Global tech giant Google is building a digital agri-stack using satellite imagery and has started with a base layer that will help identify farm boundaries, a senior official said on Saturday.
Data and analysis of this base layer of the stack can be used in a slew of applications like bettering the subsidy payments, farm insurance or farm loans, Manish Gupta, a senior director at Google DeepMind said.
".. we have built the first such model that using satellite imagery analysis can now start to identify field boundaries based on usage pattern start to identify what crops are being grown and so on," Gupta said, speaking at the Mumbai Tech Week here.
The model has taken inspiration from UIDAI's Aadhar, ascribing a unique ID to each farm and is intended to act as a base layer of the "digital agri stack", he said.
Gupta said it is upon the startups and other agri-tech players to build solutions which will provide loan crop insurance and also subsidies using the data churned out by the platform.
Pointing out the relevance of such a platform, he said 40 per cent of the Indian population are agriculturists and the annual farm lending alone is a $550 billion opportunity with a lot of it cornered by the informal sector lenders.
The comments come at a time when the Indian banking system is trying to improve its agri-lending system. Largest lender SBI's chairman C S Setty spoke this week about the bank mulling to use satellite imagery-based inputs for making its agri lending processes more efficient.
Meanwhile, Gupta also rued that the amount of content available in Indian languages is very limited and Google is trying address the same with its initiatives.
He said about 10 per cent of the overall 8 billion people speak Hindi, but the language accounts for only 0.1 per cent of the online content.
It has launched the "Vaani" project aimed at bridging this gap under which aspires to collect speech data in form of voice recordings from across all the over 700 districts.
The company has launched the first phase of the project under which it has collected 14,000 hours of audio data from 80 districts with people speaking in 59 languages, he said.
He also said that Indians under appreciate the relevance of artificial intelligence to expand the boundaries of science, and pointed to the work by DeepMind which led to a Nobel Prize in Chemistry.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
You’ve reached your limit of {{free_limit}} free articles this month.
Subscribe now for unlimited access.
Already subscribed? Log in
Subscribe to read the full story →
Smart Quarterly
₹900
3 Months
₹300/Month
Smart Essential
₹2,700
1 Year
₹225/Month
Super Saver
₹3,900
2 Years
₹162/Month
Renews automatically, cancel anytime
Here’s what’s included in our digital subscription plans
Exclusive premium stories online
Over 30 premium stories daily, handpicked by our editors


Complimentary Access to The New York Times
News, Games, Cooking, Audio, Wirecutter & The Athletic
Business Standard Epaper
Digital replica of our daily newspaper — with options to read, save, and share


Curated Newsletters
Insights on markets, finance, politics, tech, and more delivered to your inbox
Market Analysis & Investment Insights
In-depth market analysis & insights with access to The Smart Investor


Archives
Repository of articles and publications dating back to 1997
Ad-free Reading
Uninterrupted reading experience with no advertisements


Seamless Access Across All Devices
Access Business Standard across devices — mobile, tablet, or PC, via web or app
)