KEY POINTS
  • Ex-Tesla engineer Rich Wurden and former Proofpoint product lead Kenny Lee founded a company called Aigen, based in Kirkland, Washington, to end the overuse of pesticides in agriculture.
  • The firm is now making an autonomous robot, the Aigen Element, that drives over farmland, using an advanced computer vision system to identify crops and unwanted botanical invaders.
  • U.S. pesticide usage reached more than 1.1 billion pounds annually by 2012, with herbicides accounting for nearly 60% of that. Aigen believes its robots can help reduce that.
Aigen founders: Rich Wurden (CTO) and Kenny Lee (CEO)

The Aigen Element looks like a drafting table on rugged tires. It drives itself continuously at around two miles per hour over farmland, using an advanced computer vision system to identify crops and unwanted botanical invaders.

With two-axis robotic arms positioned close the ground, the Element can flick weeds out of the way where they'll dry out before they can grow seeds and spread.