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Tech

Farming robot developed to overcome lack of manual labourers

Spin-out company Robotriks is among cluster of high-tech businesses emerging from the University of Plymouth

The Robotriks RTU platform can be fitted with a range of traditional and high-tech attachments for use on farms

A low-cost robotic platform which can be fitted with almost any agricultural implement could help farmers across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ to overcome the lack of available manual labour, its inventor says.

The Robotriks Traction Unit (RTU), created by startup company Robotriks, costs just £7,000 – almost a tenth of the cost of most other products on the market.

Powered by batteries which last for 24 hours, it can be built within a few hours and made available for a range of tasks from crop monitoring to harvesting crops like cauliflowers.

Robotriks was co-founded by Jake Shaw-Sutton, senior robotics technician at the University of Plymouth, and Khaian Marsh, and is based near St Austell, in Cornwall.

The University of Plymouth's Roland Levinsky building

Both grew up on farms, so they had an idea of the challenges facing the sector but could also put the RTU through its paces in real-life situations, including testing for soil compaction.

Mr Shaw-Sutton, an MEng (hons) robotics graduate, said: “This is not about taking away jobs, it’s about filling jobs where there currently are no people available to do them.

“For a while there have been fewer people willing to go out into the fields and harvest fruit and vegetables; this is an autonomous solution to that, and one which is affordable and reliable.

“Even with the current cost of the unit, which we’re always trying to improve, it still works out cheaper than having someone employed on minimum wage - it can work for more hours, not needing lunch breaks or to sleep at night.”