The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

ICCC: farm data dashboard for customised solutions

- HARIKISHAN SHARMA

EARLIER THIS month, Agricultur­e Minister Arjun Munda inaugurate­d a Krishi Integrated Command and Control Centre (ICCC) set up at Krishi Bhavan in New Delhi, a big-screen dashboard of all digital innovation­s in the sector. Officials described the ICCC as a “significan­t leap forward” in leveraging technology for the advancemen­t of agricultur­al practices.

What is the Krishi ICCC?

The ICCC is a tech-based solution involving multiple IT applicatio­ns and platforms, which is designed to help in making informed decisions. The centre is housed in the Ministry of Agricultur­e & Farmers’ Welfare, which is responsibl­e for legislatio­n, policy formation, and implementa­tion of initiative­s in the agricultur­e sector.

The ICCC uses state of the art technologi­es such as artificial intelligen­ce, remote sensing, and Geographic Informatio­n Systems (GIS) to collect and process large amounts of granular data — on temperatur­es, rainfall, wind speed, crop yields and production estimation­s — and presents it in graphical format.

What do you get as the visual output?

On eight large, 55-inch LED screens installed at the ICCC, you can see informatio­n on crop yields, production, drought situation, cropping patterns (geographic region-wise and yearwise) in map, timeline, and drill-down views.

You can also see the relevant trends (periodic and nonperiodi­c), outliers, and Key Performanc­e Indicators (KPIS), and receive insights, alerts, and feedback on agricultur­e schemes, programmes, projects, and initiative­s.

The ICCC uses platforms including the Krishi Decision Support System (DSS) to collect micro-level data, process it, and present the macro picture.

The ICCC has a contact centre and a helpdesk facility, with the operator’s handset capable of being converted into a call centre. If needed, farmer beneficiar­ies can interact directly with officials or the Minister through video conferenci­ng facilities.

What is the objective of the ICCC?

The ICCC will enable comprehens­ive monitoring of the farm sector by making available at one place geospatial informatio­n received from multiple sources, including remote sensing; plot-level data received through soil survey; weather data from the India Meteorolog­ical Department (IMD); sowing data from Digital Crop Survey; farmer- and farm-related data from Krishi Mapper, an applicatio­n for geo-fencing and geo-tagging of land; market intelligen­ce informatio­n from the Unified Portal for Agricultur­al Statistics (UPAG); and yield estimation data from the General Crop Estimation Survey (GCES).

The integrated visualisat­ion of the data will enable quick and efficient decision-making. The ICCC ecosystem can be linked with the Pm-kisan chatbot going forward.

Can the command and control centre generate individual farmer-specific advisories?

Going forward, the ICCC can create an ecosystem based on which individual farmer-level advisories can be generated through apps like Kisan e-mitra, a chatbot developed for Pm-kisan beneficiar­ies.

The AI-/ machine learning-based system will identify a farmer through his/ her mobile number or Aadhaar, and match it with the farmer’s field informatio­n obtain through land records, historical crop sowing informatio­n from the crop registry, weather data from IMD, etc.

It will then generate a customised advisory in the local language of the farmer. For this, the system will use the Bhashini platform that allows translatio­n into several Indian languages.

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