Good morning, and welcome to the John Deere 2022 Analyst Day, which we are calling Leaps Unlocked. My name is Brent Norwood. I am Director of Investor Relations at Deere & Co. Our name for today's event refers to our recently announced goals and aspirations, which we call our leap ambitions. Today, we'll focus on those leaps and how we intend to unlock value for our industry. We'll begin with the size of the opportunity, the $150 billion incremental addressable market that we are uniquely positioned to unlock. Next, we'll do a deep dive on four key technologies we're developing that will enable us to deliver on that $150 billion. Lastly, we'll conclude with some thoughts on the sustainable and business outcomes we will generate from executing our strategy. Before we begin, a few housekeeping notes.
At the end of the presentation, we will have time for Q&A. Whether you are joining us here in person or at home or from the office, you will need to submit your questions at our microsite at leapsunlocked.deere.com. In the interest of time, I will ask the questions on your behalf. If you haven't already, please do silence your cell phones before we get started. As one final note, today's commentary and discussion may include forward-looking comments concerning the future of the company that are subject to important risks and uncertainties. These include the company's plans and projections relating to the company's products and services, strategy for customer retention, growth, and market position, and planned acquisitions and/or subsequent integrations.
Assumptions regarding factors that could cause actual results to differ materially is contained in the company's most recent annual report and 10-K, and subsequent quarterly reports on Form 10-Q filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Except as required by law, the company undertakes no obligation to update or revise its forward-looking statements. This event may include discussion of financial measures that are not in conformance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America, GAAP. Additional information concerning these measures, including reconciliations to the most directly comparable GAAP measures, is included in the company's most recent annual report and 10-K, and posted on our website at johndeere.com/earnings under Quarterly Earnings & Events. Without further ado, let's get started.
Good morning, everybody. I am pleased to welcome everyone joining us in person in Des Moines, and I'm happy to welcome all of those that are online as well. We've got a diverse group with us today. We've got customers, we've got investors, and we've got employees. At John Deere, we run so life can leap forward, and today is about technology that underpins that purpose, the technology which will help the world do more with less, the technology we can deploy to make our customers more profitable. John Deere is uniquely positioned to unlock immense value for our customers, $150 billion of value. When we help our customers succeed, it helps us creating value for our investors, creating meaningful careers for our employees, and building a better world.
In my 25+ years with this company, I have never been more enthusiastic than I am today about the opportunities in front of us. Our sense of purpose is motivating. It's motivating for our employees, and you will see throughout the morning just how motivated we are. You'll see how our business strategy drives both economic and sustainable outcomes for our customers. The world is changing faster than ever, specifically in agriculture. The challenges our customers face are growing in complexity, and society is asking more and more of them. The days of abundant resources and farming inputs is over. Labor, fertilizer, and crop protection inputs, just to name a few, are all growing in scarcity, and they're increasing in cost. Weather patterns are becoming more volatile, governments are increasing regulations, and customers are increasingly interested in more sustainably grown food, fiber, and fuel.
Populations are growing, demanding greater food security, all while embracing a shared imperative to a lower carbon world. All of these factors driving increased volatility in our customers' financial outcomes. Older approaches to increase agricultural output are no longer viable. In the past, we would rely on planting more acres, increasing horsepower, and applying more nutrients. In short, we could always do more with more. However, today in agriculture, we must do more with less, and our ambition at John Deere is to help our customers do exactly that. These challenges are also opportunities for our customers, and Deere plays a unique role in helping them solve these challenges. A few years ago, we reorganized our business around production systems, such as corn and soy, small grains, cotton and sugar. Said another way, we matched our organization to the way our customers do business.
This gave us better insight into the challenges our customers face and the opportunities for us to create value. We assessed each production system, we mapped out every job a customer does, and then we determined the areas where John Deere solutions could unlock value, both economic and sustainable. The result was $150 billion identified as incremental addressable market. That figure includes every drop of herbicide or pound of fertilizer that our machines save through precision application. Every extra bushel our customers get from achieving uniform emergence in their crop. Every dollar saved on a job site due to less rework from SmartGrade technology. That's an enormous opportunity for John Deere, and building solutions to address it will underpin our revenue growth through the balance of the next decade. That's what our smart industrial strategy is all about.
It's about more value per unit, not just driving more units. Today's focus will be more about the long-term growth than the particulars of the cycle, and we're going to dive into several technologies that'll drive this growth. Don't think of these technologies in isolation. It's the combination of these technologies on top of the best-in-class machines. Our product pipeline is full. The innovation we'll bring to the market over the balance of the decade will rival the transformation that took place when John Deere first begun making tractors in 1918. Our inflection point is now, and I've never been more convinced of the growth in front of us. At our last Analyst Day in 2020, we told you we were going to transform our organization to be a smart industrial.
Since then, we reorganized our business, we centralized technology development, and we overhauled our capital allocation process to skew more investments towards the solutions that are most differentiated and deliver the most customer value. The result is two outcomes. First, a structurally more profitable company. Second, an organization that is now prepared to deliver on the next opportunities, or as we call them, leaps ahead. Just like we accomplished the goals we set in 2020, we will do the same with our new leap ambitions. To kick things off and shed more light on the technology that we're creating, the technology leaps, I am pleased to welcome our Chief Technology Officer, Jahmy Hindman.
Thanks, John. As John just noted, we're at an inflection point in agriculture, but it's one that we've been preparing for. We began our precision technology journey nearly 30 years ago. We made it our strategy then to vertically integrate technologies that we viewed as core to our end markets. At the time, many of these technologies could have been outsourced to third parties, but we viewed them as essential components to what would ultimately become the John Deere tech stack. While other industry players partnered, we intentionally developed proprietary technology because many of our end markets are unique, and they require customization. Seamless integration with a suite of equipment and a user experience that's tailored for our customers adds tremendous value.
Over time, we've added more and more value to our tech stack, making John Deere solutions uniquely effective and difficult to replicate. A few years ago, some key developments in technologies revolutionized our ideas on the art of the possible for precision ag. Advancements in machine learning and computer vision, connectivity and compute all enabled this concept of plant-level management. You see, for generations, farming decisions have been done at the field level. Given there are 4 trillion corn plants grown in the U.S. alone each year, how could anyone expect to optimize at the plant level? Today, we're closer than ever. Our tech stack provides machines with superhuman capabilities that not only make the job easier, but also do the job better than a human operator could ever hope for over those 4 trillion corn plants. You see, the key to unlocking this value is Deere's full technology stack.
Here's what I mean by that. First, our core equipment portfolio. Deere is the leader in the ag equipment industry with the largest installed base and the broadest suite of products that span full production systems. Revolutionizing ag starts with having the best agricultural machines because these precision technologies only add value if they can execute in the field. For example, the See & Spray technology is perfectly integrated with the world's best self-propelled sprayer that incorporates a new carbon fiber boom and boom suspension system that simply makes the See & Spray technology work better. This combination of the world's best product portfolio, coupled with the best dealer network when you combine it with precision technology, provides a truly differentiated solution. Next, our electronic hardware and software.
You know, we've been developing our own hardware and software since the 1990s, when we began manufacturing displays and writing code for the embedded software that controls our machines. While we often take this for granted today, this enables highly robust electronics hardware to operate in our harsh agricultural environments with a high degree of reliability. As an example, both that autonomous tractor and the See & Spray sprayer rely upon a graphical processing unit that runs at 30 watts of compute power, all while being passively cooled. That's something nobody else in our industry, or frankly any industry, has the ability to replicate. This competency is a core part of our technology stack. Then came guidance. In 1999, we acquired NavCom, a leader in geospatial positioning that gave us our own GPS hardware and highly accurate signal correction solution.
That's the foundational technology that gave us applications like yield documentation, AutoTrac, and section control. It eventually progressed to give us features like turn automation and AutoPath. We rely upon that proprietary guidance technology today to enable ever-increasing value, like autonomy, with speed only possible when you own the core technology. Then roughly 10 years ago, we started a connectivity and digital journey. This layer of our tech stack is built on connectivity, cloud compute, real-time information, and this persistent connection that our customers can count on for both support and the ability to move their data from the field to the office and back again. We then added our digital experience, the John Deere Operations Center. This has enabled our customers to organize their agronomic data and use analytics to make better decisions.
It enables both connected support and streamlined financial tracking through Harvest Profit, our farm profitability software. Finally, all of us live in the age of automation and autonomy. Building on these previous layers of the tech stack enabled the next generation of machine intelligence, like See & Spray and autonomy. We're gonna spend much of our time this morning unpacking these next layers of the stack. Importantly, these sense-and-act technologies deliver the most value when they're integrated with the foundational layers of the stack and paired with the best equipment and support in the industry. You see, the sum is truly greater than the parts. All of this technology working together that leads to the $150 billion addressable market and the cadence of the unlock. Let me give you a few examples of how this all comes together to create value.
First, we'll deploy existing technologies in new geographies and in new production systems. For example, connectivity is becoming as important as sunlight to agriculture. Growers that aren't able to be connected are becoming more disadvantaged over time as they miss the opportunity unlocked by digital agronomy. We're gonna continue to work with our telecommunications partners to provide cellular connectivity in areas that are underserved today, but we won't stop there. We will also solve for global connectivity needs by leveraging the burgeoning activity happening in satellite communications. Next, we'll continue scaling some of the new-to-world technologies that are just now hitting the market, things like See & Spray and autonomy. See & Spray technology can help reduce the usage of contact herbicide by up to two-thirds. With a global total herbicide spend of $35 billion, we're just getting started on this one.
We've started with corn, soy, and cotton production systems, but the opportunity here is multidimensional. It not only extends to other crop types for herbicides, like pulses and small grains, but it also extends to other crop care applications, like fungicides and pesticides. Having eyes in the field that allow for real-time application decisions is very fertile ground. Autonomy. Labor is scarce, and it's becoming more costly by the day. The value of labor alone is $7 billion for U.S. row crops. Of course, the real payoff here is when autonomy enables customers to hit these optimal agronomic timing windows. That drives the biggest unlock through increased yield. While it's difficult to place a value on it, an improved quality of life is mentioned in every conversation I have with customers about autonomy. Lastly, there's this pipeline of sense and act technology that you haven't seen yet.
Think about a world where a See & Spray sprayer is providing stand count or emergence information on the first pass it makes post-planting. That pass can be used to help inform decisions on fertilization for that year's growing season, but it can also be used to inform the planning operations for the next season. Decisions like seed depth, variety, population, starter fertilizer, all are possible to change and to optimize with that information. Consider a planter in the spring of the year in Iowa, for example, sensing soil variables like nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium, and maybe even carbon in real time, providing a high-definition map of the current state of the soil and providing the necessary information to make more prescriptive decisions for the remaining crop or the following one.
Over the course of the morning, you'll see many from-to leaps that we will enable for our industry. Leaps that allow farmers to move from 40 chances to grow the perfect crop in their lifetime to analytics and decisions based on 40,000 lifetimes. They'll pivot from field-level management to plant-level management, and they'll be freed from the limits of labor to machines that work without limits. All of this driving the biggest leap of all, from doing more with more to doing more with less. I'd like to ask Doug Sauder to the stage to overview digitalization for you. Welcome, Doug.
Focus on digitalization in agriculture and how data and digital tools are key elements in how we create a production system advantage for farmers. The key theme in our digitalization strategy is connect, because we're focused on connecting equipment to the cloud, connecting data to decision-makers, and connecting the steps of the production system together. Equipment connectivity is foundational to creating customer value across the production system. We have over 300,000 connected ag machines today, and we'll more than triple that by 2026. Our goal is to enable farmers to easily connect every single piece of equipment on the farm. Connectivity allows data to get into the hands of key decision-makers through the John Deere Operations Center. As you can see, the farmer is at the center of our universe, and the Operations Center is our flagship digital tool that enables farmers to comprehensively manage their farm.
We currently have more than 340 million engaged acres, which demonstrates the increasing breadth of farmer engagement with the Operations Center. It's also important to remember, most farmers don't farm alone. They often use trusted advisors who typically utilize specialized software tools to assist farmers. We have over 250 connected software companies that are linked to the John Deere Operations Center through our API platform, making us the most collaborative system in agriculture. Finally, we connect the steps of the production system together with a thread of data to create smarter equipment. We create a system-level advantage when a machine in the field is not only equipped with onboard sensors, but is also more intelligent because it uses data that was collected in a prior step. Data is this key digital thread that links these steps together to create a system-level advantage.
