Kota teen’s AI robot helps farmers assess soil health, water crop

Update: 2024-02-10 13:51 IST

Kota : A teenager in Rajasthan’s Kota has built an all-purpose robot to help farmers assess soil and crop health, their water needs, and detect pests.

Aryan Singh, 17, built the AgRobot at his school’s Atal Tinkering Lab, a central government initiative to help school children hone their building skills. The son of a farmer, Aryan spent four years building the robot which won him the Pradhan Mantri Rashtriya Bal Puraskar under science and technology category.

Aryan was the only boy from Rajasthan among nine boys and ten girls from 18 states and Union Territories who won awards. He got the award from President Droupadi Murmu in New Delhi on January 22 this year. “I belong to a farming family, grew up watching my grandparents and parents working in the field. While studying in class 10, I conceived the idea of developing a multi-task device and later developed a prototype that can reduce farmers’ labour in the field,” Aryan told PTI. The boy sent his proposal to NITI Ayog’s Atal Innovation Mission and Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla, who is an MP from Rajasthan, as well as, then Union agriculture minister Narendra Singh Tomer, who all praised his device.

“The AgRobot is able to perform multiple tasks like cutting, irrigation, loading, soil-tracking etc,” Aryan said, adding, he has received over 15 national and international awards and appreciation for his innovation. Though building the prototype cost him Rs 50,000, “it will cost less when manufactured in large numbers,” he said. The boy, as well as his mentor at SR Public School in Kota, are hopeful that AgRobot would hit the market within a year. The initial funding for the robot came from iStart, a flagship initiative of the Rajasthan government for startups.

“They incubated me and I got a place to work, labs and support from them,” Aryan said. AgRobot is fitted with cameras to analyse crop’s condition. There is also a dropper on the top which helps spread seeds and irrigation in the field, reducing manual labour for the farmer. The robot is also equipped with soil moisture sensors that help farmers assess the soil health and look for any pests in them. The robot uses Artificial Intelligence which is trained on different farming data, he said. It can also be controlled remotely. “Using IoT, we have made the robot remotely controllable. For instance, if you want to use the robot from Jaipur city and your crops are in Kota, you can simply log in to the application that I have developed and use it,” Aryan said. 

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