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Saturday, 30 May, 2026
HomeRuralNew weed detecting system can reduce herbicide use

New weed detecting system can reduce herbicide use

Recent investment from Grains Research and Development Corporation (GRDC) has delivered an innovative weed detecting system for common boomsprays that can possibly reduce herbicide use by up to 80 per cent.

Research began in 2023 after GRDC identified an opportunity to make precision spraying more easily accessible through the use of new high resolution satellite imagery.

Toowoomba-based ag tech provider DataFarming had also been considering the value of the satellite data and agreed to develop a solution.

The project, part of the GRDC Grain Automate initiative, saw the company work with University of Sydney analysts to develop algorithms that identify weeds within the images and integrate GPS paddock boundary data from growers.

DataFarming managing director Tim Neale said the result was the new WeedSAT technology system that could help cut the cost of fallow weed management.

“Large, hard-to-kill weeds represent a very small percentage of the total paddock area but a significant per-hectare chemical cost. Targeted spraying of these weeds is where the technology delivers the greatest value,” he said.

“The WeedSAT algorithms identify weeds and add a buffer area to ensure proper coverage by the sprayer, then the spray application map is provided to the grower. Even with the buffer, the system saves growers from spraying up to 80 per cent of their total paddock area.

“Most importantly, the system can be used on any boom sprayer with section or individual nozzle control. We estimate that includes about 90 per cent of the sprayers on farms today.”

As part of the research and development investment, the technology has been tested on more than 120 paddocks across all growing areas of Australia, covering more than 12,000 hectares.

This included gathering high resolution drone imagery of select areas to train the University of Sydney’s machine learning model and ground-truth the analysis.

Western Australian precision agriculture consultant Bindi Isbister has worked alongside several clients to help test, ground-truth and operate the new technology in the paddock.

She said it was important for growers to understand the weed and timing issues they had to address.

A drone or boom-camera system would be better for small weeds or green-on-green spraying, for example.

However, she said WeedSAT was a good option for growers who want to use their current boomsprays to start spot spraying – especially for large summer weeds.

“The system’s real strength is green-on-brown summer weed control, and that’s where we’ve seen it get better and better,” Ms Isbister said.

“Even clients who have selected a more conservative weed detection threshold, increasing the mapped spray area as the model attempts to capture more potential weeds (with a higher chance of misfires), have only needed to spray eight per cent of their total paddock area.”

She compared a benchmark herbicide cost of $20 per hectare with DataFarming’s $7 per hectare fee for image acquisition, analysis and prescription processing.

“If you’re only spraying eight per cent of your paddock, that’s a huge saving that makes it more affordable to use high application rates for a sure kill on difficult, established weed patches.”

GRDC agtech investment manager Peter Thompson said the corporation’s primary investment aim was to support the 70 per cent of growers who had not invested in optical boom mounted systems yet could leverage existing investment in their current boomspray equipment.

“WeedSAT doesn’t replace those systems but, given they can cost upward of $150,000, we saw great value in developing an easily deployed technology to reduce the cost and amount of herbicide used on the majority of farms,” he said.

“Large summer weeds use soil moisture at a high rate, so eliminating them efficiently and cost-effectively will have flow-on benefits for crop establishment and development.

“GRDC is proud to have supported this world-leading technology and we look forward to seeing how we can use further imaging and analysis improvements to benefit growers.”

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