Ontario Grain Farmer September 2024

12 Industry News Modifications and repairs ‘RIGHT TO REPAIR’ RISKS AND OPPORTUNITIES. Matt McIntosh THE RIGHT TO REPAIR MACHINERY LADEN WITH SENSORS AND COMPUTER SYSTEMS HAS BEEN A CONTENTIOUS ISSUE FOR SOME TIME. While advocates say it’s important for farmers to be able to fix their equipment quickly and in the way they deem appropriate, detractors argue full in-field repair capability can generate safety risks. In a June panel discussion hosted by the Canadian Agriculture Safety Association (CASA), three industry experts – Howard Maines from the Canadian Public Policy Advisory Association of Equipment Manufacturers, Karl Klotzbach, owner of LH2K Technology and veteran of the machinery development industry, and Dion McGrath, executive director of the Agricultural Producers Association of Saskatchewan – discussed the difference between repairing and modifying, the importance of arming oneself with the right technical information, warranty limitations, and safety risks relevant to the right to repair discussion. BACKGROUND Right-to-repair refers to the right of individuals to make changes or fix technologies such as smartphones and farm machinery. In some cases, Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs) have restricted access to key components or aspects of a technology. In the agriculture sector, the issue revolves around an individual’s ability to fix equipment when breakdowns occur – self-repair or by a person not certified by the OEM. There are two main considerations – whether repairs or changes made violate the warranty on a particular machine and whether those same repairs or changes increase safety risks. The latter question is particularly pertinent in cases where operators have argued for the right to modify equipment, not just repair. In October 2023, Canada’s House of Commons passed Bill C-244, supporting the right to repair. This bill changes the Copyright Act, allowing people to work around technological protections built into machinery. GETTING THE RIGHT INFORMATION The CASA webinar panellists expressed similar but somewhat divergent interpretations of the right to repair. For Maines, it means being able to repair machinery quickly and efficiently. McGrath prioritized operator empowerment, freedom, and safety while not ignoring intellectual property rights. Klotzbach highlights the need to consider who is responsible for diagnosing problems and warranty considerations of taking action should the repair have unanticipated impacts. With modern farm machinery now featuring millions of coding lines, however, all three referenced the importance of having the right knowledge to make those repairs safely. With that knowledge, machinery owners and operators should have the freedom to either make repairs themselves or seek assistance from those who do. “Folks who want to repair their own stuff need to have the right tools, the right information, the means to access original manufacturing parts, the repair manuals, the right equipment, and the proper guidelines to do all that stuff. Having access to the information is absolutely essential to making sure the machinery is kept safe, in working order and any repairs that are made are at the same high standard that the manufacturer set out,” says McGrath. “The right to repair for farmers is really about making sure they maintain their choice and keep an active repair market available to them so they’re not stuck with one repair provider.” “We do believe manufacturers do have a huge role to play in education and training environment, so whether it is farmers or independent technicians, they have the knowledge to reduce the risk associated with repairs…Innovation should not be making repairs harder or more inaccessible.” According to Maines, farmers can access the information they need to make repairs through company websites, mobile apps, and technicians – the latter being a profession in dire need of more people. Klotzbach says that, while YouTube (and the internet more broadly) does mean the information required to fix farm machinery is more readily available, training is still important in many cases. This is part of the reason equipment manufacturers include warranty caveats for some parts. “If it’s something more complex, take it to your dealer. Use genuine parts that the manufacturer supports,” says Klotzbach.

RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTQzODE4