Farming smarter - how AI can help farmers regenerate land, empower workers and feed the future by Craig Wichner, Farmland LP
Farming smarter - how AI can help farmers regenerate land, empower workers and feed the future by Craig Wichner, Farmland LP

Farming smarter: how AI can help farmers regenerate land, empower workers and feed the future

Feeding the world in the decades ahead is one of humanity’s greatest challenges. By 2050, the global population is projected to reach nearly 10 billion people, requiring roughly 70% more calories than are produced today. Yet water supplies may fall 40% short of global needs by 2030, and nearly a quarter of the world’s arable land is already degraded. On our current path, the math doesn’t work.

Farmers everywhere are grappling with how to increase productivity while protecting their land and resources. At Farmland LP, we see artificial intelligence (AI) emerging as one of the most promising tools to help achieve both goals. But unlike many industries that rush to adopt the latest technology, agriculture has little margin for error. 

Farmers get one shot per year to plant, grow, and harvest a crop. Our approach is to integrate AI where it solves clear problems today, while methodically building the data and systems that will support regenerative farming for decades to come.

This approach is not about chasing trends. It is about building a foundation for large-scale, sustainable agriculture that will empower our workforce, protect our soil, and produce healthy food at scale.

What AI can do for farmers

AI refers to systems that can learn from data, recognize patterns, and support decision-making. On farms, these capabilities are already visible in tools that integrate drones, smart sensors, and satellite imagery. AI-enabled platforms can: 

•  Detect soil and crop conditions earlier than the human eye, allowing for targeted irrigation or compost application.

•  Identify pest or disease outbreaks before they spread, reducing the need for broad-spectrum treatments.

•  Optimize irrigation by analyzing weather, soil moisture, and plant stress, conserving water while protecting yields.

•  Streamline farm management by integrating disparate data from planting records to financial tracking into one “single pane of glass.”

•  Provide proactive alerts to farmers and managers when anomalies emerge, from irrigation stress to budget deviations, enabling faster and more effective responses.

Each of these uses serves a dual purpose: boosting efficiency and improving ecological outcomes. Healthier soils sequester more carbon. Smarter water use reduces energy demand. Targeted interventions mean less waste and fewer inputs.

A pragmatic approach to AI on the farm

Farmers are rightly cautious adopters of new technology. Each innovation must prove itself in the field, year after year. That’s why the best approach to AI adoption is iterative — start small, learn quickly, and scale what works.

In May 2025, Farmland LP partnered with Microsoft’s Digital Impact Studio to explore AI’s role in agriculture. Together, we identified roughly 35 potential applications of AI in our operations and prioritized 15 with the clearest near-term value.

The first step is integrating data scattered across multiple systems — accounting, geospatial mapping, farm management records, and field notes — into a unified platform. This “single pane of glass” provides a trusted foundation where farm, financial, and ecological data can be seen together. From there, we can layer on tools like conversational copilots, predictive crop models, and intelligent alerts that deliver actionable insights in real time.

For farmers and managers, this means less manual reporting and more timely decisions. For investors, it means scalable systems that improve both profitability and resilience.

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Empowering people, not replacing them

When people hear about AI in agriculture, they often ask: Will it replace farmers? Our answer is unequivocal: no. Perhaps the most important principle in adopting AI on farms is this: it should make workers more valuable. 

Farming is deeply human work. It requires judgment, intuition, and relationships with the land that cannot be replicated by algorithms. What AI can do is reduce repetitive or low-value tasks such as manual data entry, monitoring weather alerts, or walking hundreds of acres to check irrigation efficiency. 

By handling these tasks, AI frees our team to focus on higher-level work: engaging with tenants, innovating on crop rotations, and implementing regenerative practices. New tools also make it easier for farmers to contribute their knowledge — taking a photo, dictating a note, or entering a quick update into a mobile app that instantly feeds into the broader system. Over time, this iterative loop of human judgment plus AI-driven insights makes our operations both more efficient and more resilient.

