{"id":1790,"date":"2020-10-20T16:56:43","date_gmt":"2020-10-20T16:56:43","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/digitalgreen.org\/co-creating-an-industry-standard-for-sharing-agricultural-data-globally\/"},"modified":"2024-01-11T06:26:45","modified_gmt":"2024-01-11T06:26:45","slug":"co-creating-an-industry-standard-for-sharing-agricultural-data-globally","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/digitalgreen.org\/co-creating-an-industry-standard-for-sharing-agricultural-data-globally\/","title":{"rendered":"Co-creating\u00a0an Industry Standard for Sharing Agricultural Data Globally"},"content":{"rendered":"

2.5 billion smallholder farmers globally make daily decisions to protect their livelihoods and feed their communities. These farmers receive a staggering amount of information each day from government extension agents, private agribusinesses, and NGOs. With little coordination between these actors, farmers are given information and services that they didn\u2019t demand and can\u2019t use and are forced to make decisions about who they can trust. As climate change increasingly threatens production, and as supply chains are disrupted by crises like COVID-19, the divide between what is needed and what is offered continues to grow.<\/p>\n

We have been working towards developing agri-tech solutions to boost the incomes of small-scale farmers. Building on more than ten years of experience with 2 million farmers across South Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa, we\u2019re now leading the development of FarmStack, an agricultural data-sharing platform to enable organizations and individuals to transfer data through peer-to-peer connectors governed by usage policies that codify data sovereignty and control.<\/p>\n

On August 20th<\/sup>, \u00a0we were invited along with Hewlett Packard Enterprise & Microsoft to participate in a World Bank led webinar series on \u2018Co-creating\u00a0an industry standard for sharing agricultural data globally<\/strong>\u2019<\/a>. The discussions focused on farmers and the organizations that serve them don’t have an easy and secure way to exchange data which leads to fragmentation and silos; and<\/p>\n