Farm software and recording companies joining forces
Farm reporting software company Trev has acquired Cloud Farmer, a pioneer of farm recording in New Zealand.
Farm reporting software company Trev says it can now put operational data squarely in the hands of the farmer.
The company has released its application programming interface (API), a software intermediary designed for farmers to build and control their Trev data, enabling customers to automate data sharing within their own systems or to give permission for data to be shared with approved industry data partners. The company says its customers have always built their own datasets, extracting insights directly from the Trev platform. This new API means farmers can now automatically transfer data to other platforsm and services internally and externally, reducing their data burden.
Data can be taken directly from Trev's platform and plugged into a farm's own internal systems and processes.
Or should a customer choose, the company has the ability to send 'farmer permissioned' data to approved industry partner integrations.
Trev chief executive Scott Townshend says API certainly aren't new to the ag sector, however, he believes this is the first time that New Zealand farmers will have the ability to transfer a wide breadth of operational data that they genuinely own and control themselves.
As New Zealand's agritech industry has evolved, so too has the farming sector's ability to record information, with data available in a lot of different places.
As such, putting the farmer first and reducing data burden are important KPIs for the agritech industry, says Townshend.
"By enabling farmers to automatically share their validated, accurate records we are able to reduce the data burden and begin to create and interpret insights that are meaningful and valuable to a farming business.
"We did this firstly with our bespoke integration with Figured, and we're now offering the service for Trev customers to use within their own systems and other Trev data partners in the future."
Global trade has been thrown into another bout of uncertainty following the overnight ruling by US Supreme Court, striking down President Donald Trump's decision to impose additional tariffs on trading partners.
Controls on the movement of fruit and vegetables in the Auckland suburb of Mt Roskill have been lifted.
Fonterra farmer shareholders and unit holders are in line for another payment in April.
Farmers are being encouraged to take a closer look at the refrigerants running inside their on-farm systems, as international and domestic pressure continues to build on high global warming potential (GWP) 400-series refrigerants.
As expected, Fonterra has lifted its 2025-26 forecast farmgate milk price mid-point to $9.50/kgMS.
Bovonic says a return on investment study has found its automated mastitis detection technology, QuadSense, is delivering financial, labour, and animal-health benefits on New Zealand dairy farms worth an estimated $29,547 per season.