Agricultural Negotiator is Islam A.
Siddiqui,
a former lobbyist for Monsanto.
But it would seem that the company is starting to explore new fields,
so to speak; as Salon reports in a fascinating and important post,
Monsanto is going digital:
Monsanto
spent close to $1 billion to buy the Climate Corporation, a data
analytics firm. Last year the chemical and seed company also bought
Precision Planting, another high-tech firm, and also launched a venture
capital arm geared to fund tech start-ups.
Here's the key shift that is behind that move:
Many farmers have been collecting digitized yield data on
their operations since the 1990s, when high-tech farm tools first
emerged. But that information would sit on a tractor or monitor until
the farmer manually transferred it to his computer, or handed a USB
stick to an agronomist to analyze. Now, however, smart devices can
wirelessly transfer data
straight to a corporation’s servers, sometimes without a farmer's knowledge.
Data that in isolation is of limited use suddenly becomes highly
valuable when aggregated. Here, for example, are some of the ways that
companies like
Monsanto
might use their new stores of knowledge:
details on the economic worth of a farm operation could empower Monsanto
or DuPont to calculate the exact value the farm derives from its
products. Monsanto already varies its prices by region, so that Illinois
farmers with a bumper crop might be charged more for seeds than Texas
farmers facing a drought. Bigger heaps of data would enable these
companies to price discriminate more finely, not just among different
geographic regions but between neighbors.
Another possibility is the following:
Real-time data is highly valuable to investors and financial traders, who bet
billions of dollars in wheat, soybean and corn futures. In a market
where the slightest informational edge makes the difference between huge
profits and even bigger losses, corporations that gather big data will
have a ready customer base if they choose to sell their knowledge. Or
they could just use it to speculate themselves.
Finally, there's this:
Another issue is how the value of this information will be determined, and the profits divided. The prescription services Monsanto
and DuPont are offering will draw on the vast amounts of data they
amass from thousands of individual farms. Farmers consider much of this
information -- such as on soil fertility and crop yields --
confidential, and most view details about particular farming techniques
as akin to personal "trade secrets." Even if the corporations agree not
to disclose farm-specific information, some farmers worry that the
information may end up being used against them in ways that dull their
particular competitive edge.
The parallels with Facebook, Google and other online services that
make money
from collecting and analysing personal data, are clear. By pooling
huge quantities of previously secret data, companies gain a privileged
position with unique insights into what farmers are doing. As well as
enabling them to track exactly what the latter are up to on a 24-by-7,
field-by-field basis, it also allows these aggregators of agricultural
data to see the bigger picture in terms of the relationships between
different farms. In other words, the race seems to be on to become the
NSA of agriculture, with Monsanto already emerging as the likely winner.
No comments:
Post a Comment