Can the global drone revolution make agriculture more sustainable? Rapid growth in drone use is upending expectations but also inducing trade-offs

Use of drones has increased considerably over the past decade, reshaping activities as diverse as warfare, entertainment, delivery services, and disease control. One of the most consequential uses of drones—in agriculture—has taken off globally within only the past 5 years. This is upending expectat...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Belton, Ben, Baldiga, Leo, Justice, Scott, Minten, Bart, Narayanan, Sudha, Reardon, Thomas
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: American Association for the Advancement of Science 2025
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/176390
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author Belton, Ben
Baldiga, Leo
Justice, Scott
Minten, Bart
Narayanan, Sudha
Reardon, Thomas
author_browse Baldiga, Leo
Belton, Ben
Justice, Scott
Minten, Bart
Narayanan, Sudha
Reardon, Thomas
author_facet Belton, Ben
Baldiga, Leo
Justice, Scott
Minten, Bart
Narayanan, Sudha
Reardon, Thomas
author_sort Belton, Ben
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Use of drones has increased considerably over the past decade, reshaping activities as diverse as warfare, entertainment, delivery services, and disease control. One of the most consequential uses of drones—in agriculture—has taken off globally within only the past 5 years. This is upending expectations and may help to reconcile a fundamental sustainability dilemma—how to produce more food by using fewer inputs—but is also inducing trade-offs. This rapid change has been largely unnoticed by researchers outside of the specialized technical worlds of aeronautical engineering and precision agriculture. Little academic attention has been paid to the use of agricultural drones beyond the laboratory or trial plot. Evidence of the extent and effects of drones’ real-world use is partial and fragmentary. We explored evidence and hypotheses about global agricultural drone diffusion and its implications for sustainability and set out an agenda for future policy and science.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace176390
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher American Association for the Advancement of Science
publisherStr American Association for the Advancement of Science
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spelling CGSpace1763902025-11-03T15:52:29Z Can the global drone revolution make agriculture more sustainable? Rapid growth in drone use is upending expectations but also inducing trade-offs Belton, Ben Baldiga, Leo Justice, Scott Minten, Bart Narayanan, Sudha Reardon, Thomas agriculture crops sustainability unmanned aerial vehicles Use of drones has increased considerably over the past decade, reshaping activities as diverse as warfare, entertainment, delivery services, and disease control. One of the most consequential uses of drones—in agriculture—has taken off globally within only the past 5 years. This is upending expectations and may help to reconcile a fundamental sustainability dilemma—how to produce more food by using fewer inputs—but is also inducing trade-offs. This rapid change has been largely unnoticed by researchers outside of the specialized technical worlds of aeronautical engineering and precision agriculture. Little academic attention has been paid to the use of agricultural drones beyond the laboratory or trial plot. Evidence of the extent and effects of drones’ real-world use is partial and fragmentary. We explored evidence and hypotheses about global agricultural drone diffusion and its implications for sustainability and set out an agenda for future policy and science. 2025-09-04 2025-09-08T14:40:08Z 2025-09-08T14:40:08Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/176390 en https://doi.org/10.64628/AAI.4nmw6vkqc Limited Access American Association for the Advancement of Science Belton, Ben; Baldiga, Leo; Justice, Scott; Minten, Bart; Narayanan, Sudha; and Reardon, Thomas. 2025. Can the global drone revolution make agriculture more sustainable? Rapid growth in drone use is upending expectations but also inducing trade-offs. Science 389(6764): 972-976. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.ady1791
spellingShingle agriculture
crops
sustainability
unmanned aerial vehicles
Belton, Ben
Baldiga, Leo
Justice, Scott
Minten, Bart
Narayanan, Sudha
Reardon, Thomas
Can the global drone revolution make agriculture more sustainable? Rapid growth in drone use is upending expectations but also inducing trade-offs
title Can the global drone revolution make agriculture more sustainable? Rapid growth in drone use is upending expectations but also inducing trade-offs
title_full Can the global drone revolution make agriculture more sustainable? Rapid growth in drone use is upending expectations but also inducing trade-offs
title_fullStr Can the global drone revolution make agriculture more sustainable? Rapid growth in drone use is upending expectations but also inducing trade-offs
title_full_unstemmed Can the global drone revolution make agriculture more sustainable? Rapid growth in drone use is upending expectations but also inducing trade-offs
title_short Can the global drone revolution make agriculture more sustainable? Rapid growth in drone use is upending expectations but also inducing trade-offs
title_sort can the global drone revolution make agriculture more sustainable rapid growth in drone use is upending expectations but also inducing trade offs
topic agriculture
crops
sustainability
unmanned aerial vehicles
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/176390
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