Optimization of Agricultural Machinery Utilization: A Case of Hetosa Farmers’ Cooperative Union, Oromia Region
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Abstract
Farm mechanization refers to the integration of various tools, implements, and machinery
into agricultural practices to improve production efficiency and effectiveness. A
preliminary assessment of the Hetosa Farmers' Cooperative Union reveals several issues
with the utilization of agricultural machinery, which hinder its members from delivering
timely and effective mechanized services. The research was motivated by significant issues
in the union's present machinery management system, including a lack of modern
scheduling, outdated equipment, lack of data-based management, and underutilization of
the existing machinery. A mixed-methods approach using qualitative and quantitative data
collection instruments through interviews, questionnaires, and secondary data sources was
employed in the study. Route optimization was done using MATLAB, GIS was used for
terrain analysis, CROPWAT and MS Project for precipitation and crop period assessment
and task scheduling, respectively. Census and purposive sampling techniques are used to
assess the existing machinery, and tabu search algorithm and origin-destination cost
matrices have been used in this study to reduce route distances and fuel consumption. The
result indicated that the union could minimize the total fuel used by 11.28% throughout the
region and up to 23.34% only in the Hetosa woreda. This greatly cuts the operational cost
and enhances the working hours. An annual unproductive labor cost of 123,852 birr was
identified due to inefficient refueling and machinery downtimes, with a combined financial
loss of over 5.48 million birr in tillage and harvesting services. It was found that tractors
and combine harvesters were outdated and could not support GPS technologies, thus
leading to poor utilization and increasing maintenance costs. The study included Land use
analysis of all Hetosa member woredas, which are Zuway Dugda, Dodota, Hetosa, Lude
Hetosa, Munisa, Tiyo, and Sire. The study also established that full mechanization would
be feasible in sloppy areas like Zuway Dugda and Dodota, while Munisa and Tiyo areas
needed semi large scale and small-scale mechanization with targeted intervention
supported by strategic scheduling. CROPWAT and MS Project utilized to analysis the
growing periods and task scheduling respectively, enabled good machinery allocation and
resource management. Based on these findings, the study recommends replacing aging
machinery, establishing a fuel storage facility in order to reduce refueling time, promoting
cluster farming to reduce fragmentation of farm areas, adopting digital machinery
management, and improving coordination with governmental bodies to improve the supply
chain. GIS-based landscape analysis is also recommended to enhance sustainable land use
and machinery performance in varied landforms for the East Arsi Zone.
