AI-Driven Digital Twins For Smarter Beef Farming
Let's embark on a collaborative project
Optimizing Livestock Wellbeing
We help farmers raise cattle in a way that’s better for the environment and for the animals. By tracking methane emissions from cow waste in real time, we support more efficient feeding, reduce environmental impact, and promote healthier, more comfortable lives for the livestock.
Intelligent Livestock Management
We help farmers care for their animals and run their farms more effectively by tracking daily activities, feeding routines, and herd behavior. With better visibility into what’s happening on the ground, farmers can make faster, more confident decisions that improve livestock well-being, reduce waste, and streamline their entire operation
Machine Learning for Livestock
We help farmers better understand and care for each animal by using digital technology and machine learning. With tools like digital twins, virtual versions of each animal, we can track health, behavior, and performance in real time. This makes it easier to detect problems early, and support more efficient livestock farming.
Do you Know?
The BeefTwin project is managed by top universities with expertise in key scientific areas:
Bio Science:
Centers on microbial analysis of cattle waste to investigate the relationship between feed conversion efficiency, meat production, and methane emissions (University of Nottingham).
Environmental Science:
Centers on tracking methane emissions and identify their sources using drones, sensors and methane analysers (Royal Holloway University).
Computer Science:
Centers on leveraging sensor and computer vision data to empower precision measurement on cattle weight, behaviour, growth patterns, farming practice variations and methane emission tracking (University of Sheffield).
Management Science:
Centers on monitoring the changing dynamics of the farming practices from data and create a new reconfigured smart farming model representing efficient and optimised conversions that benefit the entire farming value chain (Nottingham Trent University).
Social Science:
Centers on working closely with farmers to identify the wider socioeconomical issues and different grazing patterns of the cattle and assess the impact on productivity and efficiency of the farm (Lincoln University).





