Business of Agriculture March April 2019 Edition | Page 13

• Enables the flow of information for better accountability and reduction of fraud. How do Drones Help with Traceability? Keeping track of how crops are sown, grown, and harvested is a challenge for governments and financial lenders given the fact that land holdings are often fragmented and small in India. Drone-based data solutions might hold the key to chronicling the journey of the crop, because of various reasons: Authenticity: Drone data offers a single source of truth that provides a means for near real- time verification for stakeholders at every level; governments and agribusiness companies can understand village and taluk level trends of plantation and health to accurately estimate water consumption and soil conditions. The farmers can make authentic claims on crop damage and make incremental improvements to soil management and better crop selection. Favourable Cost Dynamics: The cost of drone solutions to record, measure, and monitor the entire lifecycle of a crop from the day it is sown to the day it is harvested is a fraction of the total costs incurred for labour, machinery, and chemicals inputs (i.e. less than two percent) used during the cycle. Drone data is also a commodity with favourable marginal cost trends as its value increases while cost decreases with every additional flight over the same area. For the frequency and granularity at which drone data can be obtained in comparison with satellite data, drone solutions offer a much more viable alternative for week-on-week insights considering factors like resolution and immediacy of deploy-ability. Source: Skylark Drones solution Drone-based Solutions for the Community When it comes to the pangs of the agricultural community, issues like land ownership and insurance claims have been chronic cripplers ingrained in the broader system as default assumptions. Drone data offers a viable and economical way to democratise data in a way that addresses each of these chronic problems. Ease of Scalability: Drone data acquisition is a method suited to digitise farms en-masse in the Indian context of small landholdings (<2 ha. on average). One drone flight of 20 minutes can digitise crop data for up to 20-30 farms. Drones offer an optimal method for government bodies to digitise land data in a way that satisfies timelines, accuracy, and authenticity Land Ownership: Currently five percent of the population technically lay claim to over a third of agricultural land in the country. The reasons for the skewed ownership claims are the reason why drone data is currently the preferred method for large scale digitisation of land ownership by civic bodies across the country. Drones offer an optimal method for government bodies to digitise land data in a way that satisfies timelines, accuracy, and authenticity. This allows the community to resolve disputes and carry out rightful ownership rights at a pace that does not lag behind government schemes or changing ownership patterns. Source: http://www.greatlakesdronecompany.com Insurance: Changing climate patterns and vagaries in the monsoon have left widespread tracts of the country either in distress or unable to function. Traditional mechanisms in place to process and Business of Agriculture | March-April 2019 • Vol. V • Issue 2 13