RAINY RIVER — An ongoing research and innovation project that’s received provincial funding aims to use artificial intelligence to help create a database of available farmland.
The initiative is the brainchild of the Northern Ontario Farm Innovation Alliance, a not-for-profit that focuses on the agriculture sector.
“Our overall goal is to be able to create an online mapping tool that links both Crown land and private land that is available as a starting place for farmers who are looking for land,” Emily Seed, the alliance’s executive director, said in an interview with Newswatch.
“So, they know where to go looking and then they can then take the next steps in following up — whether that be an application to access that land or whether it be working with a realtor, or whatever that might look like.”
Access to usable farmland has been a longstanding issue when attempting to expand and better agriculture across northern Ontario, Seed said.
The AI component will be implemented both in the database’s front and back ends, she said. Users will be able to use a feature like a chatbot to help with searches and, behind the scenes, it will scrape data from sources like open-source databases and public information released by realtors to constantly update the tool.
That will “keep that information up-to-date and relevant in real time, so that it’s not just a standalone static tool,” Seed said.
In Northwestern Ontario, most agricultural land is southwest of Thunder Bay and in the Rainy River District.
“There’s a lot of barriers around things like Crown land access and then being able to find private land can also be a challenge,” she said. “This project is looking at how can we create some linkages in there to create long-term sustainability and make sure that people are able to find land available for agricultural use.”
“Trying to fill in some of those gaps when we’re talking about agricultural expansion and land use for agriculture in northern Ontario.”
The roughly $50,000 funding commitment from the provincial Ontario Agri-food Research Initiative will help support the project until 2027.
Seed said a publicly-available resource will likely be online more towards the end of the scheduled timeline.
“As we go through this project, we very much anticipate it to morph as we go and see what’s actually applicable,” she said. “AI is fairly new to us on that end, so we’re working with a few different developers and experts in the area to help us sort of navigate that side of things.”
“We will be working hard on it on the back end to morph it into something that’s a usable tool.”