Now, before we go too far, I'd like us to put ourselves for a moment in the shoes of one of our customers so that we can grasp the operational and agronomic complexities that our customers face. I want you to think about Ted Johnson, who farms about 6,500 acres of corn and soybeans here in Iowa. Ted has 80 fields spread out over 30 miles, has a fleet of 15 pieces of equipment, a team of seven that support him. In one season, Ted's team will operate equipment for over 2,000 hours, working ground equivalent to 40,000 football fields. He'll plant 500 million seeds. He'll apply 3,300 tons of fertilizer and harvest 1 million bushels of grain, which is almost 1,000 semi-trucks. Our aim is to help farmers like Ted manage the operations of his farm like a well-oiled machine.
Now, in addition to these operational challenges, Ted's ultimate goal is to optimize the profitability of those 6,500 acres, which are highly variable. He has nine soil types, plants 16 seed varieties, and will apply 12 different fertilizer and crop protection products this year. What makes the challenge of farming unique is that each season's weather can be different, and so many of these key variables will change each year. Realistically, Ted has 40 chances in his lifetime to optimize the economics of his farm and to pass a profitable and sustainable operation to the next generation. Our aim is to help farmers like Ted accelerate their learning through the power of data and multiply their chances for success. What if Ted could learn from 40,000 other lifetimes through powerful insights gleaned through the digitalization of the farm?
Historically, when we've talked about leveraging data, we were primarily focused on machine data and using it for predictive expert alerts to reduce machine downtime. Increasingly, we are expanding our datasets for analytics to incorporate the operational and agronomic data that comes from the farm so that we can create more value for our customers. The data foundation for advanced insights comes from the John Deere Operations Center. In fact, I'd like you to start thinking of the Operations Center as the digital twin of the farm. We create a digital representation of each farmer's equipment, fields, the products that are planted and applied, the field operations that are performed, and the yield outcomes that are achieved. This dataset is what's used to create smarter equipment an d to enable better decisions for our customers globally.
I'd like to give you a few examples of the power of data and digitalization at work. The first is a guidance solution called AutoPath that we launched last year. We take the high-resolution planting data from the planter, we send it to the Operations Center, and we create a digital representation of where each seed was planted in the field. This knowledge of the planting lines is then sent back down to the sprayer and back down to the combine so that when they enter the field, our equipment can navigate the field using the precise location of each plant that was recorded in a prior step. For the operator, this simplifies a lot of the complexity that exists with different implement widths or handling situations where the planter had to make some unplanned maneuvers.
AutoPath has been extremely well-received in the market, and we're continuing to expand and enhance it. For example, we're now working on use cases where historic planting data may not exist, but we can use the digital field boundary and other data to optimize the path plan of the field. Increasingly, our future guidance solutions will be enabled by the digital twin of the farm that is in the Operations Center. Another example of digitalization at work is how new product development is leveraging the intelligence of our global fleet. Historically, when we created automation algorithms, we were typically limited to using small datasets from our engineering machines to train our models, commonly using dozens of machines' worth of data. Over the last couple of years, we've invested in collecting more data at higher resolution from each customer machine and bringing that data to the cloud.
Our next-generation automation algorithms can now be created using the power of tens of thousands of connected machines globally. That's a leap from tens of machines to tens of thousands. See, the best algorithms are created by the biggest dataset, and we're focused on using fleet data to create smarter equipment for our customers tomorrow. A final example of how we're harnessing the power of data is in the area of agronomic insights. Historically, each farmer's knowledge was really limited to the data that they had access to. Typically, the results of small on-farm experiments that they conducted themselves or perhaps local university trials. This spring, for the second year in a row, John Deere published regionally relevant, aggregated analysis across millions of acres of soybean yields.
Our data policy with farmers in control give us the ability to create insights based on this aggregated dataset. These insights really turn the conventional wisdom on its head, upending decades-old practices of planting corn first in the Midwest and showing the upside to early soybean planting. These insights represent first steps in how the power of a broad aggregated dataset can be used to help farmers with insights gleaned from beyond the borders of their own farm. Well, now let's focus specifically on the John Deere Operations Center. The Operations Center is central to our digitalization strategy because it's the user interface where customers engage with their data to receive insights on the farm. It's important to understand the difference between the Operations Center and the historical farm management systems in the industry.
Historically, these systems were really focused on analyzing data after the fact to make agronomic decisions for next year. They typically aren't easy to use, commonly run on desktop computers, and they often import data manually from USB sticks. The Operations Center is different. It is a forward-looking operational and agronomic command center for the farm. Our approach is mobile-first, real-time, cloud-based, and it's deeply integrated with our onboard technology. We're laser-focused on the user experience so that our tools are easy to use for farmers of all ages and technology skill levels.
To give you a sense of the scale of our digital platform, on a typical day at the peak of planting season, we process about 70 million messages from over 250,000 machines worldwide, and these numbers are growing fast. What I'm gonna do next is highlight just a few of the capabilities of the Operations Center so that you can have a better sense of the value it provides farm managers, and then you're gonna get to hear from a real customer and how he uses it on his farm. First, farm managers are able to know the real-time location and working status of each piece of equipment on the farm at a glance. Idle equipment means lost time and money, and so real-time visibility of the fleet and the team are crucial to optimizing productivity.
When fieldwork is going on, the ability to keep a finger on the pulse of both productivity and job quality is critical. Remote managers can use the Operations Center mobile app to ensure that the right products are being applied at the right rate. They can have confidence that the job quality is being maintained by visualizing key performance metrics from our equipment, and they can also get an up to the minute view of job progress without having to make a phone call. It's also easy to keep an eye on the health of equipment and take action as necessary. Diagnostic trouble codes are categorized and surfaced, and in the future, farmers will have access to even more diagnostic tools and the ability to perform secure software updates. As fieldwork progresses, the agronomic data from connected equipment is received and processed automatically in our data platform.
Farmers can share that data easily with trusted advisors, either in a simple PDF report, or they can share the underlying data files. When farm managers are in the office, the web version of the Operations Center provides a bigger screen experience to view the entire farm and perform more advanced functions. Farmers often run experiments like this A/B test to understand which seed variety performed best in this field. Our field analyzer feature allows farmers to easily analyze the results of experiments like this to gain insight into agronomic outcomes. These insights can be aggregated up as well so that farmers can understand the yield performance of each variety that was planted and harvested across thousands of acres on their farm. The Operations Center also allows farmers to understand the impact of new technology. This is a spray map of See & Spray Ultimate.
In this field, over 84% of the area didn't get sprayed because no weeds were detected. These visualizations allow farmers to easily measure and understand the economic and ecological impact of new technology like See & Spray. Another one of the key ways that agronomic data is put to use is to create variable rate prescriptions for next season. A prescription is a geospatial instruction set where a field is divided into zones. It's often done using last year's yield data, and farmers or their agronomists can prescribe less seeds in the lower producing areas of the field and more seeds in the higher producing areas. They can also vary the amount of nutrients that will be applied to each zone so that they can optimize each acre of the field. Prescriptions are one part of having a plan created in advance for each field.
Planning field operations in advance is critical for operational efficiency so that operators can hit the ground running in the heat of the battle. The Operations Center allows farm managers to create work plans in advance and then send those plans wirelessly to the equipment so that the operator simply needs to pull into the field and confirm the plan on our display, saving time and ensuring high-quality data collection. As you can see, this unified off-board and on-board experience is increasingly taking tasks off of the plate of the human operator, which is crucial as we enter a world of autonomy. Our autonomous tractor is not only monitored, but it's also controlled by the Operations Center mobile app, giving remote managers the ability to initiate equipment motion as well as view a live video feed of the autonomous tillage operation.
I hope that gives you a better sense of the capabilities of the John Deere Operations Center and why we call it the operational and agronomic command center for the farm. As exciting as all that is, we're really just getting started. The future of the operations center is to turbocharge its capabilities with data science and analytics. In the future, we'll release more powerful planning tools that provide greater insights into field readiness and workability, as well as predicting the time needed for jobs to complete. Later this season, our monitoring tools will not only show where equipment is right now, but will also predict the time remaining to complete the field operation. In the future, we'll predict time to empty and provide other insights to help farmers improve the logistics of the farm.
All of these forward-looking predictions and insights are powered by the digitalization of the farm and the ability to create machine learning models from a vast data set of machine and agronomic data that was transmitted to the cloud through connectivity. I hope it's clear how connectivity and digitalization are key parts of our tech stack and critical elements in creating differentiated customer value. What is exciting is how this system gets better as time goes on and more technology is adopted. The data flywheel gets more powerful as we connect more equipment, collect more data, and generate insights that are not available to individual farmers alone, nor to our competitors. Today, we have John Deere precision ag hardware installed on an estimated 500 million acres globally.
Our leap ambitions to connect 1.5 million machines and expand to over 500 million engaged acres over the next few years will spin this flywheel even faster to create better outcomes for our customers through the power of digitalization. Well, now we're excited to have you hear firsthand from a real farmer with a really good story about how we've helped him scale his operation and increase the size of his farm through the power of digitalization. I'd like to welcome our customer, Clint Reese, and his daughter, Jade, to the stage.
Good morning. Thank you, Clint and Jade, for joining us here today. Maybe if you could start, just tell us a little bit about your farming operation.
Sure. Southwest Family Farms is located in the far southwest corner of Kansas. It's operated by the Reese family. There's four partners, my parents and a brother that are partners in that operation. We are the fourth and fifth generation of the Reese family that's farmed. We have two locations. Our home base is in Seward County, Kansas, and we have 5,000 acres of irrigated ground there that is consisted of a crop rotation of either corn-soybean rotation or corn-cotton rotation. We have 3,000 acres of dry land in Seward County that is in a corn-wheat fallow rotation, so two crops in three years. We get about 18 inches of rainfall there, so the third year we let it sit fallow so it can help build subsoil moisture.
We have another farm that's 10,000 acres that is all dry land that is 80 miles to the west, so there's an 80-mile spread between these two farms. It is all dry land, like I said, and it is in a wheat-milo fallow rotation out there. Milo is a little bit more of a drought-tolerant crop than corn, so that rainfall out there is only about 15 inches, so that's what we do out there. That's our farm.
Great. Well, maybe can you tell us a little bit about your use of digital tools over the last years and what is most important to you?
Sure. We use lots of digital tools. We've been big believers in technology on our farm ever since we started doing this. We think it's the way to continue to improve what we do. Some of the biggest things that have allowed us to grow here in the last few years is the ability to share coverage between sprayers. Spraying is probably the most difficult operation on our farm because variables change every time depending on what you're spraying, what's next to you. You don't wanna drift on it and kill a neighbor's crop, so there's a lot of variables there. We were almost to the limit where one sprayer wasn't enough and training somebody to run a sprayer is very difficult.
We bought a second sprayer, but in order to train that individual, I needed to be on there with him. With shared coverage now, we can have both of our sprayers in the same field and they can be seeing where we've applied, and it shuts the sprayer off if it goes over an area that's already been applied. I can monitor that second sprayer from the cab, and so I can be in the field with him. I can help, you know, train him that way. That has made that much easier to train those individuals. Then the other thing that we use is we use remote display access. I can look at his screen from my phone whenever I'm in my sprayer or driving around the farm and see what type of issues you had.
Jade's got a pretty good example of how remote display access has been good for her whenever she come back to help us.
Yeah. The remote display access has been absolutely instrumental as I've integrated into the farm as I've grown up. In March of 2020, I was kicked out of college due to COVID and went back and was living at home and started helping on the farm. Our H-2A employees were not able to make it in in time to help with planting due to COVID, so I got put on a planter. I was still in school. Thanks to AutoTrac, I was able to do some homework while I was planting. I had never planted before, and the remote access really made it easy for us.
We were spread pretty thin at the time, and so Dad got on with me for a couple hours to teach me the ropes and how to start planting, and I was pretty comfortable being on there by myself, but if I had any issues, he was able to get on my screen remotely and see what was going on and help me figure out I need to push this button, or I need to get out and look at this. That kept us from having to stop what we were doing so that he could physically come out to the field and help me, which really helped us keep our operation running smoothly.
