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Covid-19 Pushes Farmers Toward Precision Agriculture Drones

By: Isradrone Editorial Team⏱️ 3 min read
קורונה מדרבנת חוואים לאמץ רחפני חקלאות מדייקת

Movement restrictions and field-labor shortages brought on by the Covid-19 pandemic have driven a sharp rise in recent months in the adoption of precision agriculture drones among farmers in the United States and abroad. Multispectral sensors mounted on drones let growers detect disease, pests and nutrient deficiencies weeks before they become visible to the naked eye, replacing manual field surveys that demand large amounts of labor.

Does Covid-19 Close Fields But Open the Skies?

Since the pandemic broke out, farms both large and small have found themselves grappling with a rare combination of problems: workers who cannot or will not show up in the field, gathering restrictions that prevent group work, and cash-flow uncertainty that makes hiring seasonal labor harder. Instead of sending crews to walk entire fields on foot checking each row of crops individually, more and more farmers are flying a single drone with one operator and getting a complete picture of field conditions within hours.

The core benefit is simple: one person with a drone can survey ground that once required an entire crew. That cuts worker-to-worker exposure and reduces reliance on seasonal labor, which has become harder to find during this period.

From Simple RGB to Multispectral Sensing?

Until not long ago, most agricultural drones on the market made do with standard RGB cameras, ones that mainly capture color and shape. The problem: a crop issue shows up on such a camera only once it's already visible, and by then it's often too late for targeted treatment. The shift to multispectral sensors is changing that.

These sensors pick up wavelengths the human eye cannot detect, making it possible to spot plant stress at a much earlier stage.

  • Key advantage: identifying disease, pests and nutrient deficiencies days to weeks before they're visible to the naked eye
  • Practical result: targeted spraying and treatment at trouble spots only, instead of blanket coverage of the field
  • Underlying trend: steadily falling costs of sensors and drones, alongside growing payload capacity

Is This a Trend That Started Before Covid-19 and Got Fuel From the Pandemic?

Figures in the agricultural industry stress that the shift to sensor-equipped drones didn't originate with the pandemic. Equipment costs had already been falling gradually for years before 2020, making the technology economically viable for mid-sized farms as well, not just the biggest players in the market. Covid-19, according to these sources, didn't create the trend but accelerated it, giving farmers an urgent, immediate incentive to move faster than they had planned.

The question industry professionals keep asking is how many of the farms that switched to drones during this period will keep using them once operational restrictions ease, and how much of this is a temporary emergency fix. In the meantime, the pace of adoption on the ground shows no signs of slowing.

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Isradrone Editorial Team

The Isradrone team covers drone technology, defense, mapping, agriculture and logistics innovation from around the world. Original, research-based reporting verified for the Israeli market.

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