Papers
3
Total Citations
39
H-Index
3
About
Michael Saidani is a sustainability researcher whose work sits at the intersection of autonomous systems, life cycle assessment (LCA), and environmental economics. He has made notable contributions to quantifying the ecological and economic footprints of emerging technologies, particularly in agricultural robotics and automation. His 2020 paper assessing the sustainability of autonomous systems in agriculture (18 citations) and his 2021 comparative LCA of autonomous lawn mowing systems (17 citations) together established a rigorous framework for evaluating whether automation genuinely delivers on its promise of sustainability — filling a critical gap in a field where environmental claims often outpaced empirical evidence. His more recent 2024 work extends this lens to telematics and precision agriculture technology, addressing the nuanced challenge of allocating environmental impacts from information and communication technologies embedded in smart farming systems. Across his body of work, Saidani champions evidence-based sustainable design, urging engineers and policymakers alike to look beyond productivity gains and rigorously measure real-world trade-offs. His research is increasingly relevant as autonomous and connected agricultural systems scale globally, making his methodological contributions a valuable resource for students and practitioners navigating the sustainability of next-generation technologies.
Research Focus
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