In a combined effort to provide Sri Lankan smallholder farmers with an affordable solution for protecting crop yields from adverse weather and other negative conditions, Dialog Axiata PLC, has partnered with the University of Ruhuna and the University of Moratuwa to develop and take to market a localised, automated protected house agriculture automation system.
Though agriculture employs 33% of the workforce in Sri Lanka, the sector contributes to only 9% of Sri Lankan Gross Domestic Product (GDP) due to emerging concerns such as land fragmentation and degradation and harvest losses due to increasingly adverse climatic phenomena, compounded by pests and disease damage. To combat this, Dialog has joined hands with the Universities of Ruhuna and Moratuwa to develop a system 10 times more affordable than current market solutions with recommendations fine-tuned for the Sri Lankan context. This affordable, climate-smart, protected agriculture system optimises environmental control (humidity, temperature, soil moisture, pH level etc.) and is expected to increase yields by 130%-200%, while reducing labour requirements and management effort.
Speaking on the agricultural breakthrough, Anthony Rodrigo, Group Chief Innovation Officer, Dialog Axiata PLC said, âWith high costs of production and low productivity in an agricultural sector dominated by smallholder farmers, the partners want to build on the success of Dialogâs Govi Mithuru/Uzhavar Thozhan service counting over 550,000 farmers. This partnership with the University of Ruhuna and the University of Moratuwa focuses on a similar affordability target in developing an innovative IoT platform in line with Dialogâs vision of enriching and enhancing Sri Lankan lives and enterprisesâ
Additionally, under a recently signed Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the University of Ruhuna, Dialog and the University will work to develop a knowledge base of crop recommendations. The Dialog-University of Moratuwa Mobile Communications Research Laboratory has designed and developed low-cost IoT-enabled sensors and actuators for the automation aspects of the solution. These sensors and actuators will be connected via the Internet of Things (IoT) and will allow farmers to monitor and control activities via any smart device. Further support for farmers include real-time, accessible agriculture know-how for regular operation (fertilizer application, water management, pest and disease identification etc.) available on their smart device.
Sri Lanka has experienced a dramatic surge in HIV/AIDS cases during the second half of…
In response to criticism on social media over participation in ABBA Tribute Show at Mount…
Australia passed a law on Thursday to ban social media for children aged under 16…
SriLankan Airlines has been recognized as the ‘Best Airline Partner’ by Tamil Nadu Tourism, as…
The Meteorology Department says the deep depression over the southwest Bay of Bengal was located…
The number of deaths caused by adverse weather resulting from the deep depression over the…