The Rise Of The Agribots - IELTS Reading Answers & Explanations
From Official Cambridge Guide to IELTS Academic Reading Test 4 · Part 2 · Questions 14–26
Reading Passage
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14-26, which are based on Reading Passage 2 below.
The rise of the agribots
The use of robots and automation in the farming industry
The next time you stand at the supermarket checkout, spare a thought for the farmers who helped fill your shopping basket as life is hard for them right now. This, in turn, inevitably means bigger grocery bills for consumers, and greater hardship for the millions in countries where food shortages are a matter of life and death. Worse, studies suggest that the world will need twice as much food by 2050. Yet while farmers must squeeze more out of the land, they must also address the necessity of reducing their impact on the soil, waterways and atmosphere. All this means rethinking how agriculture is practiced, and taking automation to a whole new level. On the new model farms of the future, precision will be key. Why dose a whole field with chemicals if you can spray only where they are needed? Each plant could get exactly the right amount of everything, no more or less, an approach that could slash chemical use and improve yields in one move. But this is easier said than done; the largest farms in Europe and the U.S. can cover thousands of acres. That's why automation is key to precision farming. Specifically, say agricultural engineers, precision farming needs robot farmers.
One day, we might see fields with 'agribots' (agricultural robots) that can identify individual seedlings and encourage them along with drops of fertilizer. Other machines would distinguish problem weeds from crops and eliminate them with shots from high-power lasers or a microdot of pesticide. These machines will also be able to identify and harvest all kinds of vegetables. More than a century of mechanization has already turned farming into an industrial-scale activity in much of the world, with farms that grow cereals being the most heavily automated.
But a variety of other crops, including oranges and tomatoes destined to become processed foods, are also picked mechanically, albeit to a slightly lesser extent. Yet the next wave of autonomous farm machinery is already at work. You probably haven't even noticed, for these robots are disguised as tractors. Many are self-steering, use GPS to cross a field, and can even 'talk' to their implements – a plough or sprayer, for example. And the implements can talk back, telling the tractor that it's going too fast or needs to move to the left. This kind of communication is also being developed in other farm vehicles. A new system allows a combine harvester, say, to send a call over to a tractor-trailer so the driver can unload the grain as and when necessary.
However, when fully autonomous systems take to the field, they'll look nothing like tractors. With their enormous size and weight, today's farm machines have significant downsides: they compact the soil, reducing porosity and killing beneficial life, meaning crops don't grow so well. Simon Blackmore, who researches agricultural technology at Harper Adams University College in England believes that fleets of lightweight autonomous robots have the potential to solve this problem and that replacing brute force with precision is key. 'A seed only needs one cubic centimeter of soil to grow. If we cultivate just that we only put tiny amounts of energy in and the plants still grow nicely.' There is another reason why automation may be the way forward according to Eldert van Henten, a robotics researcher at Wageningen University in the Netherlands. 'While the population is growing and needs to be fed, a rapidly shrinking number of people are willing to work in agriculture,' he points out.
Other researchers such as Linda Calvin, an economist at the U.S. Department of Agriculture, and Philip Martin at the University of California, Davis, have studied trends in mechanization to predict how US farms might fare. Calvin and Martin have observed how rising employment costs have led to the adoption of labour-saving farm technology in the past, citing the raisin industry as an example. In 2000, a bumper harvest crashed prices and, with profits squeezed, farmers looked for a solution. With labour one of their biggest costs – 42 percent of production expenses on U.S. farms, on average – they started using a mechanical harvester adapted from a machine used by wine makers. By 2007, almost half of California's raisins were mechanically harvested and a labour force once numbering 50,000 had shrunk to 30,000.
As well as having an impact on the job market, the widespread adoption of agribots might bring changes at the supermarket. Lewis Holloway, who studies agriculture at the University of Hull, UK, says that robotic milking is likely to influence the genetics of dairy herds as farmers opt for 'robot-friendly' cows, with udder shape, and even attitudes, suited to automated milking. Similarly, he says, it's conceivable that agribots could influence what fruit or vegetable varieties get to the shops, since farmers may prefer to grow those with, say, leaf shapes that are easier for their robots to discriminate from weeds. Almost inevitably, these machines will eventually alter the landscape, too. The real tipping point for robot agriculture will come when farms are being designed with agribots in mind, says Salah Sukkarieh, a robotics researcher at the Australian Center for Field Robotics, Sydney. This could mean a return to smaller fields, with crops planted in grids rather than rows and fruit trees pruned into two-dimensional shapes to make harvesting easier. This alien terrain tended by robots is still a while away, he says 'but it will happen.'
Questions
Questions 14–17 Yes / No / Not Given
Do the following statements agree with the claims of the writer in Reading Passage 2?
YES if the statement agrees with the claims of the writer
NO if the statement contradicts the claims of the writer
NOT GIVEN if it is impossible to say what the writer thinks about this
Questions 18–21 Sentence Completion
Complete the sentences below.
Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer.
- In the future, agribots will provide 18 to young plants.
- Some machines will use chemicals or 19 to get rid of unwanted plants.
- It is the production of 20 which currently uses most machinery on farms.
