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future village food factory
future How technology is transforming the lives of India's farmers
How technology is transforming the lives of India's farmers
How technology is transforming the lives of India's farmers
The Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR) heralds an exponential pace of technological change, building on the digital revolution to combine technologies, spawn new ones, and transform systems, industries, countries - even society itself. For developing countries, advances in computing power, connectivity, artificial intelligence, biotechnology and GIS, and newer, more capable technologies hold tremendous promise. Inclusive agriculture, rural growth and structural transformation from agriculture to high-productivity manufacturing and other economic sectors can be accelerated, as technological change transforms individuals’ lives and enables developing countries to progress at speeds and on scales previously inconceivable.
To realise the positive outcomes of this new industrial revolution, public policymaking must bridge the already widening gap between skilled and unskilled labour. This gap already poses a threat to the liberal world economic order in the form of anti-globalisation movements - manifested in the rise of US President Donald Trump and Brexit - which have been caused in part by the liberal elites' prolonged neglect of the growing economic inequalities and the plight of the working class that globalisation has prompted. The case of India is salient because, unlike its East and Southeast Asian neighbours, rapid economic growth has not been inclusive enough to reduce the numbers of Indians living in poverty. India contains the largest number of poor people in the world: 270 million, according to the World Bank. Employment growth is critical in low-productivity agriculture, which accounts for nearly three-quarters of the poor population. But automation threatens to create more unemployment.
Public policy must be directed toward increasing the productivity of poor people rather than just offering handouts. The Government of India (GOI) is confronting these challenges. As more young men are migrating from rural poverty to urban areas to seek employment, they are contributing to a rapid feminisation of agriculture. Women, especially dependent on agriculture, perform most of the backbreaking labour. Their low productivity in agriculture, itself increasingly affected by climate change, demands action by policymakers. Any transformation of agriculture requires removing the constraints on women; Bina Agarwal recently argued that the discontent of rural youth could become the agitations of rural women farmers, dissatisfied with lack of access to land, irrigation, credit, inputs and markets.
Aware of these issues, in 2016 India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi introduced a new national policy to double farmers’ incomes by 2022. It targeted poverty reduction, food security and climate change, which is hurting agriculture with rising temperatures, increasingly frequent floods and droughts, and a greater incidence of pests and diseases. The Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers Welfare launched a national scheme called Pradhan Mantri Krishi Sinchai Yojana (PMKSY) with the aim of irrigating every Indian farm and improving water-use efficiency. Through its Digital India programme, GOI is working to transform the country's rural economy and create skilled jobs in rural areas. For the estimated 156 million Indian rural households, most living in poverty according to India’s National Sample Survey Organization (NSSO), there is need for investment in transportation, power, and internet access to create more employment for women and youth in rural areas. The Ministry of Communication and Information Technology, along with other ministries, is working to reform states' service delivery, through GOI’s Goods and Services Tax (GST) system, to establish a uniform interface for taxpayers with a common IT infrastructure, shared between the central government and the states.
Digital India’s strategic cornerstones, the Common Services Centres, are meant to provide access points for delivery of various electronic services to villages, to promote digital and financial inclusion, encourage rural entrepreneurship, and build rural capacities and livelihoods, offering a bottom-up approach to social change, particularly among India’s rural citizens. New technologies enable small farmers to shift from input-intensive to knowledge-intensive agriculture. Precision agriculture can improve the timeliness of planting, secure the best market prices through market information and e-market reforms, provide fertiliser subsidies via direct bank transfers that eliminate or reduce the cost of financial intermediaries, and improve agricultural extension. Combined with improved seed supply and land and water management, which can in turn increase double and triple cropping, farmers’ income can grow.
