Vietnam’s Rice Fields Are getting Smarts Spraying with Drones

Estimated read time 4 min read


Vietnam’s rice paddies are getting a high-tech makeover, and I’m here for it! As a UAV pilot who’s dodged palm trees and chased epic shots, I’m stoked about how drones are revolutionizing farming in Vietnam. According to a recent Nhan Dan report, the country’s farmers are trading backpacks for propellers, using drones to spray pesticides, sow seeds, and boost yields. It’s like giving rice fields a personal air force! From the Mekong Delta to Hanoi, these flying machines are cutting costs, saving time, and making farming safer. Let’s dive into how Vietnam’s agricultural drone game is soaring—and why it’s a #dronesforgood win.

Vietnam Drone Uas Uav Rice Crop
Good Morning, Vietnam!

From Backpacks to Sky Attacks

Picture this: a farmer in Vietnam’s Mekong Delta, hunched over with a 20-pound pesticide sprayer, sweating buckets under the sun. Now swap that for a HLD-18 drone zipping over rice fields, misting crops like a pro.

Vietnam Drone Uas Uav Rice Crop
The HLD-18 Drone

Now drones are slashing pesticide use by 30-40% and water by a jaw-dropping 90%. I’ve flown my share of DJI rigs, and let me tell you, programming a drone to hit every corner of a field is like playing a video game—except you’re saving crops, not slaying zombies.

In 2020-2021, Vietnam’s Plant Protection Department tested drones on seven crop types, tackling 15 pests with pinpoint accuracy. The result? Farmers work smarter, not harder, and their rice is thriving. Who knew drones could be such green-thumbed geniuses?

Vietnam Drone Uas Uav Rice Crop
No more back pain, my friend!

Training Farmers to Fly Like Pros

Drones aren’t just plug-and-play toys—you need skills to make ‘em shine. Vietnam’s Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development is all in, launching training programs to turn farmers into drone pilots. A September 2024 course in Hanoi’s Thuy Lam Commune, co-run with CropLife Vietnam and AgriDrone Vietnam, taught 30 officials how to fly UAS for spraying and crop monitoring.

I’ve trained newbies on my DJI Mini 3 Pro, and it’s a thrill when they nail their first flight—imagine that, but for saving rice crops! The course covered regulations, safety, and tech like AI-driven crop analysis.
According to Director Huynh Tan Dat, drones cut spraying costs by 50% and work 30 times faster than manual methods. That’s not just farming; that’s farming with swagger. Vietnam’s building a squad of tech-savvy farmers, and I’m jealous I wasn’t there to join the flight school.

Vietnam Drone Uas Uav Rice Crop
Training Day

The Future’s Buzzing with Possibilities

Vietnam’s drone market is taking off like a rocket. A 2024 report pegged it at USD 18.11 million by 2028, up from USD 4.84 million in 2021—that’s a 21% growth rate! With rice as a top export, drones are helping Vietnam aim for the global top 15 in agriculture.

I’ve seen drones map tough terrain in Ecuador, so I can imagine them scanning rice fields for pests or stress using NDVI maps (fancy tech for spotting sick plants). The catch? Regulations. Vietnam’s Civil Aviation Authority (CAAV) keeps a tight leash on drones, especially for tourists like me who’d love to fly a Dji Neo over those lush paddies.

But locals like Doan Nhat Phuong, who runs a six-drone spraying co-op in Long Dat, are proving it’s worth the red tape. His team sprays 1,000 hectares of fruit trees and rice, saving farmers cash and health risks. I’m calling it: Vietnam’s rice fields are the drone capital of tomorrow.

Here’s my take as a drone nerd: this is peak #DronesForGood. Vietnam’s showing how tech can make farming sustainable, from cutting chemical waste to keeping farmers out of toxic spray zones.

But let’s be real—drones need skilled hands. I’ve crashed enough to know a bad pilot can mess things up faster than a pest swarm. Vietnam’s training push is smart, but they gotta keep it tight to avoid yahoos buzzing where they shouldn’t.

I’m dreaming of flying an Agras over those emerald fields one day, maybe even teaming up with locals like Phuong. Until then, I’m cheering for Vietnam’s drone revolution—it’s proof our favorite flying toys can feed the world. Now, where’s my controller?

Photographs courtesy of Danviet.vn and HHTIP


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