A Kiwi company that uses AI-enabled audio sensors for respiratory health monitoring of animals on commercial animal farms, is signing two MoUs with a Chinese pig farm and AgTech solution provider.
MACSO(link is external)ย is a pioneering new Auckland-based company set up to establish the building blocks of ethical Artificial Intelligence. Its MoUโs are with a government demo farm in the region of Jinhua, a province in eastern China, and a pig farm tech solution provider who currently provides vision AI solutions for thousands of pig farms in China.
These agreements will allow MACSOโs contacts in China to test its technology and distribute it nationwide if a two-month trial period, starting this quarter, is successful. Commercial terms can then be negotiated with the farm to distribute the solution in the greater China region.
China raises 650 million pigs each year; it is the worldโs biggest swine market, ahead of Europe and the US. The three big regions combine to a $560m market. Of all swine deaths, 60 percent are from respiratory illnesses.
The trial in China was kickstarted through Callaghan Innovationโs trailblazer seed fund, used for commercialising products, with the $15,000 funding matched by MACSO. The trial will use 24 devices across three indoor barns. Each device suspends off the barn roof like a ceiling fan and is like a human ear fitted with AI and can monitor up to 120 pigs.
โWhat I had in mind was to create an AI platform that replicates the sensory part of the human brain, in this case, our ears,โ MASCO founder Saba Samiei said.
MASCOโs solution also gives farmers the monitoring ability which is always present everywhere.
โWe are very excited โ Itโs a big deal. Itโs a paid trial. The criteria for us were someone who has a good understanding of the market, has connections, and the capability to become a distributor for us and has a modern enough farm that has WiFi. After the trial we are then going to negotiate a distribution channel throughout China with these parties,โ explains Samiei.
Getting the test at a farm in China took three months of hard work. Samiei says MASCO has been testing this solution for more than a year, as well as being able to measure the success of the tests.
The solution was first launched in June 2023 at the World Pork Expo in the United States. Testing the technology on a farm in Minnesota reduced the death rate of pigs down from an average of 4.8 percent to 1.4 percent. Earlier, the US landed its animal welfare legislation, which meant a lot of farmers had to close their farms.
For more information go to:ย https://www.macso.ai/