Top Banner
Developing a Methodology and Toolkit for Enhancing Agricultural Productivity in Developing Countries via SMS Messages
9

Dat Agro and AMIS Collaborative Project to Increase Agricultural Productivity in Developing Countries

Nov 18, 2014

Download

Technology

DataDyne.org

Cameroon´s AMIS project and Chile´s DatAgro are on the leading edge of programs attempting to leverage the power of information and communication technologies (ICTs) to increase the viability of small farms and agricultural cooperatives.
Rural farming communities around the world would benefit from a rigorous documentation of the lessons learned by these projects and access to the processes and tools they have developed. Our goal is to document and package the work we are doing and make it available for free to other communities using a Creative Commons license in order to help other projects avoid mistakes and maximize the impact of the time and resources they invest.

Project Components

1. South-South Cooperation to Enhance Agricultural Productivity in Developing Countries via the use of Handheld Technology and SMS Messages

2. Desk Study on the Use of SMS Technology to Enhance Agricultural Productivity in Developing Countries

3. Online Toolkit for Using SMS Technology to Enhance Agricultural Productivity in Developing Countries

4. Workshop for Integrating SMS Technology into Agricultural Projects

5. eAgriculture Virtual Community
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Dat Agro and AMIS Collaborative Project to Increase Agricultural Productivity in Developing Countries

Developing a Methodology and Toolkit for Enhancing Agricultural Productivity in Developing Countries via SMS Messages

Page 2: Dat Agro and AMIS Collaborative Project to Increase Agricultural Productivity in Developing Countries

Who we are

• DatAgro is a project of DataDyne.org using the Mobile Information Platform (MIP) technology to provide news and information to farming cooperatives in Chile.

Chile MIP is an RSS-to-SMS and group SMS engine designed to workeven over slow, less-than-GPRS cellular networks. MIP allows groups that want to communicate with the public, or to enhance internal communications, to easily create one-to-many SMS messages or an RSS stream that can be sent as text messages to subscribers.

• AMIS seeks to empower Cameroonian farmers via group SMS messages and to bring about a mutually beneficial relationship between farmers and consumers.

Cameroon AMIS addresses the problems faced by farmers in Cameroon and consumers (at home and abroad) and seeks durable solutions to

overcome regularly occurring difficulties within the agricultural sector.

Page 3: Dat Agro and AMIS Collaborative Project to Increase Agricultural Productivity in Developing Countries

• In the developed world, we rely on the internet to reduce information inequalities by eliminating barriers to accessing and sharing information.

• In the developing world, people are extremely unlikely to have that access and are unlikely to get it any time soon. This is especially true of rural farmers, who tend to have significantly lower levels of internet connectivity than their urban peers.

• During the past decade, however, developing countries have made tremendous strides in connecting their rural populations to cellular networks. SMS messages are today´s only existing digital technology able to reach a majority of the rural poor in many developing countries.

SMS Messages Key to Overcoming Information Inequality

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 4: Dat Agro and AMIS Collaborative Project to Increase Agricultural Productivity in Developing Countries

• Cameroon´s AMIS project and Chile´s DatAgro are on the leading edge of programs attempting to leverage the power of information and communication technologies (ICTs) to increase the viability of small farms and agricultural cooperatives.

• The projects take different tactics to reach similar goals and have started informally sharing their practices as well as their difficulties.

• Rural farming communities around the world would benefit from a rigorous documentation of the lessons learned by these projects and access to the processes and tools they have developed.

Applying ICTs to Agricultural Production

Page 5: Dat Agro and AMIS Collaborative Project to Increase Agricultural Productivity in Developing Countries

• Though small holdings farmers have been slow to incorporate information technology into their work, projects around the world are beginning to experiment with the use of cellular-based ICTs to improve productivity.

• Our goal is to document and package the work we are doing and make it available for free to other communities using a Creative Commons license in order to help other projects avoid mistakes and maximize the impact of the time and resources they invest.

• In order to obtain best results, we will recruit one more similar project in the southern hemisphere to expand our breadth of experience.

Promoting Cooperation to Maximize Impact

Page 6: Dat Agro and AMIS Collaborative Project to Increase Agricultural Productivity in Developing Countries

What we propose...Using our diverse experiences, we propose to

make it easy for others to use handheld technologies and SMS messages to reach their

local farmers and improve the agricultural productivity of small farms in the

developing world

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 7: Dat Agro and AMIS Collaborative Project to Increase Agricultural Productivity in Developing Countries

Project Components

1. South-South Cooperation to Enhance Agricultural Productivity in Developing Countries via the use of Handheld Technology and SMS Messages

2. Desk Study on the Use of SMS Technology to Enhance Agricultural Productivity in Developing Countries

3. Online Toolkit for Using SMS Technology to Enhance Agricultural Productivity in Developing Countries

4. Workshop for Integrating SMS Technology into Agricultural Projects

5. eAgriculture Virtual Community

Page 8: Dat Agro and AMIS Collaborative Project to Increase Agricultural Productivity in Developing Countries

Estimated Budget

1. South-South Cooperation for Program Enhancement

a) Staff time 3 programs x 3 staff x $2,000 = $18,000

b) Travel 2 int’l trips x 3 staff x $2,500 = $15,000

2. Desk Study on Use of Handhelds and SMS in Agriculture

a) Researcher/Writer 1 x $5,000 = $5,000

b) Translation 2 x $2,000 = $4,000

3. Online Toolkit on Use of Handhelds and SMS in Agriculture

a) Toolkit design and implementation 1 x $6,500 = $6,500

b) Consultant 1 x $3,000 = $3,000

a) Workshops on Use of Handhelds and SMS in Agriculture

a) Cameroon 1 x $2,000 = $2,000

b) Chile 1 x $2,000 = $2,000

c) Other country 1 x $2,000 = $2,000

1. Virtual Community on Use of Handhelds and SMS in Agriculture

a) Customization of community tool 3 x $1,000 = $ 3,000 Total Direct = $69,200

b) English/Spanish/Other facilitators 3 x $2,500 = $7,500 Indirect @ 15% = $10,380

c) Hosting 12 x $100 = $1,200 TOTAL = $79,580

Page 9: Dat Agro and AMIS Collaborative Project to Increase Agricultural Productivity in Developing Countries

Questions?