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25.09.2019 09:56

Artificial Intelligence in agriculture and environmental management

Arne Dessaul Dezernat Hochschulkommunikation
Ruhr-Universität Bochum

    Climate change affects our environment in many different ways: crop failure, river shipping being hampered due to low water, floods and storm damage in the cities are only a few examples of the factors that have been increasingly affected our lives in recent years.

    Researchers at Ruhr-Universität Bochum (RUB) are developing digital applications intended to make it easier for various actors to better cope with weather events in the future.

    Dr. Benjamin Mewes and Dr. Henning Oppel from the Institute of Engineering Hydrology and Water Resource Management are deploying Artificial Intelligence in their joint project “Okeanos”. While Benjamin Mewes focuses on irrigated agriculture, Henning Oppel is figuring out how to better predict flood events.
    Farmers could save a lot of water

    Agriculture is the largest consumer of fresh water globally. “Most of the time, farmers employ their expertise and experience to decide when and how to water their soil,” says Mewes. However, this results in hundreds of thousands litres of this valuable resource being wasted.

    This could be remedied by a computer software that provides a recommendation for action based on all the important factors for irrigation – or better still, controls the irrigation systems itself.

    Autonomous software units

    Mewes’ solution deploys an agent-based soil/water model that he developed himself. Agents are software units that act autonomously and make decisions in accordance on a set of rules and that can represent complex systems and chains through their interaction with each other.

    “The model is dynamic, can adapt to individual conditions, and it thus offers every farmer a tailor-made irrigation strategy,” as Mewes outlines the benefits.

    Enabling precise flood warnings

    Henning Oppel researches into a water management problem of a very different kind. He intends to pave the way for more precise flood warnings with the aid of machine learning.

    In order to predict how the water level of a river will change, it is not enough to simply consider the local processes at the location for which a flood forecast is required. Rather, it is necessary to take the thousands of square kilometres that define a river’s catchment into consideration, including a wealth of different surfaces such as asphalt, forest soil or gravel, as water moves at different speeds on all of them.

    Interesting for insurance companies and flood reporting services

    “Due to the large number of active processes, it is difficult to apply a single process equation. Machine learning enables us to develop new process descriptions and add to existing concepts,” says Oppel.

    A number of target groups might benefit from an improved solution in the form of an app: flood reporting services, insurance companies, fire brigades and technical assistance services, to name but a few.

    Detailed article in the science magazine Rubin

    You can find a detailed article on this topic in the science magazine Rubin. Texts on the website and images on the download page are free to use for editorial purposes, provided the relevant copyright notice is included.


    Wissenschaftliche Ansprechpartner:

    Dr. Benjamin Mewes
    Institute of Engineering Hydrology and Water Resource Management
    Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
    Ruhr-Universität Bochum
    Phone: +49 234 32 25896
    Email: benjamin.mewes@rub.de

    Dr. Henning Oppel
    Institute of Engineering Hydrology and Water Resource Management
    Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
    Ruhr-Universität Bochum
    Phone: +49 234 32 25874
    Email: henning.oppel@rub.de


    Weitere Informationen:

    https://news.rub.de/english/2019-09-25-water-resource-management-ai-has-found-it...


    Bilder

    Benjamin Mewes (left) and Henning Oppel were awarded for their project “Okeanos” at Junge Spitzenforscher Forum (Forum for Excellent Young Scientists) in 2019.
    Benjamin Mewes (left) and Henning Oppel were awarded for their project “Okeanos” at Junge Spitzenfor ...
    Quelle: Foto: Roberto Schirdewahn


    Merkmale dieser Pressemitteilung:
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    Bauwesen / Architektur, Informationstechnik, Tier / Land / Forst, Umwelt / Ökologie
    überregional
    Forschungsprojekte
    Englisch


     

    Benjamin Mewes (left) and Henning Oppel were awarded for their project “Okeanos” at Junge Spitzenforscher Forum (Forum for Excellent Young Scientists) in 2019.


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