250 likes | 355 Views
Agriculture, Supply Chain, Best Practices, Markets. Pedro Lichtle Mian Ahsan Ahmed Aadam Soorma Ying L i. Nokia Life. Nokia Life. Localized information including weather conditions, advice about crop cycles, general tips and techniques, as well as market prices for crops.
E N D
Agriculture, Supply Chain, Best Practices, Markets Pedro Lichtle MianAhsan Ahmed AadamSoorma Ying Li
Nokia Life • Localized information including weather conditions, advice about crop cycles, general tips and techniques, as well as market prices for crops. • Farmers in the pilot scheme said getting daily prices on their phones reduced their dependency on agents for basic information, enabling them to negotiate with greater confidence.
Nokia Life • Nokia Life was launched in 2009 for “emerging market” customers • Started in India; has been rolled out in Indonesia, China & Nigeria • Farmers pay $1/month for the service • Farmers receive customizable daily text updates: • Growing advice, weather forecasts, market prices
Nokia Life • Farmers have seen drastic improvements in their farm output • It’s considered an “agricultural input cost” due to necessity • It has removed the “guesswork” associated with pricing • Can farm more confidently • Still room for improvement • Farmers request customer service via photo uploading • Example: farmer sends in photo of infected crop • Farmer receives a diagnosis reply with treatment advice
Financial Times Article • Last week’s Financial Times ran a relevant article • Mobile devices: Phones give farmers an edge when in the field • Nov. 21, 2012 • http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/490e9f88-29eb-11e2-a5ca-00144feabdc0.html#axzz2DNO6wtz6
ICT Solutions inPakistan • Video on ICT Agriculture • Video– ICT based agriculture-solutions in Pakistan --By CABI
Question: • 1. Briefly describe(in a few sentences) the goal of ICT implementation into agriculture markets. • 2. If CABI conducts a follow up study, how can they increase user feedback and streamline support units? • 3. What can be done differently in a following study?
Promoting ICT investment in Cassava Value Chains in Nigeria • What is a value chain? • Cassava is consumed by 80% of people living in rural Nigeria daily. • How can ICT be used to promote the productivity and growth of firms? • Show how firm characteristics such of SME’s influence ICT effectiveness. • Study conducted involved growers, processors and marketers.
Questions • Out of the three categories, growers, processors and markets, who are most likely to reap the benefits of using ICT and why? • Why does ICT ownership have more of an influence on SME output than ICT investment or frequency of use?
Linking Supply Chain Markets • Developed countries—Australia • Problem: • Primary grocery producers ineffectively participate in supply chain • a). Australia’s uneven geographic spread. • A small number of large cities .vs. the vast and sparsely populated rural areas. • b). Primary grocery producers don’t have time to access the internet. • They have to spend most of their time in the field. • c).Grocery industry was mainly controlled by two major retailchains: • Woolworths and Coles.
Question: • How to use technology to help organic primary producers enhance information access and provision, so as to improve the integration into the grocery supply chain?(Australia has strong mobile support.)
Solutions: • Design: • A mobile commerce technology for organic primary producers effective participation in the grocery supply chain.
Mobile Application • Name : MobiCert • Functions: • Record-keeping; Database access; Weather Information; Information access and provision and community features into one platform.
Benefits • a). Accessing and exchanging information in filed using a mobile device. • b). The approved input database allows organic producers to check any input quickly. • c). Improving the communication between organic primary producers and strengthen their inter-relationship.
COMMONSense Net: A Wireless Sensor Network forResource-Poor Agriculture in the SemiaridAreas of DevelopingCountries Panchard, J., Rao, S., Prabhakar, T. V., Hubaux, J. P., & Jamadagni, H. S. (2007)
Key Issues • Resource-poorfarmers • High rate of suicides • Increasingdebt • Cropfailure
Solution • Improving environment monitoring • Providing decision-support system • Using technologies • Wireless sensor networks (WSNs)
Design and Implementation • Use of participatory and iterative design • Employment of a field survey (10 months, 3 villages) • Deployment of WSNs (fully scalable) • Calibration • Alert • Soil Moisture Prediction • Water Requirements Assessment
Reliable Data Gathering Source: www.commonsensenet.in
BicycleDatamule Source: www.commonsensenet.in
Considerations Limitations (firstresults) • MinimumRange of 100m (Up to 1km isdesirable) • Durability of nodes of 6 months (croppingseason) • Ideallyusingalkalinebatteriesorsmall solar panel • Range of 200m • Durability of nodes of 2 months (soilmoisture use just 1 month) • Alkalinebatteries WSNs’ Characteristics
Improvements(1st Iteration) • New wireless sensor platform • Rangefrom 300m to 1km • More attractivepowerconsumption • New data acquisitionboard • Customizedforsoilmoirture • 3.6-V lithiumbattery • New software • Life-time of up to 5 years
Questions • Istheprojectsuccesful? • HowcouldyouimprovetheCOMMONSense Net project? • Scalability • EconomicSustainability • Do youthinkthattheCOMMONSense Net projectshould be replicated in otherdevelopingcountries? Why? • Design/implementation gaps: hybrids • Computerliterateoperators