Monsanto Hopes to Sow Benefits by
Tagging Seed Packets
The company's Agracetus division is set to launch a pilot next month to evaluate RFID for
tracking cases of experimental seeds.
By Mary Catherine O'Connor
Dec. 26, 2007—Monsanto, a multinational provider of bioengineered agricultural products, is planning to
launch a technology trial in which it will evaluate the use of passive RFID tags to identify individual
seed packets shipped from its Agracetus research and development facility in Middleton, Wis., to its
network of test farms, where new, genetically engineered seed is tested.
The goal of the RFID trial, according to Patrick Richgels, an IT specialist with Monsanto, is to
determine if using the tags (instead of the bar codes it currently uses) to identify the packets will
significantly reduce the amount of time employees spend shipping each case of seeds to the farms.
In order to learn RFID fundamentals and examine whether Monsanto could benefit from the technology,
Richgels joined the UW RFID Industry Workgroup, which is comprised of representatives from a range of
industries and meets monthly at the University of Wisconsin's RFID Lab (see University of Wisconsin Debuts RFID
Lab). The group shares ideas and research around RFID from a business perspective, and also takes part
in collaborative research projects and experimentation using RFID.
After attending a number of workgroup meetings and learning the ins and outs of RFID and how other
companies were employing it, Richgels worked with Alfonso Gutierrez, the lab's director, to establish a
feasibility study within the lab. During these tests, Richgels and the lab staff experimented with both
high-frequency (HF) tags, compliant with the ISO 15693 standard, and ultrahigh-frequency (UHF) tags,
compliant with the EPC Gen 2 standard, to see how well they could be read on tightly packed,
individually tagged seed packets.
The cases Agracetus ships to research farms typically measure 16 inches wide by 24 inches long and
carry up to 235 seed packets, so being able to read the individual, tagged packets inside the case was
vital. The feasibility tests proved encouraging enough for Richgels to schedule the Agracetus pilot,
which he says is set to begin in January 2008 and will last up to six months.
During the pilot, Richgels' team will hand-apply adhesive labels with integrated RFID tags to each
packet of seed it ships to the test farms. The serial number the lab staff encodes to each tag will also be
printed on the label, both in a bar code and numerals. To verify the contents of each shipment, the team
will read the tag on each packet by placing each packed case in front of a fixed-position reader, then
record how long it takes to read all the serial numbers. At the test farms, the packets will be received
manually, using bar-code scanners to collect each packet's ID.
"After the pilot," Richgels says, "if the performance [of the RFID technology] is proven, we will outfit
each [test farm] with RFID read stations." During the trial, the Agracetus participants will benefit through a faster shipping process, but if the RFID tags are used and read by the test farms as well, thebenefits will be spread out to both shipping and receiving the seeds.
In addition, Richgels hopes to use the RFID tags to perform inventory of tagged packets at both the
Agracetus location and the test farms, and to locate specific packets within inventory. In preparation for
the pilot, Richgels has worked with systems integrator Miles Technology and Avery Dennison's Atlanta
Technical Center to select the hardware and software to be used.
As they did for the in-lab feasibility tests, Richgels and his staff will apply both HF and UHF passive
tags to the packets for the pilot, to gauge the performance of both. Because HF tags are known to be
significantly better-performing than UHF, with faster read rates, Richgels says that when many tags
were being interrogated close to one another, he expected HF to win out. However, the lab's feasibility
tests didn't show that to be the case. "I expected HF to have a definite advantage over UHF, but in the
end it was marginal," he says.
Large groups of HF tags could be read faster than the same number of tagged packets with UHF tags,
but Richgels says speed isn't vital to the application he has in mind. "For us, taking five seconds, versus
20 seconds, to read a box of packets...that doesn't make much difference," he says. Either, Richgels
adds, would be a tremendous improvement over the 20 minutes or more that staff members currently
spend manually scanning each packet's bar code.
Richgels says he is interested in testing HF tags with phase jitter modulation—a method of changing a
radio wave's phase to communicate data, created to address applications in which large numbers of
tightly packed tags must be read quickly—but says he has no specific plans to do so as part of the
upcoming pilot. In addition, Richgels expresses an interest in possibly experimenting with using passive
tags to determine location, so that employees could find specific packet within a case by querying for the
unique ID number encoded to its RFID tag. Once the pilot is complete, tag price, performance and
functionality will all factor into the final tag selection process.
According to Lynn Pias, Monsanto's global manufacturing information technology lead, the seed packet
test is likely just one of many RFID projects Monsanto is planning, since it recently joined the advisory
board of the University of Arkansas' RFID Research Center and is working to develop pilot ideas with the
group. Pias and William Schulz, who heads the Monsanto's global supply chain optimization/analytics
efforts, are both representing Monsanto on the advisory board.
The center, housed in the Information Technology Research Institute at the school's Sam M. Walton College
of Business, has managed RFID research projects and studies for the likes of Wal-Mart, Tyson Foods and
logistics firm J.B. Hunt. According to a press statement released by the RFID Research Center, Monsanto
is supporting the center as a way of connecting with developing RFID applications, to share its
experiences with the technology with other companies, and because it is interested in how RFID could
improve the efficiency of its supply chain and improve customer service.
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