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Searching for sustainability in the digital agriculture debate: an alternative approach for a systemic transition
Author(s) -
Roy William Cobby
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
revista teknokultura
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1549-2230
DOI - 10.5209/tekn.69475
Subject(s) - sustainability , sociotechnical system , software deployment , agriculture , digital revolution , business model , business , population , environmental resource management , economics , knowledge management , engineering , sociology , computer science , marketing , telecommunications , ecology , demography , software engineering , biology
One of the key challenges for agriculture today is feeding an increasing population without contributing to climate change. Increasingly, digital agriculture is discussed as a new sociotechnical regime that could help limit emissions for farmers worldwide. While sustainability is an important issue, recent papers in the field of digital agriculture do not address the problem directly. After a literature review, this paper will focus on the importance of shared perspectives as enablers in socio-technical transitions. This paper argues that the myth of the digital sublime could act in favour of the existing and unsustainable model of agriculture. This is partly a result of hardware production and connectivity already being resource-intensive. Precisely because of this high environmental impact, the following discussion will employ the legacy of the Green Revolution to highlight the importance of precaution in deploying digital agriculture. In theory, in order to address the shortcomings of the current system, private sector companies are developing proprietary software solutions that could in practice entrench unsustainable business models. As an alternative, this paper suggests, existing open-source platforms that encourage not-for-profit collaborations between farmers should be scaled up. Through bottom-up processes, future researchers and developers should seek ways to place sustainability at the centre of their analyses, and encourage the adoption of practices that can be tailored to the diverse needs of farmers. Ultimately, stakeholders in digital agriculture should understand that sustainability principles must be encoded at all stages in the deployment of digital agriculture technologies.

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