That's great. Thanks for sharing that. You know, we talk a lot about helping farmers like you be more profitable and more sustainable. I'm interested, tell us what sustainability means to both of you?
Well, sustainability is something that I think farmers have always done. You know, farming is not just a business, it's kind of a way of life for us. The goal of every farmer I know is usually to pass it to the next generation. I think farmers have always thought of things as being sustainable. It's kind of a buzzword that maybe has put a word to it, but we've all thought, you know, that's about our operation. We want it to be sustainable because we want the next generation to come back. The first thing though for sustainability for us is profitability. We have to be profitable in order for our farm to be sustainable. That's number one for us, is we have to be profitable.
That can be achieved different ways in different areas. You know, we would not be profitable growing oranges in southwest Kansas. You know, we need to be growing corn and cotton and soybeans. Whatever your area is or whatever you need to do on your farm that's profitable, that's the first thing to sustainability. Growing those crops the right way, and by the right way, I mean, you know, this would be the second part of sustainability would be doing it the right way would be being smart with your fertilizer usage and your pesticide and not over applying things, taking care of that land because I need that land to be productive, not only for me, but for her and for the future generations. That's the second part of sustainability in our opinion.
The third part's kind of unique maybe, it's the community that we live in. We need that community to be sustainable. We need that community to thrive so there's a reason for my kids to come back and wanna be part of that community, that there's good schools there. It's important that we focus on contributing to our community and also trying to bring some industry into our community that will provide other opportunities for kids that maybe don't wanna farm, but still wanna be in the area so we have good schools and other activities for us to do.
Yeah, like my dad said, sustainability is a big buzzword right now, especially in the agriculture industry, but sustainability is extremely personal to farmers and farming families. As much as we talk about it now, growing up and getting more involved in the farm, I've always known that we are stewards of our land, and we are sure to do sustainable practices, and I know that it will be there for me, and I hope to continue that for generations to come. I think that some of this new tech that's coming out, especially with John Deere, will really allow us to continue to stay sustainable and have great land and produce great crops for many years to come.
That's great. Well, Clint and Jade, we really appreciate you sharing that with us and being here with us today. Clearly, the impact of digitalization is significant for our customers and the ability for them to scale and sustain their operations. Now we're gonna shift our focus to another key area of technology that allows farmers to harness the variability of the farm through Sense and Act technology. I'd like to welcome my colleagues, Deanna Kovar and Jorge Heraud, to the stage to tell us more about that.
Thank you. As Doug mentioned, real-time data from connected machines truly is the fuel, helping farmers make better decisions and helping them to become even more environmentally sustainable, all while unlocking our incremental addressable market. Data and connectivity are focused on documenting the variability in agriculture in order to manage it at an entirely new level. You see, a farming environment is not homogeneous. It's like outdoor manufacturing. There's natural variability even within a single field with different soil types, elevation changes, and weed pressure. There's also weather patterns that drive variability. Then there's hundreds of choices that farmers make every single year that generate even more variability into agriculture. All of this creates significant variability in profitability as well. A recent University of Minnesota benchmarking study showed that the profit on the lower 20% of corn acres was one-third that of the highest performing acres.
In the past, farmers managed with one plan at the farm or field level, effectively treating everything the same despite all the variability they experience. Because of the data evolution that Doug shared, more and more are now managing by zones within the field. Data tools like the John Deere Operations Center have made this possible and made it easier. Now we will go to a whole new level through Sense and Act technology. Sense and Act is plant-level management at scale with ease in real time. To put it in perspective, Doug noted about 40,000 seeds per acre. Using U.S. corn acreage, for example, those roughly 90 million acres represent nearly 4 trillion seeds and eventually 4 trillion plants. That's 4 trillion opportunities for our machines to make decisions and 4 trillion opportunities to optimize outcomes every pass.
Sense and Act moves farming from managing variability to taking advantage of variability, driving better profitability and sustainability for farmers. As we move to Sense and Act, we start with sensing, uniquely understanding each plant and its surroundings. Building off of our product leadership and years and years of automation, we then act. Automation technology executing a specific action in real time that increases yield, reduces waste, and creates better outcomes for growers. For example, sensing soil and plant conditions in real time will give the machine the superhuman capability to act to ensure every one of those 4 trillion seeds is placed precisely based on its unique needs and the variability it experiences so that it can emerge as a healthy plant and reach its optimal yield.
To give you a taste of how the machine senses the environment in real time and acts accordingly to optimize output, let's do a short exercise. How many of you spot fungus and mold? Anybody see beetles and stalk borers? Do you see a nitrogen deficiency? Do you notice any pigweeds? Pretty good. Almost like an operator who's multitasking as they traverse through the field. Now, here's what the machine sees. Each insight is valuable and helps farmers make the most out of their time in the field. We've been building the Sense and Act foundation for multiple decades through the tech stack that Jahmy walked through earlier.
What's new is how automation is progressing with Sense and Act capabilities, enabling us to automate down to the plant level through machine learning platforms by sensing new things, by making more decisions in real time, and executing them at every square meter, all allowing us to unlock tremendous identified incremental addressable market for the industry, for our farmers, and for John Deere. The products we have in the market today give us confidence that customers will adopt even more intelligence and automation tools. Customers who utilize Combine Advisor today can expect to reduce their losses and put 1% more yield in the tank. For our customer, Ted, that Doug talked about, at current prices, using Combine Advisor means an additional profit potential of $80,000 on his farm every single year.
See & Spray Ultimate, which launched in March, is another great example of our Sense and Act journey. A See & Spray Ultimate sprayer traverses through the field and identifies the difference between a weed and a healthy crop plant, and it only sprays the weed. What's most interesting, and what makes this generation of See & Spray truly ultimate, is not just the technology. This whole solution was created in concert between John Deere and two recent acquisitions, Blue River Technology and King Agro. The technology of the cameras, compute, and machine learning is unparalleled in the industry today. This system is ultimate, though, because of the integration of the Blue River technology with the best sprayer from John Deere, made even better through the capability to apply two different products at the same time through a dual product system.
Plus, the industry's most stable boom manufactured by King Agro. It's strong enough to carry the technology but light enough to keep the machine nimble. It is this integration of our teams, and not just the machine or the tech, but the machine and the technology together that truly makes See & Spray Ultimate ultimate. Sense and Act is happening now, and it is a huge part of our future. It's our opportunity to build on the technology of the past while creating even more value for our customers and for John Deere. I'd like to now introduce Jorge Heraud, who will go deeper into the technologies of our Sense and Act toolkit. Jorge.
Hey, thank you, Deanna. This year we're shipping See & Spray Ultimate and Combine Advisor, the two products that Deanna just spoke about, as well as the autonomous 8R tractor that we released at CES. These products are transformational, and they utilize robotics, and they utilize artificial intelligence, and that is just the start of our journey. We are this year also in advanced testing at customer sites with four additional products in the Sense and Act family. Two of them are in harvesting, one is in planting, and one is in construction. There's more coming on later. This technology, robotics and artificial intelligence, are going to really be propelling us to the next stage. This is why I'm here to tell you that John Deere is quickly becoming a world-leading robotics and artificial intelligence company.
To give you a feel for what we're doing, I'm going to discuss three different technologies that we're working on and that are utilized across this family of products that we're coming up with. Number one product I would like to talk to you about is cameras. These cameras are a basic sensor that we use in order to be able to see what is happening. To enable these new products that have the ability to understand what is happening with every single kernel, with every single situation the machine is in, and with every single plant the machine is seeing. I equate it to the eyes of the machines. We've designed a camera that is custom to John Deere.
This camera is a high dynamic range camera, so it can see plants both in sunlight and in shadows, even if they are in the same image. It also has a custom sensing element that can measure the best wavelengths that are good for not only seeing obstacles in the field, but seeing plants and understanding them. It's sealed, it's ultra-rugged, and it's used across not only agricultural equipment, but also construction equipment. We've been able to do this cost-effectively, we've leveraged our volume. As an example, See & Spray uses 36 cameras in every sprayer. The autonomous tractor we're going to be talking about uses 12 cameras in every single vehicle, right? With more products coming down the pipeline, we are rapidly moving to increase our volumes.
We're gonna be getting close to 1 million cameras sold every year with our equipment, and that larger volume is what makes our custom cameras affordable. The second area I would like to talk about is edge computing. Most machine learning is done in the cloud. There's a vast amount of computational power you need in order to make sense of what the cameras are seeing. At John Deere, because our machines are used in rural environments where connectivity is not always great, and because decisions need to be done very, very fast, we've decided to approach this problem by creating edge computing. It's the only possible way forward. We've created an ultra-rugged, ultra-fast processing unit based on NVIDIA GPUs or graphic processing units. In the case of See & Spray as an example, our machine covers 2,100 sq ft in every single second.
In that second, we cover and capture about 3 billion pixels. These are sub-millimeter pixels that allow us to see with high resolution every single plant. To process this, we need very, very fast processors, and we use our compute that has a total of 330,000 billion operations every second. That's what is needed for the system to be able to make decisions in real time as the sprayer is going across the field and seeing plants through its 120 ft wide boom. Just like in the case of our cameras, this ultra-rugged compute is not only useful for See & Spray, but it's also the core that we use across every single automation and autonomy product. The same applies to the software that is running in this system and this hardware.
By the way, this software just got a lot better with our 27 new employees that came from Light and we just announced two weeks ago, and they're helping us make perception better. The third technology I would like to talk about is what we call MESA, our machine learning platform. This is a collection of software applications that allow us to do many things to accelerate machine learning. It does everything from collect images and ingest images, to search images and curate images, to label images and then deploy trained models based on these images back to the machines. All these are fundamental capabilities that are needed by all our products. We developed this set of tools for See & Spray initially, but we've been using now in generalized ways across all our products.
MESA allows us to develop this, these new products much faster because we already have a lot of the tools that we need, and we're able to obtain performances that are much higher and in much shorter time than we were able to do this before. Those are three technologies that we're using across all our product lines. In addition to these three technologies, what I would like to tell you a little bit about is the advantage of scale. We have the ability to use our fleet as data collection rigs. The more machines we put out with cameras, the better we're able to collect images and train our models.
Not only that, not only do we get better models that help farmers, but we prepare for future applications that can come up in the products that we've already launched. Let me give you an example. Now going back again to See & Spray, we decided to start with three crops, corn, soybeans, and cotton, and that's what we're supporting in our first release. These same machines are going to be used by our customers, not only in this See & Spray application in these three crops, but they're going to be used across multiple other crops in conventional mode. We are able to collect images from these sprayers as they drive through these other crops and start the creation of new models to support these new crops.
Also, in the future, we're gonna be able to move, not only through fields spraying herbicides, but also spray other chemicals that our farmers use with that same sprayer. We're gonna be able to support in the future, insecticides, fungicides, and nutrient application, and we're gonna be able to do that faster because of the data we're already collecting with those machines. Using all this hardware is very powerful, and it's already installed in the machines. An analog that you might draw, you might be familiar with, is Tesla. Tesla talks a little bit about this advantage. They're using the power of their fleet to collect images. They have, if you think about all the cars on the road, Tesla has a relatively small percentage of the vehicles.
We have in agriculture a significantly larger installed base. This allows us to collect a larger database that allows us to make our products better, deliver more value to the customers, keep improving them, and develop new products and solutions faster. This is a flywheel that we're able to keep turning and make our products better, and the more we make our products better, the more customers we attract, which feeds back into more customers and better models. With these three technologies, cameras, edge computing, machine learning, as well as the scale of our fleet, we're able to develop new robotics and artificial intelligence products much faster than anyone in the industry, and this sets us up to unlock the $150 billion of incremental addressable market.
Building on our 180-year-old roots as a world-class manufacturer, we are now set up to become a world-leading robotics and artificial intelligence company. Back to you, Deanna.