In April 2016, Modi launched eNAM (National Agriculture Market), an online platform for farmers that integrates agricultural markets online, allowing farmers and traders alike to view all Agriculture Produce Market Committee-related information and services, commodity arrivals and prices, and buy and sell trade offers, thus helping farmers bid for the best prices across markets. GOI also launched a crop insurance scheme, the Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana (PMFBY) in 2016, which now covers 37 million farmers. Additionally, GOI is investing in mapping all of India's aquifers, and using technology to manage water demand. Quantifying the relationship between rainfall and groundwater levels under alternative modes of irrigation and farming should enable prioritisation of prospective water and irrigation investments. Greater investment in research, meanwhile, is needed to develop multi-resistant crops. India has lagged behind its Asian neighbours in genomics, even resisting the approval of genetically modified crops developed by its own scientists. Arguably, such crops do not involve multinational monopolies, can be grown by poor farmers, and offer increased resistance to extreme climatic conditions. Digitised land registration, mobile phones and 'Uberised' tractor services all are contributing to improved farm management. Digital India Land Records Modernisation Programme (DILRMP) is updating millions of land records, providing title guarantees and increased security of land tenure to farmers while stimulating land rentals by nonviable smallholders and land consolidation. To facilitate communications, Digital India is implementing plans to connect 2.5 million Gram Panchayats (local governments) with high-speed internet by 2018, with hundreds of thousands already internet-enabled. GOI has also mandated that all mobiles phones must support at least one of 22 Indian languages, other than English and Hindi, beginning July 2017. With only 27% of villages having banking services within 5 kilometres, the government is licensing new banks and using mobile phone payment technology to an increasing extent. Mobile coverage is high—over 1 billion of India’s population of 1.4 billion are connected.
The need for safety nets Complementing efforts to increase agricultural productivity and employment is India’s triple innovation system (JAM), consisting of Jan Dhan (the Prime Minister’s initiative to open universal bank accounts, depositing Rs1000 [US$15.4] per household), Aadhaar (a unique 12-digit ID number for citizens) and mobile phones. Between them, these factors have provided a platform for expansion of India's public safety nets. The Public Distribution System (PDS), the world’s largest safety net of its kind, distributes food grains and essential commodities via a network of over 521,000 Fair Price Shops (FPSs). More recently, the Modi government has focused on reforming PDS using new technologies. There is now far less pilfering thanks to the digitisation of 230 million ration cards, 56% of which are strengthened with a universal ID and Aadhaar. Several states have now installed electronic point-of-sale devices at FPSs to track sales of food grains to cardholders on a real-time basis. A much debated policy shift - in-kind cash transfers in place of food distribution - is also being facilitated by digital technology. Since 2014, liquid petroleum gas (LPG) subsidies to over 176 million consumers have transferred over Rs.400 billion ($6.2 billion) directly to beneficiaries’ bank accounts. Through GOI’s 'LPG Give It Up Campaign', 12 million consumers voluntarily gave up their subsidies to provide greater access to LPG for their more underprivileged neighbours. Nearly 6.3 million new LPG connections have been provided to poor families in 2015–16, with a target of providing 50 million LPG connections over three years.
Further, the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme, (MGNREGS), the largest in the world, guarantees up to 100 days of rural employment for those in need of employment at Rs100 (US$1.5)/day. Using DBTs to pay beneficiaries has reduced transfer costs, waste and corruption - and sidestepping any possible misallocation of funds transferred from central to state to district to panchayats for distribution. The limits of technology Despite technology’s promise, there remains a need for substantial increase in old-fashioned investments to catch up with the backlog in physical infrastructure and education to achieve a geographically more dispersed development away from the 100 big cities. Around 25% of Indian adults cannot read or write, and the gender divide must be addressed with investment, particularly in rural women’s education and training. Geographical application of new technologies is still limited in rural areas; many farmers remain unaware of these advances.
Insufficient connectivity in rural areas along with a lack of basic computer knowledge and literacy hinder development. Substantial investment is needed in physical infrastructure, power, broadband, transportation and education, particularly in rural regions and among the poorest populations in order to truly reap the benefits of the 4IR.
future Food industry
future food industry
The food industry is a complex, global collective of diverse businesses that supplies most of the food consumed by the world population. Only subsistence farmers, those who survive on what they grow, and hunter-gatherers can be considered outside the scope of the modern food industry.
The food Industry includes:
- Agriculture: raising of crops and livestock, and seafood
- Manufacturing: agrichemicals, agricultural construction, farm machinery and supplies, seed, etc.
