Skip to main content

Speakers

Subpage Hero

Loading
Dr Ben Trevaskis

Dr Ben Trevaskis

Research Director Systems Program, CSIRO
Panel | What’s for dinner in 2050? A Look at the Future of Agriculture for Australia

The year 2050 is just 26 growing seasons away. Climate shocks during the first two decades of the 21st century have sharpened our attention on the reality of the impacts of climate change, but continued incremental production gain has enabled us to compensate so far. Meeting future food security and sustainability goals will require more than this. Recent exponential advances in areas such as genomics, robotics and autonomous systems, machine learning and AI, remote sensing, modelling and landscape monitoring, have positioned agriculture for a step-change in innovation and production. However, innovation is constrained by the 'lock-in' between farm management, machinery/infrastructure and species genetics. Simultaneous coordinated innovation in all these areas is required to achieve that production step-change. The CSIRO Agriculture and Food Ag2050 program has defined this need through a landmark futures publication, in conjunction with the Commonwealth Department of Agriculture Forestry and Fisheries, and will demonstrate the value of this approach through use-cases co-designed with stakeholders and utilising expertise from socio-technology to landscape management to farming systems to robotics and machine learning. CSIRO's network of research farms will be a key component of this, acting as 'living labs' and centres of engagement for these use-case demonstrations and the future of sustainability in Australian agriculture. Critical to success of this program is partnering early with industry in identifying and co-developing sustainable and commercially viable opportunities to drive significant change. This session will provide an introduction to the Ag2050 program and a panel Q&A around its implementation with members from CSIRO and partners.

About Ben: 
Ben is the Research Director of the CSIRO Systems Program, which has more than 150 people located across Australia. The focus of the program is research and innovation to deliver sustainable, productive and profitable farming systems for future climates. Examples of research from the program include digital technologies to improve farm productivity and natural resource management, innovations in pest/weed/disease control and diversification of farming systems for production resilience. Prior to his current role Ben completed a PhD in Plant Science at the Australian National University, spent three years as a researcher in Berlin, and then led research to understand how cereal crop plants sense and respond to the changing seasons.
 
Sessions