Thanks, Jorge. What's next? Where do we go from here? As far as we have come, we still have tremendous opportunity in front of us to unlock over $150 billion of identified incremental addressable market for our customers. Building upon our past, the future, the next decade is all about smart automation, expanding the tools we've launched, sensing new attributes in the field, and automating more of the work at scale. As Jorge mentioned, we'll be focused on expanding our capabilities with products like See & Spray, where we'll take the product across more machine forms, new modes of actions, new geographies, and new crops. Also, expect to see further See & Spray retrofit solutions. Beyond just See & Spray, we'll continue to take our leading technologies from North America and extend them in geographies like Brazil, Argentina, Europe, and other locations.
With our next technologies, we will follow the success we have had with extending technologies like ExactEmerge planter technology and ExactApply sprayer technology, as well as continue to leverage our precision foundation globally. In addition, we have innovations developed specifically for one production system that will expand to others, creating significant opportunities to scale. We are using Sense & Act technology to focus on our customers' most significant challenges and to unlock the greatest amount of economic and environmental value across all the jobs in the field. For example, we introduced a product called ExactRate last year. We have the only OEM solution that enables our customers to combine the planting step with the application of liquid fertilizer more efficiently through a solution on both the planter and the tractor.
Currently, many of our growers apply fertilizer in the fall because that's the only time they have to get that important job done. Many of our customers will apply nitrogen fertilizer right after harvest, even though the seed won't need that fertilizer for months to come. The global fertilizer market is estimated to be just under $200 billion, highlighting a significant opportunity to improve farm economics through increased efficiency. ExactRate gives our customers an option to reduce or forgo the fall fertilizer pass, instead applying a precise stream of liquid fertilizer beside the row while planting, making it easy for the plant's roots to find and use the applied nitrogen. Some customers using this practice have reduced nitrogen rates by up to 5%-10%. Importantly, many of these solutions will be software or machine learning enabled, lending themselves well to recurring or per-usage monetization models.
This, too, is an important innovation for our customers. We can help customers adopt technology for lower upfront costs. Through this, we will time the cost of these technologies with the value they create for our customers. Finally, we will ensure that we continue to add new customer value to the products over time. While the technology is critical, the integration with the hard iron is the differentiator for Deere. There is a lot of investment moving into ag tech, but ultimately, solutions need to be paired with equipment that execute in the field and are supported. Our decades of experience integrating technology into our products, combined with our world-class dealer network, uniquely position us to unlock the long runway of opportunity ahead.
Now, I'm honored to introduce the owners of Silent Shade Planting Company, Jeremy and Elizabeth Jack, who will share a story on how John Deere technology gave them meaningful time back with their family. Welcome, Jeremy and Elizabeth. Thank you so much for sharing your critical time with us.
Thank you for having us.
Could you maybe start out by giving us a little bit of background on your operation?
Sure. Silent Shade Planting Company is a corn, cotton, soybeans, and rice farm located in the Mississippi Delta. We are about 12,000 acres of all irrigated ground.
Awesome.
We have five family members that are involved in the op eration. Jeremy acts as our CEO and COO and runs the day-to-day operations. His sister, Stacie, is our CFO. I handle our human resources and safety and public relations, and his parents, who were the founders of the farm, are still very involved in the day-to-day operations and provide us with historical knowledge each day. Under us, we have about five managers and 14 employees that work with us day to day to get the crop planted and harvested.
Truly a family farm. That's awesome. Well, can you tell us a little bit maybe with a farm your size, I understand you have a lot of inputs that you deal with, seed, herbicides, fertilizer. How do you manage those on your farm, and how has that changed over time? Maybe how are you navigating through this very dynamic environment?
Sure. To understand where we are today, and you have to understand where we used to be, you know. You had a plan for the farm, and you treated the whole plan. You planted your cotton this way, your corn this way, your rice this way, and you just once you got started, that's how you did the whole farm. You know, we technology changed. We learned, like, well, this variety needs to be on this field, this fertilizer on this field. We made the next step was like, okay, when we came back to the operation, we could really see that we need to make plans and fields, and we could put prescriptions, and that's how we managed every one of all those things.
We could plan out the whole farming year in the off-season, and then we had the plans when we went to the field. Today, now with See & Spray, we're actually saying, "Okay, machines, we want this to be done as you're going through the fields," and the machines are actually making those plans for us. We're giving the guidelines to the machines, making those reactions as they're going across the field. Especially that's real important on today's time, like, today, with inflation, you know, chemistries, crop protection, fertilizers, you know, doubled or tripled in price, or can you even get them? We have limited supply, so we have to have. This is all we have.
We have to make it stretch through the whole crop year, and through this technology of See & Spray, we're able to make those products work for the whole crop.
Hey, that's excellent. Thank you for sharing that. You've been one of the early testers of See & Spray through the years, and gotten a chance to get to know you both. Thank you very much for your help. Can you tell us maybe a little bit about how See & Spray is going for you? What are your early observations and why the value that it brings is important?
The big question I always get is, you know, how does it work, and does it work? You know, this machine's going across the field at 12 miles an hour with a 120-foot boom. It's covering a lot of ground. How do you know it's working? Well, we could put dye in the machine as it goes across there, then you can see it's kinda like, this is what it did. When we first got the machine, I would say, it's like, okay, we're gonna hit weeds this big, and that's gonna be great. We're gonna kill all the big weeds. Then as we got going through and watching behind the sprayer and walking, we could see these little square blue dye spots where it was sprayed. All of a sudden, we found one that, well, there's no weeds here.
The machine oversprayed. I'm about 6'4". You know, I'm a little long ways down to the ground. I actually had to get down, and we could find a weed that was probably just a couple hours old that the machine could see and spray at 12 miles an hour. From our eyes standing up, we could not see till we got down on our hands and knees and could find the weed. It's just unbelievable how the technology works, but also the speed and the efficiency it works. Now that the sprayer might. If it only sprays 10% of the field, well, then that sprayer goes 10 times further between fill-ups. The machines are much more efficient. We're getting the crop taken care of.
We're taking the crop in a much more efficient way in those small windows that we have with today's farming.
Tell them about the example of sometimes it can be your eyes in the field and see things that you don't realize are actually there.
We've had fields that were like, there's no weeds out here. We're just gonna go out there and clean it up. There's a couple spots, and then we notice that the sprayer's spraying all the time. We're like, "Well, machine's broken." We go out to the field, it's like, no, there's a bunch of weeds that came up yesterday that we did not see and did not know. We, as the sprayers go across the field, it sends back, maps of what it actually did, report cards, if you would say. We are learning more about our fields, soil types, weed pressures. We're able to produce a bigger crop by knowing more of what's out there.
In real time.
in real time, but the great thing about it is we're utilizing less to do it.
No, thank you. This is very insightful. We put a lot of work into making sure that we can detect those small weeds, and we don't miss them. The cameras are low to the ground. We have this millions of pixels that we capture. It's all so that we can capture those little weeds.
Yep.
Awesome. Well, thank you, Jeremy and Elizabeth, for being here with us today, and thank you for sharing a bit about both the professional and personal impact of Sense & Act technologies like See & Spray. Now we'd like to turn it over to Willy Pell, who's going to talk about a key to our automation journey, and that's autonomy, one of the last steps in automation, automating the task of driving our machines through the field without an operator. Willy?
Thank you, Deanna, Jorge, Jeremy, and Elizabeth. As we've already established, so much of the economic returns in farming come from getting a job done in a tight agronomic window that Mother Nature allows each year. The window is variable and unpredictable, but getting it right has significant impact on your profitability. As Doug already pointed out, data is now able to quantify just how valuable time is to a farmer's economic health. Last year, we published yield loss data for planting corn late. For an acre of corn, planting outside the optimal window may cost you up to 1% a day. That's significant when you realize that each day a farmer may plant up to $500,000 in crop. That's a 1% that drops straight to the bottom line. Each season is a race against the clock.
Despite the enormous economic payoff that comes from getting jobs done in the right timeframe, farmers frequently miss out on this payoff because of one very significant challenge: labor. Growers are constrained by their own labor. Since they can't operate 24/7, they're constrained by the ability to hire labor. As the population continues to migrate to urban areas, this problem is getting worse, not better. Further complicating matters is the significant spikes that occur in demand for labor at critical points in the season. Jobs like planting and harvesting all require a significant surge in labor to getting the job done in the optimal window. Unfortunately, there's no Uber surge pricing that magically brings labor to the rural Midwest for two-three weeks during these busy periods.
One of my favorite farm site visits was during a harvest season. During the season, the farmer needs to operate a combine, an operator to drive a grain cart, an operator to drive a 18-wheeler, and then another person to till fields right behind all that. Our team, our engineering team, worked a really long day, and I drove into town to try to find some food for everybody. I found that the town's only burger joint was closed, and that's because everybody who should have been cooking burgers was out harvesting. There was literally nowhere to eat. Instead, I picked up some peanuts at a convenience store for dinner, and this poor engineer named Rahul, that was his dinner. Sorry, you deserve better.
It was in that moment that I realized just how important this problem is to solve and how tight things are. Autonomy runs 24/7. It never calls in sick, it never migrates to urban areas, and most importantly, autonomy scales perfectly at the exact time you need it. Turn it on in a second, and you can triple your headcount and turn it off when you don't need it. The payoff is dramatic. Sure, farmers no longer need to pay for surge labor, but that's only the floor of its value. Most importantly, they'll be able to get the jobs done in the optimal window to get them done. That economic return is enormous. It's moving from constraints in time to limitless labor.
Before Deere, I worked in the autonomous car industry, and there were two things that drew me to ag in general. First, as I discussed, is just the value, the size of the value creation that we could unlock. Second is the nearness of the opportunity in ag. A farm is just this perfect place to do autonomy. I knew this problem would be commercially available in agriculture long before it would be in automotive. I wanna see my projects come to fruition within the near term. That's what's happened at Deere. There's some major advantages to solving autonomy in ag versus other environments. First, the number of variables is fewer. Our machines primarily see skies, trees, dirt, and the occasional piece of farming equipment.
Our machines are moving slowly, so that puts a lot less pressure on processing speeds and having to detect objects at long range. We're also in a much less dynamic environment on a farm, so our machines can stop for anomalies, and there's no risk of getting rear-ended. Robots basically need a way to be wrong and have it be okay. In farming, it's great. You can just stop. If you're uncertain about anything, you can stop, and that sets us apart from automotive. It allows us to get products to the field much sooner and much more safely. These products improve over time. The more data we get, the more experience we get. What does a robot have to do? They really need to be able to do two things.
They need to be able to perceive the world and make good decisions about what they perceive. To do that, we have six stereo cameras in the tractor, which give us 360-degree obstacle coverage. Stereo cameras work just like the human eyes. You have two eyes and only one image, and what your brain is doing is finding the common points between those two points and triangulating the depth. It calculates depth for each point and passes this output into ML algorithms, which are running on GPUs. Also, our tractors know where they are due to the GNSS guidance systems they've had for years, and they know where they have authorization to be. We do this with a geofence, so we just prescribe a boundary where the tractor can drive and where it can't.
It never leaves this area, and we continuously track it through GNSS systems. We have redundant safety systems to make sure it's always running properly. This means that if any core assumption in the system fails, we basically can cut off the system and stop. Comes back to this ability to stop, which just makes the system much easier to build. Let's dig in a little bit into the machine learning and what's actually happening in the machine learning stack. You start with four raw images, one from each camera, one exposed bright and one exposed dark. This is called HDR imaging, and it's similar to what you see in an iPhone when you take a picture of someone at sunset. You can see their face, and you can still see the golden sunset behind them.
Similarly, we take these images and fuse them, and we can handle an incredibly wide range of lighting conditions, such as someone's truck's high beams pointed directly at the machine. Those images are passed into a neural network, which is trained on hundreds of thousands of ground truth images, and we classify each one of these pixels in about 100 milliseconds. These GPUs were originally designed for video games and NVIDIA pivoted and co-opted them for computing on the edge, and it's just been fantastic. What Deere has done is hardened the system. They've taken this NVIDIA system and hardened it, and we've gotten this thing called a VPU, and it's one of a kind and allows us to achieve a very high degree of safety and productivity.
While we have less variables in farming on the open road, it still requires a world-class research team to get these results. Our machines produce many images, and our algorithms rank these images to what is more likely to add value to a model. Any kind of new circumstance that we encounter, we can detect that that's an interesting new situation, upload it, get it labeled, and put them in a training set, and the system continually improves. The goal with any ML strategy is to make a self-optimizing system, a system that the more you use it, the better it gets. Recently, we've just acquired the intellectual property and of almost 30 employees of a company called Light.
