AgTech Innovation News

CropScanAg is Pleased to Accept the 1st Place Award for Ag Tech at The Manitoba Ag Days 2025

AgTech News

Dean Scrivens, CropScanAg Technical Specialist for Western Canada and Victoria Morris, CropScanAg Marketing Manager and USA Manager, Denver, Co, accepted the award and proudly displayed the banner on their stand during the show. This award is the third in the last 12 months for CropScanAg. The first was an Australian Agritech Association (AAA) award for Precision Agriculture awarded in Melbourne, June 6th, 2024. The second was the ‘Innovation in Agronomics Award’ from the Ag in Motion organisers at the 2024 Ag in Motion, Western Canada’s Outdoor Farm Expo held at Langham, Saskatchewan, Canada, July 17-19, 2024.

The Australian designed and manufactured CropScan 4000VT ISOBUS On Combine Grain Analyser is the world market leader in on combine grain analysers. Victoria Morris has been working in the North American market for several years and in 2023, Dean Scrivens was appointed to provide technical and sales support to dealers in Western Canada. These awards are a credit to the efforts made by both Victoria and Dean, as well as the CropScanAg team in Australian, to position the CropScan as the world’s premium system for measuring Protein, Moisture, Oil and Starch in grains and oil seeds as they are harvested.

The CropScanAg technology provides farmers with a simple and reliable means of generating Variable Rate Nitrogen Fertilization applications which ensure an increase in Yield, reduction in fertilizer usage and an optimization of Protein and Oil in grains and oilseeds.

At the Manitoba Ag Days, the competition in the Ag Tech category has previously focused on controlling sprayer efficiency, using spray drones, as well as some automation for weed control. The 2025 judges saw CropScan as a brand-new approach to managing Nitrogen. An agronomist attending the event commented, “I wish every farmer had the CropScan system on his equipment. This would help the farmer with recommended fertilizer inputs, which is a major part of what agronomists do”.

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