LUBBOCK, TEXAS (RFD NEWS) — Rural counties cannot afford to fall behind as artificial intelligence and digital tools reshape agriculture. Texas A&M researchers say AI, machine learning, and digital technologies could help farms, food processors, and rural businesses improve efficiency, planning, and competitiveness.
Those tools can support real-time pricing, supply chain coordination, market analysis, and better access to information. Digital twins could allow producers to test virtual farm scenarios before making costly operational decisions.
The challenge is adoption. Many rural agribusinesses face limited capital, weak broadband, fewer tech-trained workers, and limited training on how AI tools fit daily operations. Smaller businesses may also struggle with software costs, maintenance, and data management.
Those barriers are especially important in rural counties where agriculture supports jobs, income, and local economic development. If adoption lags, rural businesses could lose ground to better-connected competitors.
Texas A&M researchers say extension services, land-grant universities, and affordable digital tools can help build local capacity.
Farm-Level Takeaway: AI may help rural agribusinesses improve efficiency, but adoption depends on training, broadband, and practical tools.
Tony St. James, RFD News Markets Specialist
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