Hugh Brady addressed the finalists.
Hugh Brady addressed the finalists. Team AmmonAI are on a mission to create 'greener fields and smarter yields' with their tool that guides smart farming decisions. AmmonAI, a software for farmers to measure soil quality and make smart farming decisions been awarded £7,000 at Imperial's Faculty of Natural Sciences Make-A-Difference (FoNS-MAD) competition. The competition is aimed at undergraduate students to help them develop a startup idea into a proof-of-concept. Ritsuki Takesako in the Department of Chemistry, Sarkis Paul Shadarevian in the Department of Mechanical Engineering, Stephen Heslip and Paolo De Biase both in the Department of Mathematics, of team AmmonAI, said that fertiliser has seen a rapid increase since the 1950s. Smart farming. Fertilisers usually contain nitrogen, which can lead to algae blooms and ecosystem damage.
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