The Global Kashmir
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Kashmir
    • Jammu
  • National
  • World
  • Business
  • Editorial
  • Health
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • E-Paper
en English
ar Arabiczh-CN Chinese (Simplified)en Englishru Russianes Spanishur Urdu
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Kashmir
    • Jammu
  • National
  • World
  • Business
  • Editorial
  • Health
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • E-Paper
No Result
View All Result
The Global Kashmir
No Result
View All Result
image 2 3

Opinion | G20 Call to Action in Agriculture: An Opportunity for India

By: Shri R Chandrashekhar

News Desk by News Desk
September 7, 2023
Reading Time: 3 mins read
0
8
VIEWS
Share on Facebook

READ ALSO

Opinion | Nation Building: Youth of Kashmir as Architects of Change

Opinion | Transforming War Zones into Tourist Destinations

Opinion | Indian Army’s Initiatives for Women’s Empowerment in Eastern Ladakh

The G20 Agriculture Ministers’ Meeting at Hyderabad during 16-17 June, 2023 agreed on some important principles and set forth a rousing call for action on several fronts.
What is particularly interesting to note is the emphasis on digital strategies as a key instrumentality of achieving various other objectives central to the continuing “commitment to food security and nutrition for all, through the development of inclusive, resilient, and sustainable agriculture and food systems.”Herein lie important imperatives and opportunities for India in particular.
Seven specific “Deccan High Level Principles” are spelt out in The Outcome Document that complement various ongoing responses to global food security crises. Among these, Principle 6 underlines the need to Accelerate Innovation and the Use of Digital Technology.Principle 7 emphasizes the importance of Scaling-Up Responsible Public and Private Investments in Agriculture including investment in digital infrastructure.
The Call for Action emphasizes that in today’s world, digitalization and inclusivity are critical for agricultural transformation. This in turn necessitates appropriate digital infrastructure, universal broadband internet access, digital rights and rules on data access, usage and privacy in this field. The declaration makes a commitment to collaborate with all stakeholders to strengthen capacity-building efforts, including dissemination of digital tools and technology and promoting its adoption by farmers. It further commits to foster international cooperation through exchange of experiences and insights.
The Call for Action recognizes the need for adequate public and private financing of digital infrastructure to help drive innovations in agriculture using emerging digital technologies. It underscores the need to increase responsible investment in start-ups, incubators, and accelerators with an emphasis on enabling entrepreneurship in agriculture and along agri-food value chains.
I had the privilege of moderating the Panel discussion on “Connecting the Digitally Disconnected: Harnessing the Power of Digital Technologies in Agriculture”at this event. The panel included the US Under Secretary for RD, the DG, ADB, Manila, senior representatives from BMGF Washington and the Indian Ministry of Agriculture in addition to 3 exciting agritech startup promoters from India.
The potential for leveraging the enormous power of AI is nowhere more evident than in the agriculture sector. The opportunities in agriculture are vast. These include:
 Optimizing usage of inputs, including water usage
I mproving agronomic practices
 Enhancing access to markets
Improving advisory extension services
 Reducing food loss and wastage
 Enabling climate adaptation and mitigation
 Protecting and regenerating natural resources
Many dots comprising diverse stakeholders, data sets and technologies need to be connected for the transformation of the sector including: Land holding and encumbrances thereon, choice of crop, input needs and suppliers, water resources, soil and agro-climatic data, banks and credit institutions, crop insurance, satellite data, market yards and market information, AI tools for early detection of pest attacks, customized AI-enabled advisory services in local language equipped with voice, video and text communication,leveraging mobile telephony, etc.
Ecosystem level, farmer-centric,strategic thinking must therefore underpin the digital transformation. For this, a distributive, adaptive, and open digital ecosystem is an imperative. India is fortunate to have all the three ingredients needed for this transformation:
 Athriving, global IT industry with developed country capabilities in AI and new and emerging technologies such as IoT, big data, drones, blockchain, intelligent systems, robotics, etc.
 A vibrant startup eco-system brimming with young, new age entrepreneurs who are devising highly innovative, hugely beneficial, profitable solutions in various social sectors, including agriculture and
 A globally unparalleled track record of setting up population scale Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) such as Aadhaar, UPI, ONDC, with others at a nascent stage in healthcare, agriculture and other sectors.
Three impressive agri-tech startups that were on the panel best illustrate the scope, benefit and scale of opportunity for India and for the private sector in this nascent revolution that is just unfolding in India and elsewhere. Absolute aims to use AI to capture and apply nature’s inventive problem-solving and intricate communication capability honed by billions of years of evolution. Waycool has established a specialized platform that supports commerce in the sector. Sammunati provides solutions that enable farmers to maximize their financial returns by choosing the right time and place to sell their produce.
In the context of the prominence of digital strategies in the Outcome Document, it is gratifying to note that it acknowledges India’s focus on making digital infrastructure inclusive to make it a catalyst for socio-economic transformation of the agriculture ecosystem and farmer centric public and private digital innovations.
India can become a global leader in adapting new and emerging technologies for transforming the agriculture sector. The Government needs to play a carefully calibrated but pivotal role: establishing standards, introducing necessary policies and facilitating critical DPIs.The goal is to ensure coherence, integration and equity while channeling private sector energy and initiative to drive digital transformation of the sector.
– The author is the Chairman, Centre for the Digital Future, Former Secretary, Depts. of Electronics, IT and Telecom & Former President, NASSCOM
ADVERTISEMENT
ShareTweetSendSharePinShare
ADVERTISEMENT
Previous Post