- Food processing: preparation of fresh products for market, and manufacture of prepared food products
- Marketing: promotion of generic products (e.g., milk board), new products, advertising, marketing campaigns, packaging, public relations, etc.
- Wholesale and food distribution: logistics, transportation, warehousing
- Foodservice (which includes catering)
- Grocery, farmers' markets, public markets and other retailing
- Regulation: local, regional, national, and international rules and regulations for food production and sale, including food quality, food security, food safety, marketing/advertising, and industry lobbying activities
- Education: academic, consultancy, vocational
- Research and development: food technology
- Financial services: credit, insurance
apple most world profit company world
Apple Inc.profitable company world
> Earnings from continued operations: $39.5 billion> Total revenue: $182.8 billion
> Headquarters: United States
Apple is among the most rapidly growing large multinational companies in the world due to a string of product successes that began over a decade ago and include the Mac, iPod, iPhone, and iPad. Apple has married these with huge content operations such as iTunes and the App Store. Apple is the largest company in the world based on its market cap of about $672 billion. Last year, Apple reported revenue of $182.7 billion and earnings of nearly $40 billion. Last quarter alone, Apple sold 47.5 million iPhones, 10.9 million iPads, and 4.8 million Macs. Company management has made it clear that for Apple to grow it has to have impressive sales in China, the largest wireless market in the world.
Earth 2050: future social and technological developments
Earth 2050: future social and technological developments
Kaspersky Lab has announced the launch of Earth 2050, an interactive multimedia project that accumulates predictions about social and technological developments for the upcoming 30 years Nick
Ismail To create Earth 2050, Kaspersky Lab has teamed with futurologists such as Ian Pearson, added the future visions of its own researchers and spoken to artists and scientists to develop a realistic view of the not-so-distant future .
Users can help shape their vision of the future by studying over 200 predictions online, and they are invited to submit their visions for inclusion on the Earth 2050 site. The aim behind this is to understand what the world will look like in the not-too-distant future, so that people and businesses can better understand the challenges the future will bring.
For example, if all people’s lives are digitalised, how will they handle privacy? If people have all their devices implanted inside them and their data in the cloud, how will they protect that data? And importantly for Kaspersky Lab: if there are no endpoints anymore, will the industry move quicker towards providing security solutions which adapt to customer circumstances, regardless of which device they are using at any one time
All of the forecasts you can find about Earth 2050 could become a reality in just a couple of decades. Earth 2050 is not only a creative exercise for us. For the last 20 years, Kaspersky Lab experts have been fighting with cybercrime, and they have seen threats evolving over this time. They are therefore able to share their knowledge and expertise and – in many cases – encourage users to take a more thorough look at the security of future technologies,” said Andrey Lavrentyev, head of technology research department at Kaspersky Lab.
“Although inventions might be amazing – such as like driverless cars, intelligent infrastructure and the ability to instantly share medical data between doctors across the world – they can still trip us up. Each of them brings a whole new world of opportunity for cyber criminals to exploit.
”At the moment Earth 2050 contains predictions for 80 cities around the globe. Users can select any of these cities and forecasts will appear at the top of the map.
The portal is divided into three time categories: 2030, 2040 and 2050, with each of these containing predictions from people who are recognised experts in their fields.
For example, users can explore the thoughts of Ian Pearson and different experts at Kaspersky Lab, about what the future holds.
The forum is not limited to written predictions. Earth 2050 also contains 12 VR-enabled panoramas of cities like Barcelona and Shanghai as well as illustrations of different artefacts from the future.
Users can take a 360º look at how future cities might be operating. Will we be able to adjust the appearance of every person we see in the street?
Will humans invent a dress that changes its style? Are driverless cars in smart cities the future of the taxi business? Will we see ads while we sleep?
These questions are just a glimpse of what a user can find on the site.Filling in a special feedback form allows visitors to add their own ideas to the portal. These will be published once they have passed through the editorial team’s review.
Users can discuss existing predictions and also contribute by sharing their own.New content from the experts, and forecasts compiled from different sources, will frequently appear on the site. “Still, we hope to see many more names on the portal and encourage our users and site visitors to send us their craziest ideas on what the future might look like,” Andrey Lavrentyev mentioned.
