- Kinga Marek ([email protected]), personal code: 10844847
- Józek Piechaczek ([email protected]), personal code: 10852281
- Mariusz Wiśniewski ([email protected]), personal code: 10843995
Over 58 percent of rural Indian households rely on agriculture as their primary source of income, with 80 percent of them being smallholder farmers with less than 2 hectares of land. Furthermore, more than 20 percent of smallholder agricultural households live in poverty. Food consumption is anticipated to climb by 59 percent to 98 percent by 2050, according to the Harvard Business Review.
With climate change posing a serious danger to agriculture, a complete overhaul of the system that transports food from farmers to our tables is required. On the top of that, the coronavirus pandemic created a huge disruption in food supply chains, exposing the weak parts of small-scale farmers as well as the significance of constructing resilient food systems.
Telangana is India's 11th biggest state, having a land area of 122,077 km2 and a population of 35,193,978 people (data from 2011). The project's goal is to help Telangana’s government promote data-driven policy-making in the state by designing, developing, and demonstrating anticipatory governance models for food systems utilizing digital public goods and community-centric approaches
- Improve farmers performance by providing them with personalized suggestions.
- Acquire, combine, and visualize data from external systems.
- Facilitate performance assessment of the farmers.
- Promote regular farms' visits by agronomists, depending on the type of problems they face.
- Enable agronomists to exchange information with farmers.
- Enable farmers to exchange their knowledge.