What these people give us is the ability to run wider baseline stereo cameras, and they do this by calibrating the poses of each camera on a per frame basis. What this will allow us to do is have smaller, cheaper hardware on the system that is more performant and gives us a better sense of depth at range. The goal finally being that all large tractors that ship come with this autonomy kit onboard. With that, I'll hand it over to Igino, who's gonna talk to you about go-to-market.
Hi, everyone. I'm Igino Cafiero, and I'm one of the founders of Bear Flag Robotics. As a Silicon Valley startup, Bear Flag developed autonomous technology for farm tractors with a recurring revenue go-to-market strategy. I have to say, since we joined John Deere through acquisition last fall, I've been absolutely blown away by the sheer horsepower of this company to translate cutting-edge technology on the laptop to value in the field. The impact that we will have here together is both inspiring and palpable, and here's why. At the highest level possible, autonomy makes farmers more profitable, and the most obvious way it does that is by not requiring the farmer to be in the cab or to pay someone to be in the cab. The value creation extends beyond that, of course. Jobs are done deterministically.
A farmer knows the time it'll take to complete a job, which helps with planning, but it also helps them operate in increasingly tighter weather windows. Things like job quality are done consistently day in, day out, regardless of the skill of the operator who may or may not be in the cab. Of course, the operation is always run as safely as possible. Now, the value that we're creating through autonomy isn't intrinsically linked to a specific form factor. Yeah, we started with the 8R in tillage. That makes sense. That same technology will eventually be deployed to the entire fleet and to other jobs as well. Furthermore, autonomy will include high-value crops like orchards and vineyards and even combines and harvesters. Even more exciting is the possibilities that autonomy unlocks with new form factors like cabless machines.
No other John Deere technology will scale as quickly or as deeply across the install base as autonomy. Like Doug said, with over half a billion engaged acres every year, the transition from hard metal to software presents a massive opportunity for Deere. To that end, we plan to have a fully autonomous corn and soy production system by the year 2030. That means spring tillage, planting, spraying, harvest, and fall tillage all done autonomously. Now, in order to accelerate that adoption, we plan to include the required autonomous sensors and compute in the base configuration of the 8R tractor in the next few years. What this is gonna mean for a farmer is at the tap of a screen, they can unlock the full potential of autonomy on that tractor that's already sitting in their yard.
Autonomy will be the aspirin a farmer needs right when they need it most. Listen, the cool thing about this SaaS go-to-market is we can experiment with other go-to-markets, like freemium models that allow us to fuel adoption at a viral pace. Autonomy doesn't just help farmers in the field, it helps the economics of their operations too. What I mean by that is traditionally farmers have made large capital investments in their equipment. This makes sense, right? Farmers can finance the equipment and then use tax optimization strategies that make sense for their business. Autonomy changes that. Farmers can pay for the actual value being delivered by that piece of equipment in their field. What this means for Deere is that we're more tightly coupling the value creation with the value capture.
What it means for a farmer is instead of using that credit to finance equipment, they can use it in other parts of their operation, like buying more land or updating their infrastructure. Autonomy really does unlock new ways for farmers to think about their business that just didn't exist before. All this being said, the most important benefit of autonomy will be realized over a longer time horizon. What I mean by that is the same sensors that we're using for safety are also being used to collect all kinds of information about the fields that they're passing through. Over the billions of passes that John Deere equipment makes every year across the world, we're gathering insights that will help farmers be orders of magnitude more productive than previous generations.
If there's one thing to remember from what I'm saying here today, it's this: through autonomy, John Deere is creating the system of record in agriculture. The impact of that is delivering value to farmers today, but it will deliver value to farmers tomorrow in ways that we haven't even imagined yet. As we humans are faced with this exponential challenge of growing food, fuel, and fiber for our children and our children's children from the almond orchards of California to the corn and soy fields of Brazil, John Deere will be one of the most important technology companies for the next 100 years. That's why our team is here. That's our mission, our hearts in the work. Thank you very much. The future's an exciting place.
For an even more important perspective, we'd love to bring in Taylor Nelson to share his experience on the power of autonomy, and I think Willy's gonna come back up too. Good to see you, buddy. Taylor, we know each other pretty well, but just for the broader audience, I'd love to hear more about your operation, how you think about farming.
Yeah. I'm a fifth-generation family farmer. We farm corn, soybean rotation in northeast Nebraska, irrigated and dry land. We cover about 9,000 acres or so. You know, as my generation is making its way back to the farm and as, you know, I attended college at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln in Lincoln and I came back, I really evaluated, you know, where can I add value and what sorts of things could I do to help move our operation forward. This role that I kinda came into is really similar to like a chief technology officer. What I do is I evaluate different technological opportunities and then I decide, you know, is this opportunity right? And if is it gonna add value?
If we do this, how can I implement some of these different strategies and get people trained and make sure that we're getting the outcome that we desire. As I've made my way in, that's kind of been, you know, my role on the farm.
Awesome.
What's your biggest pain point? What do you want us to build next? We've started with autonomous tillage and I'd love to direct this team towards the next biggest thing for you.
I'm sure that my wife, probably my dad, and anyone in our operation is tired of hearing me say it, but labor is our biggest pain point. I mean, we're extremely short of labor, and as we look to the future, you know, we need autonomy to help us fill those voids, you know. The seasonal demands during the busy seasons of the fall and the spring where we need that extra help, that labor crunch is something that's really becoming debilitating.
The other thing is, how do we use technology to bring forth generations of intuition, that you know I might have as an operator in the cab, but if we bring somebody without the experience, how can I ensure that this job is gonna get done consistent with what we consider to be a good job and how we would do things? This tech of not only taking somebody out of the seat, but ensuring the quality of the job is going to be there, and then ensuring that we're gonna get it done in that optimum window so that we're not having to have a trade-off.
Absolutely.
Outstanding.
Cool.
Can you tell us for a second just how much your operation has grown? 'Cause you have an incredible growth story here.
Yeah. In one generation's time, essentially our operation's grown nearly tenfold. What's incredible about that is we're doing it seasonally; it's taken more, you know, labor than it did back then, but throughout the rest of the year, we're doing it with a similar force, and it's all because we're able to leverage technology and updated farming practices and some of the different agronomics that we're using today, and we're just covering immense amounts more acres and still hitting those windows and doing things the way that they need to be done. It's really allowed for us to scale over time, and we look forward to being able to do more so.
Looking forward to being able to provide these things.
Absolutely.
Thanks so much for joining us. It's awesome to see you.
Yep. Happy to be here.
Thanks, man.
Yep.
Thank you.
Of all the exciting technology we've shared today, there's a final layer that unlocks even greater customer, societal, and environmental value. To speak on that, I'd like to introduce Aaron Wetzel, who will electrify the crowd with some background on electrification.
Thank you. Thank you, Igino, Willy, and Taylor, and good morning. I'm Aaron Wetzel, Vice President of Production Systems for our Small Ag and Turf business. As you just heard Willy explain, our customers are facing a variety of challenges, from the lack of skilled labor to the ever-tightening planting window. Through technology solutions like autonomy, we're delivering value to our customers in ways never possible before. Today, I'm gonna talk to you about another solution we're rapidly developing and prioritizing as part of our broader tech stack strategy, and that's electrification. You've already seen electrification revolutionizing the automotive industry. Rather than a futuristic ideal, it's become today's expectation. Importantly, electrification is most valuable to customers when paired with a comprehensive tech stack, including connected machines, digitized operations, sense and act, and autonomy.
Much like electric car manufacturers tout their entire ecosystem, we'll offer a comprehensive experience that will leverage the entire Deere tech stack to maximize customer value. It's why we are certain we'll have the best electric offering, because we'll combine our battery electric machines with the industry's most powerful tech stack for a solution that's truly differentiated. Let's start first by looking at the example of high-value crop customers, a key customer segment for our Small Ag and Turf business, and one primed for electrification. The high-value crop customer segment is on the cusp of a technology revolution. While customers in corn and soy have seen major technology advancements, the basic farming practices for high-value crop customers remain largely unchanged from how they operated in the 1960s.
Due to the crops they grow, such as grapes, almonds, and apples, and the vineyards and orchards they nurture, they are restricted in machine form size. Where customers boost efficiency and productivity through increasing their machine size, these customers don't have that luxury due to the tight aisleways and overhead hanging crops. High-value crop customers are motivated and have an immediate need for sustainable solutions. Their investors and end customers, such as the Costcos and Walmarts of the world, are demanding it. State and federal government regulations are also coming into play, especially for growers in California, where regulations are more rigid. They are also more ready and willing to adopt. In 2017, only 17% of U.S. auto customers said they wanted electric vehicles.
Today, our research shows that between 60% and 70% of our high-value crop customers say they were ready to purchase an electric offering. Compared to rural lifestyle and other customer segments, high-value crop customers are leading the way in terms of desiring electrification technology to solve their challenges. Like many customers, skilled labor is hard to find, and for the high-value crop customer specifically, it accounts for more than 30% of their total production cost. For almond customers alone, autonomy could save them $ billions in production labor costs annually. For these reasons, our high-value crop customers are primed to leap forward with us on our electrification journey, especially when we pair these battery electric vehicles with the rest of the John Deere technology stack, inclusive of autonomy.
In fact, our electrification journey will help support autonomy capabilities because all of the control systems can be integrated electronically. These customer needs, combined with the rapid acceleration of battery development, technology advancements, and decreases in cost, make battery electrification and autonomy a prime growth opportunity. The technology is now more accessible, convenient, and affordable than ever. It's also desirable, with performance benefits and attributes not possible with diesel, such as improved ease of use, the ability for rapid enablement and scaling of autonomy, and reduction in noise pollution.
With electrification, John Deere will provide sustainable solutions and a substantial impact to our planet and our customers' bottom line, reducing their total cost of ownership from fuel to service, qualifying our customers for government incentives and subsidies, and allowing them to tap into on-site renewables. With the battery electric vehicle machine form, we will deliver the John Deere technology stack and value unlocked opportunities that come with sense and act technologies and the John Deere Operations Center. Our electrification journey is rooted in user value. How do we make our users more efficient and profitable? Where customers are trained to think of diesel in terms of its negative impact on their wallet, electrification switches the gears, going from economics or electrification to economics and electrification. Instead of penalizing customers, electrification incentivizes their bottom line.
Battery electric will enable technology while unlocking performance improvements and the operational ease of use critical to the high-value crop customers. It is bigger than just this customer segment alone. We will leverage our learnings with high-value crop customers to take this electrification across our entire enterprise portfolio. In turf, we see consumer preferences for electric-only growing in demand. Customers are looking for equipment that's easier to operate and maintain, performs better, runs more efficiently, more quietly, and requires less maintenance. At the heart of our electrification journey is user value. That is why earlier this year, John Deere made a commitment to electrification, announcing our 2026 leap ambitions. In Small Ag and Turf, we announced plans to offer electric options in each of our turf and compact utility product families, and an autonomous battery-powered electric agricultural tractor.
In our construction and forestry division, we committed to 20+ electric and hybrid electric product models across our Deere and Wirtgen products. When we provide solutions to our customers' most demanding and difficult challenges, customers see us not just as an equipment provider but as a trusted business partner. With the strength of our enterprise tech stack and our majority investment in Kreisel Electric, we are well-positioned to tackle our electrification goals. Kreisel is the leading innovator in the development of high-density, high-durability electric battery modules and packs, and a supporting charging infrastructure platform that utilizes their patented technology. Their proprietary technology is cutting edge, delivering high performance and durability in demanding off-highway applications. The company has a differentiated battery technology and battery buffered charging infrastructure offering and currently serves a global customer base across multiple markets.
Most importantly to John Deere, Kreisel brings capabilities and expertise we can apply across the variety of applications we serve. Their portfolio of work shows their batteries and charging technology have been tested in rough and rugged conditions where customers demand peak and uncompromising performance. The majority investment in Kreisel Electric will allow Deere to optimally integrate vehicle and powertrain designs around high-density battery packs while leveraging Kreisel's charging technology to build out infrastructure required for customer adoption, making electrification accessible and convenient for our customers. Battery electric is about thinking bigger and broader than ever before. It's taking a giant leap. We're not just talking battery electric vehicles. We're talking about the entire ecosystem. By broadening our horizons and evaluating the entire electric vehicle ecosystem, we'll open new value streams to our customers, to our dealers, and to John Deere.
