An AI-powered platform called FarmerChat is helping small-scale farmers in India access timely, reliable agricultural advice when it matters most, offering a practical solution to the information gaps that often put livelihoods at risk. The tool, developed by Digital Green, provides multilingual and hyperlocal guidance in real time, enabling farmers to make faster decisions in response to urgent challenges such as sudden weather shocks, crop diseases, pest outbreaks, and livestock management problems.
The article highlights how immediate access to trusted advice can be critical for farmers facing unpredictable conditions. One farmer, Saraswati Vishwakarma, had to quickly decide how to protect her potato crop from unseasonal frost that could have destroyed months of work in a single night. Another, Vishwesh Singh, was dealing with the complex demands of growing wheat while managing a small fishery after a pest infestation had previously devastated his guava orchard. Although their situations were different, both needed accurate and timely guidance to avoid losses and protect their incomes.
FarmerChat is presented as especially valuable in the Indian context, where millions of smallholder farmers depend on agriculture but often struggle to get support from the country’s public agricultural extension system. That system is designed to connect scientific expertise with farmers in the field, but it is increasingly overstretched. In many areas, a single extension worker may be responsible for more than 5,000 farmers, making personalized or rapid assistance difficult to deliver, particularly during emergencies or fast-changing conditions linked to climate change.
The platform aims to fill that gap by acting like a virtual personal extension agent, bringing advice directly to farmers through an accessible digital interface. Its ability to respond in real time is particularly important as climate variability makes farming decisions more urgent and complex. Rather than waiting days or weeks for in-person support, farmers can get immediate recommendations that help them respond before small problems become major financial setbacks.
The article also notes that FarmerChat appears to be helping women farmers engage more actively with agricultural information. In India, around 45 percent of the app’s users are women, and once they join the platform, they reportedly use it more frequently than men. This suggests that digital tools like FarmerChat may also help address gender-related barriers to accessing farm advice, especially for women managing farms while facing mobility or social constraints.
The Rockefeller Foundation is supporting initiatives like FarmerChat as part of a broader effort to strengthen food system resilience by improving how knowledge reaches farmers. The article frames the challenge as an “AI-sized problem,” arguing that digital tools are increasingly necessary because the scale of demand far exceeds what traditional agricultural support systems can provide. In that sense, FarmerChat is not just a helpful app but part of a larger shift toward using artificial intelligence to make farming support more immediate, inclusive, and resilient in the face of growing climate and productivity pressures.




