Skip to main content

Topcon hopes for bumper harvest from Vatican link-up

Topcon Positioning Systems (TPS) is working with the Vatican and Pope Benedict XVI to develop the Person and Technological Innovation program for agriculture. The program is designed to introduce young people in developing countries to technologies and applications of precise positioning in the global agriculture markets. Initial training will be conducted at the TPS training facilities in Modena, Italy. Countries targeted for the first projects will be Cameroon, Ethiopia and Ghana.
November 27, 2012 Read time: 3 mins

342 Topcon Positioning Systems (TPS) is working with the Vatican and Pope Benedict XVI to develop the Person and Technological Innovation program for agriculture.

The program is designed to introduce young people in developing countries to technologies and applications of precise positioning in the global agriculture markets. Initial training will be conducted at the TPS training facilities in Modena, Italy.

Countries targeted for the first projects will be Cameroon, Ethiopia and Ghana.

The joint program is a result of a meeting between Pope Benedict XVI and Ray O’Connor, TPS president and chief executive, and Ivan Di Federico, TPS chief strategy officer, at the Vatican.

The classes at the TPS training facilities will consist of 12 students from African nations. The students will be chosen by clergy in the respective diocese and trained by TPS and Topcon Tierra staff in the latest agriculture technologies.

As part of the program TPS test facilities will also be established in Angola, Brazil and Honduras. Established facilities already exist in the United States, Australia and Europe. TPS will provide precise agriculture positioning instruments for the testing and training.

When the program is firmly established, other companies will be invited to participate. These will include tractor manufacturers, seed, chemical and fertilizer suppliers and accessory manufacturers. TPS secured free seed from a French partner, Caussade, to cultivate about 75 acres in Cameroon.

O’Connor said: “The Person and Technology Innovation program is the largest Corporate Social Responsibility program in the history of the company. It will not be a one-shot program . . . train the people and turn them loose. It will have a far greater impact than that.

“The program will model established train-the-trainer programs. The students will be expected to return to their country and serve as trainers for the next generation of students eager to learn the newest agriculture technologies.”
 
O’Connor praised Pope Benedict XVI for “his compassionate view of the world, his innate understanding and his eagerness to work with companies like Topcon, which have the resources and the will to make a positive difference in our world”.

Di Federico said: “The key to success in agricultural endeavors is not the quantity of the land available, but how to achieve the greatest efficiency in the land’s use. In many countries, agriculture is a step to mere survival.

“The use of modern technologies to enhance yields while saving time and money will go a long way to help struggling nations grow and prosper.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • SDLG machines supporting growth in Ghana
    June 30, 2014
    As the West African country of Ghana has been maintaining consistent GDP growth, substantial investment in industry and infrastructure has followed. One leading Ghanaian company, Justmoh Group, is using SDLG equipment to help the country achieve its economic and social ambitions
  • World's largest industrial auctioneer to hold biggest ever auction
    March 2, 2012
    US-based Ritchie Bros Auctioneers, the world's largest industrial auctioneer, is staging its biggest ever unreserved public equipment auction. More than 9,100 heavy equipment items and trucks will be sold over the six-day event in Orlando, Florida from February 13-18, 2012.
  • Emulbitume opens Brazil manufacturing plant
    June 18, 2012
    Emulbitume has opened a manufacturing plant in Brazil as it looks to develop its South American market position. The French firm, which specialises in the design, manufacture and commissioning of bitumen emulsion production units and macerator pumps, said its new production site in Uberaba, western Brazil, will enable it to offer a full range of products to Latin America customers, including units for laboratories and a wide range of production devices.
  • Brazil: Dnit proposes suspending 61 projects due to lack of funds
    May 9, 2016
    Brazil's national department of transport infrastructure, Dnit, has approved a proposal to suspend work on 29 road projects across 12 states. The approval comes after severe budget cuts this year and the number of affected works could increase to 61. Dnit noted, however, that no work will be immediately stopped and that current contracts will be maintained. The proposal will now go before the Ministry of Transport and Planning and the Office of the Chief of Staff before it can receive final approva