Nepali ICT firms receive US data-driven farming award

Nepali firm has been awarded with US Data-Driven Farming Award for their innovative solutions in utilizing information and communications technology to improve agricultural productivity. The US government’s Feed the Future Initiative has awarded its global Data-Driven Farming Prize to four firms from around the world including two from Nepal.

Kathmandu-based ICT firm Db2Map received a $100,000 award for its GEOKrishi program that integrates satellite data with government and crowd sourced information to assess land and soil conditions to help farmers maximize crop yields. ICT for Agriculture, also based in Nepal, received a $50,000 award for their mobile and web-based platform that provides comprehensive agricultural information to rural farmers.

Other prize winners included German-based PEAT and Canadian-based Spero Analytics technology firms, receiving $100,000 and $50,000 awards, respectively.

Shifts in weather patterns, soil content, and market prices can cause adverse ripple effects across the agriculture sector. Satellites, weather stations, governments, and researchers regularly capture agricultural data. However, this data is rarely consolidated and communicated appropriately to farmers. Speaking at the event, Amy Tohill-Stull, Acting Mission Director at USAID, remarked, “Data should no longer reside on computer servers at research institutes. We must make it open and accessible to Nepal’s farmers, agribusiness owners, and all stakeholders across the agriculture value chain. This is what we mean by “data-driven farming.”

Launched in February 2017 by the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), the $300,000 Data-Driven Farming Prize recognizes innovative tools and approaches that source, analyze, and provide actionable information to help smallholder farmers in Nepal, and around the world, improve their productivity. The Data-Driven Farming Prize attracted a total of 143 applicants from 21 countries, including 83 from Nepal. Of the 13 finalists, six were from Nepal.

 

Nature Khabar

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