Opinion | Indian Traditional Medicine Systems in G20 Reassuring Evidence and Equity

Next Post

Editorial | Own the Responsibility 

RelatedPosts

Opinion | Nation Building: Youth of Kashmir as Architects of Change

Opinion | Nation Building: Youth of Kashmir as Architects of Change

June 22, 2025
Opinion | Transforming War Zones into Tourist Destinations

Opinion | Transforming War Zones into Tourist Destinations

June 22, 2025
Opinion | Indian Army’s Initiatives for Women’s Empowerment in Eastern Ladakh

Opinion | Indian Army’s Initiatives for Women’s Empowerment in Eastern Ladakh

June 22, 2025

Opinion | India’s Governance Renaissance: A New Dawn of Inclusion and Trust

Opinion | From Vision to Reality: Unveiling the World’s Tallest Railway Bridge

Opinion | Hidden Dangers on Your Plate: The Alarming Health Hazards of Using Newspaper Ink in Food Packaging

Opinion | Reviving Tourism in South Kashmir: New Circuits and Community Participation

Opinion | Independent Balochistan: What Does It Mean?

Opinion | Ramban Landslide: Indian Army in Aid to Civil Authority

Next Post
Editorial | Own the Responsibility 

Editorial | Own the Responsibility 

“An honour for me to co-chair..:” PM Modi at ASEAN-India Summit in Jakarta

"An honour for me to co-chair..:" PM Modi at ASEAN-India Summit in Jakarta

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

ADVERTISEMENT

Company Info

Address: F11 silk factory road Tulsibagh, Srinagar
Phone : 9797970347.
Email : globalkashmir786@gmail.com
Owner, printer, publisher Editor : Suhail Yousuf Shah
Legal advisor : Advocate Umar Mushtaq
Printed at : LUBAAB PUBLICATIONS LAWAYPORA SRINAGAR
Published from : Green house Soitang, Srinagar, Kashmir.
RNI No : JKENG/2011/38364
Office No's :
Postal Regd No : JKNP 160 / SKGPO 2012 - 2014

About

The Global Kashmir was founded in Srinagar, with a vision to promote positive news from the Kashmir valley and across the globe. Covering first hand, all categories of news from different corners of Jammu and Kashmir as well as relevant national and international news stories. Global Kashmir is dedicated to providing unbiased stories that are yet to be told...

News By Topic

Company Info

  • Contact Us
  • About

© 2022 - Global Kashmir

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Kashmir
    • Jammu
  • National
  • World
  • Business
  • Editorial
  • Health
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • E-Paper

© 2022 - Global Kashmir