- 21 between machines such as tractors is making farming more efficient.
Questions 22–26 Matching Features
Look at the following researchers (Questions 22-26) and the list of statements below.
Match each researcher with the correct statement, A-H.
A. The use of automation might impact on the development of particular animal and plant species.
B. We need to consider the effect on employment that increased automation will have.
C. We need machines of the future to be exact, not more powerful.
D. As farming becomes more automated the appearance of farmland will change.
E. New machinery may require more investment than certain farmers can afford.
F. There is a shortage of employees in the farming industry.
G. There are limits to the environmental benefits of automation.
H. Economic factors are often the driving force behind the development of machinery.
Answers & Explanations Summary
| # | Answer | Evidence | Explanation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Q14 | NOT GIVEN | The next time you stand at the supermarket checkout, spare a thought for the farmers who helped fill your shopping basket as life is hard for them right now. This, in turn, inevitably means bigger grocery bills for consumers, and greater hardship for the millions in countries where food shortages are a matter of life and death | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that farmers are having a hard time, which makes food more expensive for people and causes problems for those who don't have enough to eat, but it says nothing about the government taking action. Answer Explanation: The answer is NOT GIVEN because the passage does not mention what the government should or should not do to help with food prices. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is NOT GIVEN because while the writer mentions that life is hard for farmers and grocery bills are getting higher, the text never discusses the role of governments. For a 'YES' or 'NO' answer, the passage would need to specifically mention 'governments' or 'officials' and their responsibility toward making food cheaper. Since this topic is missing, we cannot know the writer's opinion on what governments should do. |
| Q15 | YES | Yet while farmers must squeeze more out of the land, they must also address the necessity of reducing their impact on the soil, waterways and atmosphere | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that even though farmers need to get more food from the land, they also have to find ways to cause less harm to the ground, the water, and the air. Answer Explanation: The answer means that the author agrees that farmers must lower the amount of damage they cause to nature. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is YES because the text explains that farmers have to deal with the "necessity" (meaning something they must do) of "reducing their impact" (meaning hurting something less) on the "soil, waterways and atmosphere" (which are parts of the environment). This shows that the writer believes farmers have a responsibility to be more careful with nature. |
| Q16 | NO | Each plant could get exactly the right amount of everything, no more or less, an approach that could slash chemical use and improve yields in one move | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that by giving every plant the perfect amount of what it needs and nothing more, farmers can greatly reduce how many chemicals they use. Answer Explanation: The answer is NO because the text says that in the future, farmers will use much less chemical spray, not more. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is NO because the author describes a future where robots help farmers be very 'precise'. Instead of spraying a whole field with chemicals, robots can give every single plant only what it needs. This method will 'slash' (meaning to cut or reduce a lot) the amount of chemicals used. This is the opposite of increasing dependency (relying more) on chemicals. |
| Q17 | NOT GIVEN | But this is easier said than done; the largest farms in Europe and the U.S. can cover thousands of acres | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that being very exact with chemicals and seeds is difficult because the farms in Europe and the US are very large. However, it does not say if the farms will find it hard to start using or get used to this new technology. Answer Explanation: The answer means that the passage does not provide enough information to determine if farms in Europe and the US will struggle to change to precision farming. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is NOT GIVEN because while the text notes that precision farming is "easier said than done" due to the massive size of farms in Europe and the US, it does not specifically discuss whether these farms will find it difficult to adapt (the process of changing or switching) to this new system. The author mentions the physical challenge of scale but does not comment on the difficulty of the transition itself for the farms. |
| Q18 | fertiliser / fertilizer | One day, we might see fields with 'agribots' (agricultural robots) that can identify individual seedlings and encourage them along with drops of fertilizer | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that in the future, robots on farms will be able to find specific small plants and give them fertilizer to help them grow. Answer Explanation: The answer is a substance that is added to soil or plants to help them grow better and stronger. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is based on the description of what agricultural robots (agribots) will do in the future. The passage uses the phrase "One day" to indicate the future and mentions "seedlings," which are young plants. It states that agribots will help these young plants by giving them "drops of fertilizer." Therefore, "fertilizer" (or the British spelling "fertiliser") is the correct word to complete the sentence. |
| Q19 | lasers | Other machines would distinguish problem weeds from crops and eliminate them with shots from high-power lasers or a microdot of pesticide | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that some farm robots will be able to tell the difference between healthy crops and bad plants (weeds). It states that the robots will kill these bad plants using either strong beams of light called lasers or a tiny amount of chemical spray. Answer Explanation: The answer refers to concentrated beams of light that future farm machines will use to kill unwanted plants. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'lasers' because the text explains how agricultural robots (agribots) will deal with weeds, which are unwanted plants. It mentions two ways these machines will 'eliminate' (get rid of) weeds: using 'pesticide' (which are chemicals) or 'high-power lasers'. This matches the sentence structure 'use chemicals or [lasers] to get rid of unwanted plants'. |
