Adoption of Precision Farming Tools: The Case of Italian Farmers



View results in:
https://tapipedia.org/sites/default/files/ijerph-17-00869-v2.pdf
DOI: 
doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17030869
Licensing of resource: 
Rights subject to owner's permission
Type: 
journal article
Journal: 
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health
Number: 
3
Volume: 
17
Year: 
2020
Author(s): 
Vecchio Y.
Agnusdei G. P.
Miglietta P. P.
Capitanio F.
Description: 

The process of adopting innovation, especially with regard to precision farming (PF), is inherently complex and social, and influenced by producers, change agents, social norms and organizational pressure. An empirical analysis was conducted among Italian farmers to measure the drivers and clarify “bottlenecks” in the adoption of agricultural innovation. The purpose of this study was to analyze the socio-structural and complexity factors that affect the probability to adopt innovations and the determinants that drive an individual’s decisions. Preliminary results found high levels of adoption among younger farmers, those that had a high level of education, those with high intensity of information, with large farm sizes, and high labor intensity. A logit model was used to understand the role played by labor intensity and perceived in the adoption process. In light of the Common Agricultural Policy Reform post 2020, the findings suggest relevant policy implications, such as the need to increase awareness of PF tools and foster dissemination of information aimed at reducing the degree of perceived complexity.

Publication year: 
2020
Keywords: 
innovation process
Awareness
Complexity
Precision agriculture
farming 4.0
Italy
Europe