Scaling Regenerative Ag with Swarms of Robots
Wed Feb 04 2026
Founder Clint Brauer explains how Greenfield Robotics builds compact, row-running robots that mow weeds and lay mulch while enabling nighttime foliar feeding—helping farms reduce herbicides and improve soil biology. He shares the personal catalyst (his father’s Parkinson’s), why tillage damages soil ecosystems, and how small, autonomous swarms can cover large acreages more cheaply than traditional machinery. We dig into go-to-market (from RaaS to equipment sales with software/telemetry fees), manufacturing with partners, and adoption curves from organic innovators to conventional growers. Brauer outlines the roadmap (attachments, reliability, self-charging), unit counts across 17 states, and potential exit paths with ag OEMs like John Deere—all while keeping the mission clear: get chemicals out of agriculture.
Highlights include...
Why “weed by day, foliar-feed by night” changes farm economics
How mulch from cut cover crops suppresses weeds & feeds soil
RaaS → leases → direct sales: what farmers prefer (and why)
Swarm autonomy vs. ever-bigger tractors—cost & uptime math
Manufacturing scale via Amity Technologies; why small wins here
Early-adopter profile: regenerative, organic, and safety-driven growers
Exit lanes with major OEMs—and the case for remaining independent
More
Founder Clint Brauer explains how Greenfield Robotics builds compact, row-running robots that mow weeds and lay mulch while enabling nighttime foliar feeding—helping farms reduce herbicides and improve soil biology. He shares the personal catalyst (his father’s Parkinson’s), why tillage damages soil ecosystems, and how small, autonomous swarms can cover large acreages more cheaply than traditional machinery. We dig into go-to-market (from RaaS to equipment sales with software/telemetry fees), manufacturing with partners, and adoption curves from organic innovators to conventional growers. Brauer outlines the roadmap (attachments, reliability, self-charging), unit counts across 17 states, and potential exit paths with ag OEMs like John Deere—all while keeping the mission clear: get chemicals out of agriculture. Highlights include... Why “weed by day, foliar-feed by night” changes farm economics How mulch from cut cover crops suppresses weeds & feeds soil RaaS → leases → direct sales: what farmers prefer (and why) Swarm autonomy vs. ever-bigger tractors—cost & uptime math Manufacturing scale via Amity Technologies; why small wins here Early-adopter profile: regenerative, organic, and safety-driven growers Exit lanes with major OEMs—and the case for remaining independent