Through that ecosystem, we'll enable autonomous applications and new digital business models. We'll also see the impact on a global scale, connecting farms around the world digitally and electrically. We have ability to bring optimal product with optimal ecosystem, but also the ability to sell and scale battery electric products with global manufacturing footprint and unrivaled channel. Our teams are already proactively preparing for the new services and support for our dealers and will offer the new skills and training required of them to support this new electrification ecosystem. Our customers are ready. Our industry is ready, and John Deere is ready for our next leap into electrification. Building on our legacy of innovation and excellence in tractors, we will revolutionize agriculture, and no one is more qualified to tackle this challenge than our teams and our talent at John Deere.
Leveraging the industry's most powerful tech stack into the heart of the electric vehicle ecosystem and harnessing the power of our global manufacturing and scaling capabilities, we'll differentiate our products from the competition and new startups entering the electrified ag space. We won't do it alone. As they've done for over 180 years, our world-class dealer channel will provide us our competitive advantage. While many companies may be rushing to bring their electrified solutions to the market, only John Deere can provide the level of service and support our customers expect and the confidence to take the next electrified leap. No one knows their customers better than John Deere. We know their economics, we know their performance demands, we know their challenges, and most importantly, their opportunities to unlock future value. The time is now. We cannot underestimate the significance of electrification to our business.
This is a monumental shift on par with the transition we made in 1918 from horse-drawn plows to introducing our very first tractors, the John Deere Tractor and Waterloo Boy. Just like then, the stakes to get it right are high, but the rewards for our customers, for our dealers, and for John Deere will be greater. To share a little bit more about exactly what those rewards are, I'd like to bring to the stage Mark von Pentz of Treasury Americas, who's gonna share more about our Deere partnership and how fleets and electrification are helping him solve some key pain points. Mark. Mark, appreciate you joining me. All right. Well, Mark, thank you very much for joining us this morning here in Des Moines. I think we'll start off just tell a little bit about yourself and your company.
Thank you. I'm glad to be here. My name's Mark von Pentz. I work for Treasury Americas. We're a subset of Treasury Wine Estates, Australian-based, one of the largest wine companies in the world. We have a footprint in 70 countries, about 30,000 acres planted worldwide. You know, relatively small to what we hear from, you know, corn and soybeans earlier. However, we're going back and forth every 10 rows, right? Or every 10 feet, up and down the rows, so.
I am the regional service maintenance manager, so my day-to-day job is making sure our fleet in the field is up and running, but the long-term part of my job is to understand where we're going in the future, trying to see what technology's out there and how we can change the way we're farming to be more efficient and effective in the future.
Great. You know, yesterday we talked a lot about some of the trends that are impacting your business. Maybe share a little bit about some of the concerns you have about what macro things are coming at you.
Look, I'm gonna say the same thing you guys have heard all morning, but it doesn't make it any less important. Labor is an issue. Rising costs are an issue. Finding quality labor right now has been a struggle. We are paying people more than double minimum wage and still having trouble finding the people we need. That's where the autonomy piece comes in that you talked about. The chemical costs have gone up significantly, up 30%, I believe, in the last year and a half alone. These are huge impacts to our bottom line. We work for a corporation, so that's important. You guys understand that.
However, I also think about, you know, what's happening in the field and the safety of our operators along the way, and I think a lot of what we're talking about today is gonna help with that as well.
Great. You had yesterday a chance to go out and visit the farm and see a lot of the technology advancements we're making. Looking at your business, where do you see John Deere being able to bring technology to your, to your operations?
Sure. I'm part of the supply chain, so I'm just one piece of this puzzle, right? I need people like John Deere to help me get to where we need to go. I can't do it without our business partners, and like you said, I look at you guys as a business partner, not somebody who sells us tractors.
Great. Well, thank you so much.
Yeah, appreciate it.
Mark, really appreciate you being with us today. You know, you've heard the leaps we're unlocking through the tech stack. However, none of this is really possible without our people. I'd like to take the opportunity now to welcome my colleague, Andrez Carberry, to shed light on how Deere is crafting a diverse, future-looking, and empowered employee base. Great job.
Thank you.
Morning. Our most important and differentiated asset is our people. We know we go as far as our people will take us. As our CEO and Chairman, John May, has said, we want to attract the best talent, have the best teams, and the best place to work. We approach each day striving to empower our people and create a more inclusive, diverse, and equitable environment where our people thrive. You've met some of that remarkable talent today, and they are but a small representation of our global workforce that's over 75,000 people strong. A team that is passionate about our mission, our higher purpose, and our customers. I could be biased, as John was earlier, but we build the best products in the world.
We build the best machines and solutions that help our customers be more profitable, productive, and do so more sustainably. Some of you might be wondering, how is a 185-year-old iron company able to attract and retain the talent you've seen today? How will Deere continue to compete for the talent to accelerate our smart industrial strategy and our leap ambitions? Well, it's basketball playoffs in the U.S., and how we would say it is game recognizes game. Smart people want to work with other smart people. They want to work on big challenges, and they want to work on technology that will make a meaningful difference and have a positive impact on the land we call home. That's Deere. That's who we are.
Our mission, our higher purpose of feeding the world and creating an infrastructure to support a growing population and helping our customers do so more profitably and sustainably resonates with our employees, our customers, our communities, and our shareholders. Interestingly, that higher purpose resonates resoundingly and is a key differentiator with all talent, but particularly when we talk to technology talent because they know that their contributions will be in the market and put to use now. Allow me to walk you through our four-point talent acquisition and development strategy. First, we leverage M&A as an accelerant. It's no secret we are aggressively targeting the best companies out there with the brightest minds, people, and culture that are aligned with our smart industrial strategy, and we merge that talent with our own. Let me provide you a few proof points.
You heard from Jorge Heraud and Igino Cafiero, founders of Blue River Technology and Bear Flag Robotics, who have not only agreed to join the Deere family, but are playing critical roles in our path to autonomy. Talk to them and they will tell you Deere's higher purpose and the real challenges and opportunities to make a meaningful and sustainable impact on humanity and the planet drive them and their teams every day. We followed a similar strategy with other companies, including Kreisel, that Aaron just spoke about. A strong indicator of our success is that the talent up and down these organizations choose to stay with Deere and are helping us to accelerate our technical journey. We'll continue to explore these opportunities as they become available. Second, we strategically recruit technological accelerators, and we develop a deep technical pipeline.
We strategically recruit individuals in critical areas of the business whose expertise can be an accelerant to our business goals. To do this, we frequently map tech company structures and their profiles to gain deeper insights into the talent market, and we vigorously pursue those people who we've identified as technology accelerators. Let me give you a few proof points. You met Doug Sauder here today. You heard from him, and he's an expert in leading software development who we recruited to help us .accelerate our digital journey with our customers. This year, we also added an executive to our production system who is steeped in electrification and are building those business models in that space. He came to Deere with over 179 filed patents. Over half of those are related to battery technology and electrification.
We are using this strategic talent sourcing approach as we stand up our recurring revenue part of the business to ensure that we understand how mature companies in this space are structured, and in a similar way, identify the capability and the talent we want to pursue in key areas like customer success and pricing. Let me also share with you a few points on how we're developing that deep pipeline with what we call 10xers. In the last 18 months or so, we have significantly shifted our talent recruiting strategy so that we're sourcing over 50% of our technical roles from the external market, focusing on differentiated software and technology skills.
Several of our more recently hired colleagues have come to us from the tech companies whose devices we all have in our pockets, the search engines and the streaming companies that many of us use every day. Next, we go to markets that are rich in the technical talent we need. Critical to this successful shift in building our technical talent, our pipeline requires us to go to markets that are rich in diverse technical talent. We're no longer relying on who is willing to come to one of our current locations around the world. We're going to the locations where the technical talent we must attract to Deere live and work every day. Let me provide you with what that looks like. We've recently announced our new offices in Bangalore, India, Austin, Texas, and Chicago's West Loop area.
These locations give us access to thriving tech talent. These markets are in addition to our footprint that we have in the Bay Area, the Research Triangle, and similar markets across the globe. We continue to explore other locations to add to that footprint. Next, we invest and we develop our people. Of critical importance to our long-term success, we invest in and develop the skills of our exceptional global team. How do we do that? Later this year, we will launch a learning experience platform, or LXP as it's called, which uses machine learning and artificial intelligence to hyper personalize the learning path of each employee. The LXP enables us to deploy a build talent strategy to future-proof our workforce, so they are equipped with the skills and the technical expertise to match the rate of technological change.
Importantly, late last year, we announced our global framework for the future of work at Deere. Now more than ever, we know that people have choices about where and how they will work. Increasingly, their decisions are not just made on compensation, but on mission, on purpose, and a culture and an environment where they can have an impact and thrive. That's Deere. That's our core. That's who we are. That's how a 185-year-old company is attracting and developing the talent to deliver our smart industrial strategy and our leap ambitions. Don't just take my word for it. I want you to hear directly from a few of our new tech employees.
It's an exciting time to be part of a big company with all the resources of big tech, but a lot of opportunity to make a difference.
It's almost like being in a startup environment, except you have the support and stability of an almost 200-year-old company.
I really like the idea of working for a company that people understood what it did, and people, when you say, "I work for John Deere," everyone understands that. Everyone knows. Everyone knows the green and yellow. Everyone knows the product.
Deere and Blue River came together. That's kind of where real magic happened, because we were able to use this new technology of machine learning and robotics with the Deere skills in manufacturing and dealership network.
The hardware that we're running on is really serious stuff. There's, like, military grade, and there's satellite grade, and then there's, like, John Deere grade.
Being able to work with the best of the best when it comes to agriculture equipment means that we can do our job better. It means that we can really change the world for the better.
If you think about John Deere and their ability to impact the world for positive change, it's enormous. Think about the amount of land that we have access to. Think about how much carbon we can sequester if we drive the systems. I saw that, and it sold me right away. I chose John Deere because I strongly believe in the importance of helping people to live better.
I've always been fascinated with the ag tech. Like, agriculture's not going anywhere. Transitioning here to John Deere, I feel like I'm making a bigger impact.
There's a longer video that'll be made available online as well. As you can see, we have great people, and we continue to recruit great talent, particularly in technology roles. Our people are driven by purpose, the opportunity to deliver solutions to big challenges, which just a few years ago would've been like science fiction. Our equipment, through technology, helps to unlock boundless possibilities that will help our customers feed us, do so profitably, smartly, and with less impact on the only land we have. That's not theory. That's how we will continue to differentiate and bring value to all of our stakeholders. To show the magnitude of these outcomes, I'd like to welcome to the stage Josh Jepsen and Julian Sanchez, who will share how Deere is on the frontier of sustainability in agriculture. Thank you.
Thanks, Andrez. The mission and purpose that Andrez spoke about not only resonates with employees, but with customers as well. The Jacks who you heard from earlier today, they experienced this firsthand this year. As a result of rising cost and scarcity of inputs, they were faced with the very practical need to reduce the use of chemicals. Leveraging See & Spray, they were able to better use the limited inputs they had, which resulted in significantly less herbicide used. This is a great example of the relationship between driving improved economics for our customers and sustainable outcomes in the John Deere strategy. Now, for a long time, Deere has delivered environmental benefits through our products, technologies, and solutions. The Smart Industrial strategy increased the focus on delivering improved farmer economics and environmental outcomes through technology.
As we've executed the Smart Industrial strategy and leveraged production system thinking, we've been able to identify and have begun quantifying the impacts our solutions can have on the environmental side. The Leap ambitions highlight this tight linkage between our strategy and sustainable outcomes. These Leap ambitions, which you've heard a lot about today, based on the notion of unlocking $150 billion of incremental addressable market and the executional drivers which create that value and deliver these outcomes. The outcomes I'd like to focus on today are the ag customer outcomes of improving nitrogen use efficiency and crop protection use efficiency by 20% while also reducing customer CO2 equivalent emissions by 15%. How do we do this? How do we get there?
