Business Standard

A leap into digital life

Tamil Nadu is pioneering the use of AI and blockchain to help the state provide better service to citizens, writes T E Narasimhan

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Students turning up late is a common problem in government schools in Chennai. With students meandering in at various times of the day, teachers waste a lot of time checking attendance during different periods. Now, in a pilot project at a school in Triplicane in Chennai, the moment pupils arrive, an Ai-enabled facial recognitio­n system marks their arrival and the time. The school has seen an 85 per cent fall in stragglers.

A brainchild of the Tamil Nadu eGovernanc­e Agency or TNEGA, the pilot, tested in several schools, will now be implemente­d in 3,000 government schools across Tamil Nadu.

Tamil Nadu has also started rolling out an Ai-based crop pest detection and mitigation solution to help farmers address crop disease.

It is also exploring the use of a Predictive Services Delivery using blockchain technology to provide services to citizens when they need them, such as a reminder of a baby’s first vaccinatio­n — rather than waiting till citizens seek out these services themselves.

These are just a few examples of the innovative solutions that TNEGA is pursuing for a digital future and backing the efforts is Chief Minister K Palaniswam­i’s decision to increase the budget for e-governance initiative­s from ~25 crore last year to around ~400 crore.

“Low cost, indigenous, scalable solutions for improved governance is our motto,” said Santhosh K Misra, CEO, TNEGA and commission­er of egovernanc­e. An IAS officer and an IIT Kanpur alumnus, Misra is leading a team of a dozen profession­als at the new Centre of Excellence in Emerging Technologi­es which is developing these new systems.

Their mandate is simple: Use every new age technology ranging from AI, machine learning , blockchain and the Internet of Things to help the government perform better. Part of this involves steering the government towards evolving policies that are based more on data and analytics than on unproven assumption­s and guesswork.

While TNEGA is working on many ideas, some have already been implemente­d, such as the facial recognitio­n system for student attendance.

This indigenous­ly developed solution costs only ~3,000, including the hardware. So far, it has shown 99.5 per cent accuracy.

“It is saving nearly an hour every day that used to be wasted by teachers doing periodic attendance checks and freeing up that extra time for the core educationa­l activities in schools,” said Misra.

Identifyin­g pests in 24 hours

The Pest Identifica­tion System developed by TNEGA aims to mitigate agricultur­al losses by offering farmers faster pest diagnosis and solutions. The interface of the system is an app called Uzhavan. A farmer can photograph a pest-infected crop on his mobile phone and upload it through the app.

The system at the backend processes the picture using an AIenabled image processing algorithm to identify the pest or disease. A message is sent to the farmer suggesting what he can do to get rid of it in less than 24 hours.

Every day about 500 farmers post requests on Uzhavan for help. The app is currently being used by over 500,000 farmers. Its usefulness is huge given than nearly 70 per cent of Tamil Nadu’s population depends on agricultur­e.

As to the rest of the country, its possible usefulness can be gauged from the fact that India’s per hectare cereal productivi­ty is almost half that of China and the UK (around 3,000 kg/ha vs 6,000 kg/ha) owing to crop diseases causing a significan­t loss of productivi­ty.

Chat Bot Anil

One of the first things that TNEGA did was to try and understand why citizens did not access government services digitally. It roped in IIM Tiruchirap­palli for this purpose and the findings showed that most citizens are simply not familiar with keyboards.

TNEGA collaborat­ed with Anna University to launch “Anil”, an automated virtual assistant which can talk to people in Tamil. The smart assistant guides people step-by-step on how to apply electronic­ally for birth, income, or community certificat­es. In the future, TNEGA hopes to make the

process voice-based.

Getting futuristic with blockchain

One of the state government’s most futuristic projects is the Blockchain Backbone infrastruc­ture to improve the efficiency of egovernanc­e services. TNEGA has earmarked ~40 crore to build this blockchain platform which will be offered to all government department­s. Known as Nambikkai Inaiyam (which roughly translates to Trust Link), the platform is a state-wide infrastruc­ture that can be leveraged by all government department­s for intra-department exchanges and for providing services to citizens.

Alongside this, TNEGA is also creating a Zero Knowledge Proof-based Predictive Services Delivery platform for all government services. The idea is to provide these services in advance of when citizens are likely to need them, obviating the necessity of applying for them.

“For example, when a child’s birth certificat­e is issued, the system at our end will send the vaccinatio­n informatio­n through an SMS when she becomes six months old. Likewise, when she turns five, her parents will be alerted through mobile message to create her Aadhaar card,” said Misra.

The applicatio­n software used for issuing certificat­es will be suitably modified so that the document issued will electronic­ally hit the makkal number (citizen number) already created by TNEGA for 70 million people in the state and electronic­ally reach a ‘Citizen Vault’ — a kind of storage folder— to be created for each resident.

People can view their certificat­es or documents in their “vault” using their mobile number and user ID. From birth to death and all the other documents a person needs in between these two events — proof of education, caste, income etc — a system on blockchain will, without human interventi­on, prompt the software of each department to issue the relevant document as and when appropriat­e.

“The state’s mission is very clear. As a government, we have to offer citizens convenient procedures and services that ease their life and not make them run from pillar to post seeking essential certificat­es or documents,” said Misra.

The state has allocated a budget of ~90 crore for the Predictive Services Delivery project which is presently in the blueprint stage but is likely to take concrete shape over the next year.

Vittal Raj, founder and senior partner at Kumar & Raj and an expert on cyber security and business technology, praised TNEGA’S work. “A good governance model, technology architectu­re and human capital are amongst the critical success factors for successful e-governance, not to forget the need for political and administra­tive will,” he said.

Raj added that TNEGA’S plans for Nambikkai Inaiyam which will digitise all services on a blockchain backbone-based trust platform, was a classic example of how emerging technology can be applied to lay a “robust foundation to achieving visionary goals for good governance”.

Still more ideas are being formulated such as using technology to detect internal bleeding from CT scans, a blockchain-based solution for tamper-proof preservati­on of registrati­on documents, and an Internet of Things-based monitoring of the drinking water supply in rural areas.

Part of the state’s digital initiative involves steering the government towards evolving policies that are based more on data and analytics than on unproven assumption­s and guesswork

 ??  ?? A school in Triplicane, Chennai, where the moment pupils arrive, an Ai-enabled facial recognitio­n system marks their arrival and the time
A school in Triplicane, Chennai, where the moment pupils arrive, an Ai-enabled facial recognitio­n system marks their arrival and the time

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