| Q20 | cereals | More than a century of mechanization has already turned farming into an industrial-scale activity in much of the world, with farms that grow cereals being the most heavily automated | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that farming has become a large-scale industry because of tools and machines. It notes that the farms growing cereal crops are the ones that use the most machines and robots right now. Answer Explanation: The answer means types of grain crops, such as wheat or corn, which the text says are the most automated part of farming today. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is correct because the text explains that automation—the use of machines—is very high in agriculture. It specifically mentions that farms producing cereals use more machines and technology than any other type of farming. The phrase 'heavily automated' in the text matches the idea of 'using most machinery' in the question. |
| Q21 | Communication | This kind of communication is also being developed in other farm vehicles | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that there is a system where farm machines share information with each other to help the work go smoothly. Answer Explanation: The answer "Communication" refers to the process where farming machines share information with each other to work more effectively. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is "Communication" because the text describes how modern tractors and their tools can "talk" to one another. For example, a tool like a plough can tell a tractor if it is moving too fast. This exchange of information is specifically called "communication" in the passage and is being used across different types of farm vehicles to improve how they work together. |
| Q22 | C | Simon Blackmore, who researches agricultural technology at Harper Adams University College in England believes that fleets of lightweight autonomous robots have the potential to solve this problem and that replacing brute force with precision is key | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that Simon Blackmore thinks using light, automatic robots is the right way forward. He believes that the most important thing (the "key") is to stop using "brute force" (strong, heavy power) and start using "precision" (being very exact). Answer Explanation: The answer is option C. This means Simon Blackmore believes that future farm machines should focus on being very exact and accurate rather than just being big and powerful. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is C because the passage mentions Simon Blackmore's view that "replacing brute force with precision is key." In this context, "brute force" refers to the use of heavy, powerful, and large machinery that can damage the soil. "Precision" acts as a synonym for being "exact." Blackmore argues for using smaller, "lightweight" robots that can handle tiny areas of soil exactly where a seed is planted, rather than using the heavy power of traditional tractors. |
| Q23 | F | 'While the population is growing and needs to be fed, a rapidly shrinking number of people are willing to work in agriculture,' he points out | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage states that although the world's population is getting bigger and needs food, the amount of people who want to work on farms is dropping very quickly. Answer Explanation: The answer means that there are not enough workers in the farming business. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is F because Eldert van Henten explains that automation is necessary due to the declining interest in agricultural labor. He specifically notes that as the human population increases, the number of people prepared to work on farms is decreasing quickly. The phrase "rapidly shrinking number of people" is a synonym for the "shortage" mentioned in statement F. |
| Q24 | H | Calvin and Martin have observed how rising employment costs have led to the adoption of labour-saving farm technology in the past, citing the raisin industry as an example | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that these two researchers noticed a pattern: when paying employees becomes too expensive, it causes farmers to start using machines that can do the work more cheaply. Answer Explanation: The answer means that money-related reasons, such as high costs or the need to save money, are the main causes for using and creating new farming machines. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is H because Linda Calvin and Philip Martin studied how the high cost of paying workers (an economic factor) pushed farmers to use machines instead of people. They used the example of the raisin industry to show that when it became too expensive to hire workers, farmers adopted new technology to survive financially. This confirms that economic reasons are the 'driving force' or the primary motivation for shifting to automated machinery. |
| Q25 | A | Lewis Holloway, who studies agriculture at the University of Hull, UK, says that robotic milking is likely to influence the genetics of dairy herds as farmers opt for 'robot-friendly' cows, with udder shape, and even attitudes, suited to automated milking. Similarly, he says, it's conceivable that agribots could influence what fruit or vegetable varieties get to the shops, since farmers may prefer to grow those with, say, leaf shapes that are easier for their robots to discriminate from weeds | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that robots could lead farmers to select cows with specific body shapes and plants with specific leaf shapes so that the machines can work more effectively with them. Answer Explanation: The answer identifies that Lewis Holloway believes using robots in farming will change the physical traits and types of animals and plants that farmers choose to raise. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is A because the text describes Lewis Holloway's view that technology will change the 'genetics' of animals (like cows) and the 'varieties' of plants (like fruits and vegetables). He explains that farmers will want animals and plants that are easier for robots to work with, which means robots directly affect how these species are developed and chosen for farming. Keywords like 'genetics' and 'varieties' relate to the 'animal and plant species' mentioned in statement A. |
| Q26 | D | Almost inevitably, these machines will eventually alter the landscape, too. The real tipping point for robot agriculture will come when farms are being designed with agribots in mind, says Salah Sukkarieh, a robotics researcher at the Australian Center for Field Robotics, Sydney. This could mean a return to smaller fields, with crops planted in grids rather than rows and fruit trees pruned into two-dimensional shapes to make harvesting easier | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that Sukkarieh believes robots will change how farms look because the fields will be planned specifically for them. Instead of the usual rows of plants, farms might have smaller fields and plants growing in grids to help the robots work. Answer Explanation: The answer D means that as robots are used more in farming, the way the fields and farmland look will change. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is based on Salah Sukkarieh's idea that robots will 'alter the landscape,' which is a synonym for changing the appearance of farmland. He explains that future farms will be 'designed with agribots in mind,' meaning the land will be planned for robots. This will lead to visible changes such as smaller fields and trees cut into flat shapes, which makes the farm look very different from how it looks today. |