By executing the strategy, we'll drive 75% of our engaged acres to become sustainably engaged acres by 2030, meaning they're using multiple solutions or practices which deliver environmental benefits. ExactRate is a fitting example, dosing only the seeds with nitrogen as they're planted when needed and only in the furrow versus broadcast. This addresses not only one of the larger components of the grower's cost structure, but also its carbon footprint. On an acre of corn, nitrogen and fertilizer represents about 35% of the variable cost structure and about 75% of the acre's greenhouse gas footprint. A solution like ExactRate improves on both of these simultaneously. You know, See & Spray, we've talked about today, has a very similar impact on herbicides, driving improvements in crop protection use efficiency.
Maybe one last example of how we create profitability, productivity, and sustainability is changing how production systems are approached by solving customer pain points. The CH950 two-row sugarcane harvester, which was highlighted in our 2021 sustainability report, delivers such significant efficiency to our customers' operations that the entire production system can be optimized. On a model farm in Brazil of about 42,000 hectares, this converts to savings of over 1 million liters of fuel, reduces CO2 equivalents of 9 million passenger miles driven, while adding significantly higher tons harvested by reducing losses.
These examples show that we're not only driving economics, but also putting a dent, a significant dent, in the carbon footprint on the farm as well. We're very excited about the opportunities that we have to deliver sustainable outcomes for our customers and feel like we are uniquely positioned to do so. Now I'm gonna turn it over to Julian Sanchez, the Director of Emerging Technology, to talk about how we do this for our customers.
There's been a recognition that there is a tremendous opportunity for agriculture to unlock sustainable outcomes. I'm just gonna spend a little bit of time telling you about what those opportunities are at the moment. They're emerging opportunities. I wanna tell you a little bit about the complexities surrounding them, what John Deere's role is in helping overcome those complexities, and a few activities.
We've been busy here the last couple of years in this topic, so I wanna kinda highlight some of the key activities around there. Opportunities, let's talk about this. Again, all of these are emerging. In no particular order here, carbon sequestration is one that we hear a lot about, right? That's the idea of changing your agronomic practices to take carbon from the atmosphere, put it into the ground and keep it there. All right? The friendly estimates suggest that, you know, you can do about one metric ton of CO2 per year per acre if you make full aggressive changes to your agronomic practices. If you start doing the math there, it's quite a bit of an opportunity, right?
The end game there is if the grower does all those things, they document all that data, you can eventually mint that into a carbon credit and sell it to somebody that's trying to offset their emissions. All right? That's carbon sequestration. There's another area that's similar. It's carbon intensity of crops. In this case, you're not actually measuring and trying to model how much carbon is sequestered, you're simply tracking what is the carbon intensity of a crop for a specific field. Let's say you grow an acre of corn right here, and then next door you grow an acre of corn, but you use ExactRate so that you put less nitrogen on it, so that crop would have a lower carbon intensity number. The end game there is to be able to get a premium for lower carbon intensity crops.
There's another area, similar, but now you're going beyond carbon, and I'll give you example on this on cotton in a second, where you're basically tracking any regenerative ag sustainable practice to grow your crop, and then there's markets, for example, in cotton, where you're maybe getting access to new markets for buyers that are looking for sustainably grown crops. Then there's areas like water management, which we're keeping an eye on and seeing how they evolve. They may evolve similar to the carbon sequestration conversation, but again, those are still really early on. Okay? So those are some of the buckets of opportunities. Now, there are complexities associated with those, right?
The first complexity, you heard from Clint and Jade earlier about sustainability. I was talking to them last night, you know, about cover crops, and it's like, "Hey, what do you guys think about cover crops?" Clint said, you know, "I'd love cover crops, but here's the deal, right? Where I am in Kansas, if I put down a cover crop in the fall, it's really gonna put too much pressure on the moisture of my ground. So it's good to put a cover crop down, but, you know, now I'm sort of playing with a variable of moisture." So it's just an example where, you know, every farmer is looking at the opportunity, but they're also looking at the risks of making those those radical changes in some cases to their practices.
Remember, most farmers have spent their whole life optimizing and tweaking both agronomic practices, labor, equipment, everything they need to do to farm just right in their land. Any kind of change from year to year is something that carries risk. Okay? That's the one complexity, and there is good news there in a second. The second complexity is around data. Okay? I'm gonna give you an example from cotton. In the cotton industry, there's something called the U.S. Cotton Trust Protocol that was established two years ago, which is like, "Hey, document all of the practices that you use to grow sustainable cotton, and then you get access to premium markets or new markets that want to source sustainable cotton." You're gonna start seeing a bunch of screens here.
Here's the issue with data right now across all of these things: gathering the data is hard, and we're working on that, but there's still a lot of manual entry for a lot of these protocols and a lot of these programs. You're seeing here clicks and clicks and dropdown boxes and checkboxes. You know, just entering a field to participate in this program takes dozens and dozens of steps, right? Now, good news is, for that specific example, just by leveraging the power of Operations Center, we were able to, in a few months' work, reduce the number of steps by 60%.
Again, I share that example with you because that's sort of one of the complexities right now, is that, you know, you talk to a farmer and they say, "Yeah, this sounds interesting, but, you know, I have to fill out 100 data fields for every single field, every single time, and it just adds a lot of burden, complexity." Okay? All right. What is John Deere's role in helping overcome those complexities? Well, the first good news is first order principle, which is farmers are lifelong experimenters, right? Again, Clint and Jade, they're gonna be wanting to try or willing to try something new from an agronomic practices perspective.
Now, they're not gonna go scale it across their farm on day one, but you talk to any farmer, they're always willing to try something new in 100 acres and see how it goes. If it goes well, 200 acres, and then on from there. John Deere's role there, especially with our Operations Center, is to help basically show the insights of those experiments and help them understand, "Is this working in my land or not?" Right? Second good news is there is a good correlation, science-based correlation of regenerative ag practices and healthier soil. If you start implementing a lot of these practices, over time, the quality of your soil goes up. Better soil, better yields, better land quality, better land value.
Again, the role for John Deere there is helping farmers see the changes on their yield, the changes on their outcomes when they implement some of these practices. Okay? The third one, and this is really, really the key one, is around making the data gathering and the data synthesis easier, right? About 10 years ago, just as part of our design philosophy for technology, we embraced a design philosophy called Walk Up Easy. It's just what it sounds like. You walk up to it and it's easy and it's intuitive, and you don't have to do a lot of setup, and stuff just works. We're trying to now apply that mindset to the space of the sustainability opportunities. It's the same thing. I don't have to walk up. You know, if it's carbon sequestration, I'm a farmer, I'm worried about so many things.
I don't need to worry about what are the 100 data fields that I need to make sure I have two months from now. We need to make an easy button for that as an industry, and that's something, again, the example I showed you with cotton, that we're already well on our way to try to unlock some of that. We've been busy. There's a few things that we've been doing in the last couple of years. The first one is we launched a number of pilots across the Midwest with dozens of farmers. Keep in mind, even the carbon sequestration or carbon intensity, all of this is still nascent, right?
What we've been doing in our pilots is we've been simulating kind of an end-to-end market with a grower and saying, "Hey, grower, if you're willing to try these practices, we're gonna make sure that we understand what data needs to be collected. We're gonna model that data to understand how much carbon was sequestered, and then we're gonna, quote, unquote, 'mint a credit' and understand, you know, what are your behaviors in terms of the value creation for the grower in dealing with those credits." We've been busy experimenting with all of that and really understanding everything from on-the-ground behavior and attitudes around all of this to how would this possibly work downstream. We also just submitted, two weeks ago, a couple of proposals for the USDA.
The USDA put out a request for proposals about three months ago around this topic of regenerative agriculture. We submitted a couple of proposals two weeks ago. We'll know in September. If those come through, that will really help us scale and understand this in a broader sense, and understand basically the tipping points that we think are necessary in order for this to scale and for it to make economic sense for growers. One of the cool things about going through that process with the USDA proposal was the number of requests we got from other folks in the industry asking John Deere to put together a letter of support.
The letter of support, and the genesis of those was, "Hey, we understand and we know the value of your equipment on the ground collecting the data of what is done, how it's done, when it's done, and we think that you're gonna continue to be at the key of unlocking all of the potential value in all of these sustainability efforts." The third thing we've been doing is investing in real-time soil health sensing. Remember, all of this ultimately comes down to is your soil healthy, and is it getting healthier or is it not getting as healthy over time, right?
If we can develop over time, on-the-go, real-time sensors that let the farmer know what is the quality of my soil right now in this, you know, specific area of the field versus another specific area of the field, we know that that will unlock tremendous value for them, and that will really begin to give them the understanding of when I make some of these agronomic changes, what happens to my fields, what happens to my operation. I will now turn things over to Ryan Campbell. He's gonna talk to you a little bit about the business outcomes we expect to deliver. Ryan?
Thank you, Julian. When you step back and look at the content today, it tells the story of our strategy. I hope you're as excited as I am. I truly believe there is no industry more ready for positive disruption through technology than agriculture, and no company better positioned to deliver for our customers in a differentiated way. The Smart Industrial strategy organized our company around production systems. The production systems teams went to work to identify ways that we can use our equipment and tech stack to deliver solutions that can create over $150 billion in customer value. You heard today about four technology platforms. Those platforms build upon our existing tech stack and are key to unlocking that value. Importantly, the platforms will deliver precision over multiple products and production systems and come together with a common thread of customers doing their jobs.
The products and solutions taken individually are powerful drivers of customer value. Taken together and integrated, they feed upon each other to deliver even greater value. Said another way, the parts are valuable. The sum of those parts is even more. That's how we think about where our business is going in the future. It will be about a system of solutions working seamlessly together to produce tangible outcomes for our customers. Not just the tractor or the combine, but the integrated system of growing a crop. The new value creation will also provide opportunity for us to add different elements to our business model over time. Since inception, Deere has primarily relied on a business model that monetized products at the point of sale. However, the nature of our solutions are changing.
They combine the equipment, which will largely remain on a point of sale model, with machine learning and an ever-increasing software component. These new features can improve over time and will be updated over the air in many instances. Selling them through a SaaS-like model matches their underlying characteristics and ties payment more closely to value creation, ultimately moving us from a point of sale to creating ongoing value for customers. We believe this can increase adoption and scale more quickly across our installed base. Customers benefit from a lower upfront cost compared to the value created and can receive improved functionality over time, making them more adaptable to continuous improvement. Josh, why don't you join me back on stage?
Thanks, Ryan. As we move forward, we're not simply focused on driving more units, but instead on increasing the value each machine delivers over its lifetime. That's what's going to drive not just customer value, but shareholder value for Deere. In the first quarter, we announced our goal to achieve 20% through cycle margins by 2030. Put differently, if you average our margins in a cycle from peak to trough or trough to peak, we'd expect an average margin of about 20%, with higher margins during periods of more robust demand. Just a few minutes ago, Ryan laid out a number of benefits of matching value creation to monetization for our customers. This will also have important implications to Deere.
It will enable us to dampen the amplitude of our cycle through predictable recurring revenues that are tied much more closely to the jobs our customers do, which in most years is very similar as the same acres get planted, sprayed, and harvested year in and year out. As reflected in our Leap ambitions, we expect about 10% of our total revenues to be recurring by 2030. This will increase the consistency of our through cycle earnings. When you combine this SaaS-like recurring revenue with some other forms of more stable, less cyclical revenues, like service parts or John Deere Financial, we see a future where nearly 40% of our revenue is recurring or less cyclical, and the percent of earnings tied to these more stable revenues will be even higher.
While it may take us a few years to begin building out a base of recurring revenues, we have a few examples today. See & Spray Ultimate is a great hybrid example where the cost of the machine is incurred at point of sale, but the usage of the green-on-green machine learning platform will drive a per acre or per usage fee. Autonomous solutions on top of our underlying machine forms will be recurring, and the enabling components will move into base equipment over the next few years. Customers will have the option to pay for it when they use it, and again, on a per usage or per acre basis. These are just a few examples of the transformations that are happening right now at Deere. I'll turn it back to you, Ryan.
