
Audio By Carbonatix
The College of Engineering (CoE), Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST) is leading a novelty project to use drone technology to identify diseased crops for agricultural productivity.
Professor Mark Adom-Asamoah, the Provost, said the project whose prototypes were in the infant stages of design, after successful execution would be used in identifying specific diseases in real-time.
The drones function is to hover over the farm, take videos and pictures of the target objects (crops) and scan them to identify diseased ones
"The College intends to introduce the technology to the Ministry of Food and Agriculture (MoFA) for further development and increased productivity on the farm," Prof. Adom-Asamoah told the Ghana News Agency (GNA), Kumasi.
This was on the sideline of a ceremony to demonstrate the project, which is a collaborative work between the KNUST and Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology (UNIST), South Korea.
The occasion was also used to demonstrate a waste sorting machine designed through an exchange programme of the two universities.
According to a problem statement that informed the 'Drone in Agriculture' project, large-scale farming in Ghana is a daunting task, especially in relation to its monitoring.
"This seemingly innocuous reason costs the Ghanaian farmer so much in money and in time, because, diseases spread over large areas only become detectable even by the most experienced eyes after they have advanced," the statement emphasized.
Prof. Adom-Asamoah said disease outbreaks and upsurges could cause huge losses to crops, threatening the livelihoods of vulnerable farmers and food security.
The University, he said, would, therefore, not relent in working to find innovative means to assist farmers to overcome such predicament in order to improve their wellbeing.
Prof. George Yaw Obeng, Dean of the Faculty of Mechanical and Chemical Engineering, KNUST, said the nation ought to continually invest in science and technology education to help harness the potentials in the youth for sustainable growth.
Dr. Jerry John Kponyo, Dean of the Faculty of Electrical and Computer Engineering, KNUST, said the University was happy to be working with their South Korean counterparts to address societal development challenges.
Latest Stories
-
UNODC commissions bakery and vocational training facilities at Nsawam Medium Security Prison
2 minutes -
NAVTRAC Commander hosts new artillery training school commanding officer
5 minutes -
Parliamentary Committee reviews progress of Feed Ghana Programme
8 minutes -
IGP, Police Management Board pay courtesy call on Oti Regional Minister
10 minutes -
Join us to use Tribunal System to fight galamsey — Theophilus Dzimega to Minority
10 minutes -
USTED students learn breast cancer diagnosis is not the end of life
14 minutes -
‘We are toying with our democracy’ — Dr Bomfeh criticises passage of Tribunal Bill
15 minutes -
Ghana breast cancer centre strengthens global learning through US student exchange
25 minutes -
NDC promised to restore tribunals, must honour mandate — Theophilus Dzimega Jnr
38 minutes -
Judiciary Service needs greater investment, not tribunal courts – Baffour Awuah
39 minutes -
Justice will be served to accused persons and Republic – Deputy AG on Adu-Boahene trial
42 minutes -
Tribunal system more expensive than traditional courts – Manhyia South MP
42 minutes -
Tribunal Bill is unconstitutional, expensive and historically ineffective — Nana Agyei Baffour Awuah
44 minutes -
NDC government alone in pushing unconstitutional Tribunal Bill despite opposition -Baffour Awuah
1 hour -
Mr Eazi is helping change how Africa althletes get paid
2 hours