Electric bus goes 1,100 miles on a single charge future
Electric bus goes 1,100 miles on a single charge
The Future of Agriculture
The Future of Agriculture A technological revolution in farming led by advances in robotics and sensing technologies looks set to disrupt modern practice.
The future of food? Integrated apps, more digital purchasing options
The future of food? Integrated apps, more digital purchasing options
WASHINGTON
futureTechnology Intelligence
Technology Intelligence
Technology Intelligence Disruptive technology is changing the world
Technology research
future trends in agriculture
trends in agriculture
Future trends in agriculture:
the role of biotechnology AM Mannion - Outlook on Agriculture, 1998 - journals.sagepub.com Agriculture has been responsible for the transformation of a substantial portion of the biosphere from wildscapes to landscapes. In view of the fact that human population is likely to increase by c 46% in the next two decades, pressure on agricultural systems and the Cited by 21 Related articles All 4 versions researchgate.netClimate change and variability in Sub-Saharan Africa:
Past developments and future trends P Levitt, BN Jaworsky - Annu. Rev. Sociol., 2007 - annualreviews.org Home >; Annual Review of Sociology >; Volume 33, 2007 >; Levitt, pp 129-156. Save. Share. Transnational Migration Studies: Past Developments and Future Trends … Transnational Migration Studies: Past Developments and Future Trends. Annual Review of Sociology. Vol … Cited by 1071 Related articles All 13 versions researchgate.net Nitrogen use in the United States from 1961–2000 and potential future trends RW Howarth, EW Boyer, WJ Pabich… - AMBIO: A Journal of the …, 2002 - BioOne … Bleken, MA 1997. Food consumption and nitrogen losses from agriculture. In … 2001. Future trends in worldwide river nitrogen transport and related nitrous oxide emissions:
a scenario analysis. The Scientific World 1.DOI 10.1100/tsw.2001.279 … Cited by 400 Related articles All 13 versions Inputs to Climatic Change by Soil and Agriculture Related Activities: Present status and possible future trends AF Bouwman, WG Sombroek - Developments in soil science, 1990 - Elsevier Abstract The most important soil borne and land use related greenhouse gases are carbon dioxide (CO 2), methane (CH 4) and nitrous oxide (N 2 O). The present annual increase of atmospheric CO 2 is 0.5%. The total emission of CO 2 is 6.5 to 7.5 Gt C y− 1. Fossil fuel Cited by 33 Related articles All 7 versions wiley.com Global river nutrient export: A scenario analysis of past and future trends SP Seitzinger, E Mayorga, AF Bouwman… - Global …, 2010 - Wiley Online Library … Past trends (1970–2000) and four future scenarios were analyzed. Differences among the scenarios for nutrient management in agriculture were a key factor affecting the magnitude and direction of change of future DIN river export …
treding smart farming in agri world
treding smart farming in agri
It was considered a necessity for life, and hence was treated as the foremost among all occupations. The farmers or the Ulavar were placed right at the top of the social classification. As they were the producers of food grains, they lived with self-respect. Agriculture during the early stages of Sangam period was primitive
,
The prosperity of a farmer depended on getting the necessary sunlight, seasonal rains and the fertility of the soil. Among these elements of nature, sunlight was considered indispensable by the ancient Tamils, because if rains fail other methods of irrigation could be put to use and if the soil wasn't naturally fertile, artificial manuring would enrich the soil. They differentiated the lands on the basis of fertility and accordingly cultivated the crops that were best suited for the kind of soil. They were Vanpulam (hardland), Menpulam(fertile land), Pinpulam (dry land) and Kalarnilam or Uvarnilam (salty land). Vanpulam in Mullai and Kurinji regions did not yield rich produce, whereas in Menpulam the yield was very good. Dry crops were
smart fariming next gentrtion
smart fariming next gentrtion
smart fariming in agricuture a that being taking which home la smart faririmng see made location
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organic planing in smart farimning whch should being man process need leading farm gentraton
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