1. Electric drives
Battery-electric drives are well-established in passenger transport and have proved a viable alternative to the combustion engine for every day use. They can also be used to good effect in some agricultural areas; for example, a battery-electric small tractor can handle the practical demands of yard work, light fieldwork and municipal work. However, at this stage electric motors are not a workable option for larger, more powerful machines. These machines need higher tractive performance and in some cases their engine has to drive other components apart from the vehicle itself, such as the threshing unit in a combine harvester. This would require an extremely large, heavy battery. An electric tractor with a 135 kW output would need a battery ten times heavier than a conventional engine with diesel tank – making the resulting machine so heavy that it would cause long-term damage to the soil by compacting the substrate as it drove across the field. If the battery capacity was reduced to an acceptable additional weight, its range would be too short to be practical.