Thanks, Josh. Lastly, this transformation is consistent with our capital allocation philosophy. You'll continue to see us prioritize our commitment to our mid-single A credit rating. Growth investments, both organic and inorganic, followed by our dividend and share buybacks. What has changed over the last few years with our smart industrial strategy is our growth investments are skewed more toward the products and solutions that we have the most opportunity to differentiate and create value for our customers. Today, you heard about how four technology platforms will combine with our equipment and tech stack to unlock significant incremental value. Execution against our objectives will drive significant economic and sustainability value for our customers and will allow us to begin to grow a more recurring, less cyclical business.
Again, I hope you're as excited as we are, given the incredible opportunities in our industries and our unique position to lead for our customers. We're now ready to take your questions.
All right, for the final segment of the day, we're gonna engage in a little bit of Q&A. I wanna thank everybody who has submitted questions on our microsite today. In the interest of time and an effort to get through as many questions as possible, I'm gonna read them on your behalf, and we'll engage our panelists for some answers here. First up, we got a question from Kristen Owen at Oppenheimer. She asked, "You mentioned more than 340 million engaged acres growing to over 500 million acres," which is one of our Leap ambitions. "Within that 340 million acres, can you talk about the degree of engagement? In other words, how many of those engaged acres are using multiple products within the JD Ops Center?
How important is that for unlocking the full potential of the John Deere Operations Center as a digital twin platform?" I think that's a great question for Doug, so maybe we can ask Doug to come join us for that question. Thanks, Doug.
Engaged acres is really a measure of breadth. As we think about our leap ambitions, we're really focused on highly engaged acres, which has a couple of different components. The first is depth of acres, and that's where we have data collected over multiple passes over a single growing season. Even more important is the concept of utilization, and that's where our customers are actually utilizing those tools, whether they be digital tools or onboard technologies to really realize value because that's when value is realized. You'll see us continue to emphasize utilization metrics and this highly engaged acre concept to get a richer view of how customers are receiving value from our technology.
You know, maybe Brent, just to add to that, the thing that really makes me excited about Doug's answer is if you go back to 2012 as a company, we made the decision to put a telematics gateway in every one of our pieces of large ag equipment, had that same strategy around the world. The way I want you to think about that is that that's the rail that we laid. In order for us to quickly accelerate the amount of engaged acres and the depth of acres, it really takes a large population of vehicles that can communicate back to us and back to the Operations Center. By far, John Deere has the largest population in the industry, and we're really excited about what we can do by capturing more and more data and improving the quality of the overall acres.
Absolutely agree with you, Doug. Great answer.
Let's just stay on the digitalization theme. We've got another question from Stephen Volkmann at Jefferies. Historically, some farmers may have resisted sharing their data with others. Yeah, how do you overcome this to aggregate large amounts of data, and do you charge farmers for these insights? And if so, how do you do that? Doug, you wanna start off there?
Sure. The first important principle is that the farmer is in control of their data. We have, we give them the ability to have permission control. If I, as a farmer, wanna share my data with my agronomist so that they can help me, I'm in control and have fine-grain permission details to be able to do that. When we talk about aggregated insights, those are anonymous, aggregated insights created over a broad data set, and we give options for farmers to opt out of some of that as well. Lastly, today we monetize the Operations Center capabilities really through our core equipment and the technology that it's onboard.
Awesome. Thanks, Doug. Appreciate it. Next question from Alex Derby at G.research. Especially in markets like Brazil, do you need to work with connectivity partners to supply sufficient internet connections to tractors to unlock demand?
Yeah, it's a great question, Brent. You know, if you've been to Brazil, and you've been to Mato Grosso or the Cerrado, you've seen the vastness of the country, and you sort of intrinsically understand, I think, the challenge that we have with connectivity. We have and continue to work with telecommunication providers in Brazil to grow the edge of connectivity in the country. But it's also, I think, a really interesting place for us to experiment with alternative ways to connect customers, things like private cell, things like, you'll see us in the next few months release an RFP for satellite connectivity that we can put on our equipment.
Those sorts of opportunities are out there and in particular, there's a ton of technology development that's going on in that space at the moment that give us, I think, great optimism for the ability to connect those customers that are in very remote regions of agriculture.
Thanks, Jamie. This next question is probably a great one for Jorge Heraud, so I'll invite him on stage as I ask it. This is a question from Dimitri at ClearBridge. What are the gating factors to using See & Spray technology for applications in chemicals other than herbicides? And you know, when will it be introduced at scale?
Yeah. Perfect. That's a great question. We're starting with herbicides. That's the number one crop protection product that is used by farmers, particularly in the U.S. Beyond that, we want to move to fungicides, to insecticides, and also into nutrition, to applying nitrogen selectively. Those are all chemicals that are applied by the same machine, the sprayer, right? The self-propelled sprayer is a machine that is used to apply all those chemicals. We're putting in hardware to compute. We're putting cameras to compute that are going to allow us to detect when there's deficiency in each one of those chemicals or there's a need to apply each one of those chemicals, and we're going to be applying them.
The second one we have in that journey beyond herbicides is going to be fungicides. We're consciously focusing on releasing See & Spray. See & Spray was just announced this year and is hitting customers. The first thing we're gonna be doing is making sure that that release goes smoothly, scaling up not only to the U.S. where we have it this year, but having it cover worldwide, going to Brazil, going to Argentina, going to Europe. Those are all very important things to us, increasing the number of coverage crops. Right after that is fungicides. We think it's probably two years after herbicide that we'll be able to release fungicide.
After that comes insecticides and nutrients.
Maybe Brent, I'll add onto that one a little bit, tying back to John's point about the importance of connectivity on those machines. That's what enables us to get the data that enables us to create these models for fungicide, as an example. To be able to push those models from a software perspective onto that installed base and unlock that value. You know, I think it's important to understand the foundation that we've got in place already to make that possible.
Awesome. Thanks. Jorge, if you don't mind sticking around, I think I got another one for you. This is from Tami Zakaria at J.P Morgan. You mentioned working on construction equipment and leveraging, in terms of leveraging sense and act capabilities. Can you expand on that? What kind of equipment, and what would be used in those cases?
You want me to start?
Yeah. Right on cue.
Yeah. I love the question because it speaks to the power of the organization. Our ability to leverage the technology investment that we've made in production precision ag into construction is vast. You know, there's a handful of examples that we can point to already. Things like John mentioned the telematics gateway, the connectivity devices from a hardware perspective, and all the backend to get the data into the cloud and in a useful format in the form presented to the customer. That's just one example. Also in addition to connectivity, sense and compute. Things like inertial measurement units, things like graphics processing units, those things are highly leverageable for us, not just within ag across products, but also from agriculture into construction.
Yeah. That's perfect. From the product standpoint, what we're focusing on is a product we already have in development. We call it obstacle intelligence. It's the ability to see obstacles and understand which obstacles are important to avoid. You see, in construction, there's a lot of things that are there. These machines, in many cases, climb over piles, right? Go over holes. Not every single obstacle is a real obstacle for a construction machine, right? In many cases, they are continuously routinely driving into things like dirt piles, rock piles. It's very important to differentiate that versus obstacles that you do want to avoid, like cars or people, right? You don't want to go, be going over that.
Some of these machines get driven a lot of the time backwards and forwards, right? Think about a loader, for example. It's doing, they call it a V path. It's loading, going back, and dumping it into a truck, and doing that all day. It's very easy for something to get all of a sudden in its path, especially when they're backing behind. We have a new product that we're working on that has the ability to detect obstacles and classify them into obstacles that are worthy of stopping for and obstacles that are just regular obstacles that the construction equipment is expected to go over. Anyhow, that's one first product that is being tested this year with customers at customer sites.
It's still not commercial, but it's being developed and to the point where we're getting input from customers, which is very important. Beyond that, there's a lot of opportunity for autonomy, making vehicles driverless. A lot of the operations in construction are highly repetitive, particularly in road building. There's a lot of very repetitive tasks that could be made driverless. We're looking into that, and that's probably a little bit further along, but huge opportunities.
Yeah, maybe to add to that, you know, a way to think about it is the hardware, the infrastructure can be consistent between ag and construction, but the data and the machine learning models that we create are different, right? There's a need for us to collect that information in those different use cases, but they're deployable directly to the same hardware stack that we've got across agriculture.
Perfect. Awesome. Thanks, Jorge. Appreciate it. Our next question was addressed to Igino Cafiero, so I'm gonna ask him to join us on stage. It's from Jerry Revich at Goldman Sachs. Igino Cafiero spoke of a fully autonomous row crop production system in 2030. Beyond tillage, what are the major product introductions on the path to that fully autonomous production system in 2030?
We get to announce new products, right?
Yeah, go for it.
From Deere Country. No. Okay. If you look at the stages of the production system, we have spring tillage, planting, spraying, harvest, fall tillage. Makes sense we start with tillage, right? Like spring tillage and fall tillage sort of look like the same sort from an autonomous perspective. From there, we have, you know, planting, obviously, like massive economic benefits to a farmer to get the seeds in the ground right when they need them in the ground. But then more excitingly, you look at grain carts. This is probably one of the most complicated human-computer interactions at scale that, you know, non-NASA scientists will be able to solve, right? Like to deal with in the field, right? We have huge pieces of equipment moving around in a well-synchronized orchestra, and we're gonna deliver that to farmers. That's really exciting.
Beyond it, I'll just tease this. The implications of See & Spray plus autonomy are astounding. I've been privy to some thoughts there. It's remarkable what we can do. But even then we're like, "Okay, great, we've solved the autonomy and automation part." It still comes back to what can you do on top of that? When I say we're creating the system of record in agriculture, what we're actually doing is creating a system that's greater than some of its parts, right? Better than just being able to get these operations done at the right time, now we're linking insights from the seasons to drive outcomes that really do have headroom that we aren't able to quantify yet. Like that's the promised land. That's where we're going. That's what's really exciting.
Lastly too, it's not just a story about corn and soy. You know, it's, as I mentioned, you know, other crops too. As Aaron Wetzel mentioned, high value crops, orchards, vineyards provide tremendous potential, and we're working on that as well. It really is exciting.
Maybe just to add to this, Brent, you know, I said when I kicked off the event and talked to all of you that, you know, in my 25 years with Deere, this is probably the most excited I am about the future. This area that Gino just spoke about really creates that excitement. The reason I say that is we're talking about a suite of technology, whether it's software or a suite of sensors, that are relatively inexpensive, that can be very similar to what we talked about, telematics gateways, where you can envision this sort of technology in base, which will allow us to scale it rapidly across a lot of acres around the globe.
It's really, really exciting technology, mainly because it's gonna make our customers a lot more productive, a lot more profitable, and help them do the jobs they do in a much more environmentally sustainable way.
Awesome.
Thanks, Gino.
Thanks. Thanks, Gino. Yep. I think we have time for one last question, and we got this from many of you, so I won't attribute it to anyone specifically. You know, the question is, it comes in various forms, but in general it goes like this: you are targeting a 20% through cycle operating margin by fiscal year 2030. What do you expect your peak and trough margins to look like as we go through various cycles?
Yeah. It's a great question, and you know, philosophically, the journey we've been on when we went from 12.5% to 15% at mid cycle, the implications there and what we worked on is to raise that 250 basis points at all points in the cycle. Now we're on that journey from 15% to 20%, the implication and what we're working on is all points of the cycle have an improvement in it. What's unique about this time and a little bit different is some of the business model changes that we have that we've all talked about today and Josh hit on, it's gonna allow us to take some of the standard deviation around that 20% out.
When we went from 12.5% to 15%, we raised the all points in the cycle by 250 basis points. We will raise again commensurate with the 15%-20%, but execution of our business model strategy will take some of the standard deviation out around that 20%.
Awesome. Thanks, Ryan. That concludes our time for today. We don't have time to get through all of the questions, but I know I'm gonna have time to interact with everybody here later on in the day. I wanna give a special thanks to everybody who joined us. I know folks traveled a long way to join us today. Thank you very much. A very special thanks to our customers who were able to join us as well. That was really special to have them as a part of this day with us. For those who are here in person, we are going to depart immediately. We've got buses outside, and we're gonna go straight to the test farm. For those joining virtually, we will post clips of that at a later date, so you'll have an opportunity to participate.
Thank you, everybody.
Thanks, everybody.