In remote locations, 5G-powered tech is helping farmers produce crops with the support of experts.
Smart farming was introduced into Japanese agriculture in 2020 by NTT AgriTechnology in Chōfu City, Tokyo, for a three-year project.
This helps farmers monitor crops for disease and create a harvesting timeline while navigating conditions that can change daily.
The next steps for 5G farming involve broadening the scale of these projects so that farmers can monitor more fields at a time, Ahmed and Masakuza said.
To do that, companies and local governments will need to continue investing in private, local 5G networks, they added.
Persons:
—, Abe Masakuza, Masakuza, Shahid Ahmed, Ahmed, NTT Ahmed
Organizations:
Private 5G, Service, Agriculture, Forestry, Smart, NTT AgriTechnology, Nippon Telegraph, Telephone, NTT, Hokkaido University, 5G, Farmers, Chōfu, Private
Locations:
Japan, Chōfu City, Tokyo, Tachikawa , Tokyo, Iwamizawa, Northern Japan