
John Deere synching with Israeli farm management system
Integration with John Deere Operation Center lets users view data and analytics from CropX system, including near real-time soil sensor monitoring.

Integration with John Deere Operation Center lets users view data and analytics from CropX system, including near real-time soil sensor monitoring.

These autonomous robotic pickers can harvest precisely and gently without tiring or needing a break.

30 percent of food crops never reach the market. It’s a mega problem and one the world must address quickly. Dozens of Israeli startups think they have answers.

Israel-based Amai Proteins is global winner of Extreme Tech Challenge; founder pitched the company to Bill Gates and other prominent judges.

As the world population grows and resources dwindle, Dganit Vered of Smart Agro Fund talks about how Israeli technology can help overcome the biggest problems facing agriculture.

Agriculture must become more sustainable to grow enough food for the future with less water and land, says CEO of world’s largest irrigation firm.

Greeneye’s software and cameras turns ordinary field spraying machines into AI-powered smart sprayers for soy and corn growers.

New report shows 1,200 Israeli companies already in the climate-tech sector, with fastest growth in alternative proteins and green construction.

‘It’s just like manufacturing but instead of making a car, we produce a nut or a grape. We digitize the entire day-to-day of the farm.’

An Israeli startup wants to make farming an easier, more profitable and safer enterprise using Nobel-winning gene-editing technology.

In Israel, every seventh year is supposed to be a sabbath year when farmers don’t raise crops. It’s a great rest for the fields, but a huge test of faith.

N-Drip’s precise agriculture system drip-irrigates fields that were formerly flooded, addressing the world water shortage while improving outcomes.

Potatoes get stressed too apparently. If farmers were able to get early warning signs, according to new research, the result could be much better harvests.

More than 50% of agri-food research programs in Israeli academia are led by women, but few agri-food startups are female led.

Greenhouses and urban farm factories are expensive to set up but pay off in higher yield, quality and market value, growing all through the seasons.