Building for the long term

One of the greatest risks with new technology is rushing in too quickly. AI is evolving rapidly, and the tools available today may look entirely different five years from now. That’s why Farmland LP is building our AI adoption iteratively. Each project is designed to deliver value now while laying the groundwork for future systems. 

Take water management as an example. On our farms, water is one of the most valuable resources. In California, senior water rights dating back to the 1950’s give us secure access to irrigation, but responsible stewardship is essential. AI-enabled irrigation systems can already optimize when and how much water to apply. Over time, as models ingest more data on soil health, weather, and plant responses, these systems will become increasingly precise, ensuring we use every drop wisely.

Another example is crop planning. AI can analyze decades of weather, soil, and market data to suggest optimal rotations and planting schedules. But final decisions remain with our agronomists and farm managers, who factor in experience, tenant needs, and long-term soil health. The point is not to hand control over to machines, it’s to equip our team with better information to make sustainable decisions.

AI and sustainability: the double bottom line

Thoughtful AI adoption has the potential to accelerate environmental gains across agriculture. Among the most promising benefits: 

•  Soil Health: AI-powered monitoring allows us to reduce chemical inputs and tailor organic amendments more precisely, supporting richer microbial activity in the soil.

•  Water Conservation: By detecting stress earlier, AI systems help us avoid overwatering and reduce the energy required to pump and distribute water.

•  Carbon Sequestration: Healthier soils store more carbon. AI can track and optimize practices like cover cropping that increase sequestration rates.

•  Biodiversity: Early detection of pests and diseases allows for targeted, organic interventions that protect beneficial insects and surrounding habitats.

•  Transparency: Unified reporting platforms make it possible to share real-time impact metrics with investors and stakeholders, building trust and accountability.

Each of these outcomes supports what many farmers already know intuitively: what’s good for the environment is often good for long-term profitability.

Leading with caution and confidence

AI is often portrayed in extremes: either as a panacea that will solve all problems, or as a threat that displaces workers and degrades society. Our experience suggests a different path. When applied thoughtfully, AI is neither savior nor threat, but instead a practical tool that can help us farm smarter and steward the land more effectively.

Farmland LP’s mission has always been to demonstrate that regenerative agriculture is not only better for the planet, but also more profitable than chemical-dependent farming. AI is now a big part of that toolkit. By pairing our talented team with exceptional farmland and best-in-class technology — including our partnership with Microsoft — we are building a model for how agriculture can feed a growing population while restoring the ecosystems on which farming depends.

This is not about moving fast and breaking things. It is about moving steadily and building things that last. For the farmers we work with, the investors who support us, and the communities that rely on healthy food, that difference matters. 


Article by Craig Wichner, Founder & Managing Partner, Farmland LP

Craig is responsible for day-to-day management, business strategy and all investment activity. An experienced technology and real estate investor, Craig has helped build numerous companies over the past 30 years. But it was his work on California farms as a teenager that ultimately inspired him to start Farmland LP. Craig’s mission has not changed since day one – prove that regenerative farming is more profitable and maximizes returns for investors.  Craig strives to ensure that investors and consumers can look beyond misleading labels and support beneficial farming practices. His efforts were recognized in 2021, when Farmland LP achieved the highest sustainability rating among 10,000+ global corporations reviewed by HIP (Human Impact +Profit) Investor. Craig has a Bachelor of Science in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, with a minor in Economics, from the University of California, San Diego.

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•  https://grow.cals.wisc.edu/departments/features/how-wet-is-americas-soil-nobody-really-knows-but-ai-can-help#:~:text=But%20Huang%E2%80%99s%20team%20at%20CALS,for%20a%20less%20certain%20world

https://www.fischer.senate.gov/public/_cache/files/095fe218-f260-4d01-ae01-e6d46e36fe44/edf-report.pdf#:~:text=such%20as%20AI%2C%20soil%20moisture,2012

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