AI to the Rescue: How Phones are Turning into Plant Doctors for Thousands of Farmers
Until one and a half years ago, Devidas Lonkar from Chakan town of Pune district had to depend on local fertiliser and pesticide sellers to resolve diseases and fungal issues in his crops. Hailing from an agrarian background, the 26-year-old farmer grows sugarcane, cabbage, cauliflower as well as beetroot and groundnuts across a 7-acre plot. "I would describe the symptoms of fungus or disease to the shopkeeper, to which he would then suggest various pesticides and add-ons. It took me a while before realising that these shopkeepers only suggested chemicals with short-lived efficiency that would inevitably bring farmers back to them within a couple of months," he says. "This app ended up saving me a lot of money as well as time. Sitting at home, I can now diagnose plant diseases and have already saved about Rs 1-1.5 lakh in a year that I would otherwise spend on fertilisers," he mentions.
Jun-1-2019, 07:49:49 GMT
- Country:
- Africa (0.05)
- Asia > India (0.45)
- South America > Brazil (0.05)
- Industry:
- Food & Agriculture > Agriculture (1.00)
- Technology:
- Information Technology
- Artificial Intelligence (0.50)
- Communications > Mobile (0.32)
- Information Technology