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The company has successfully developed a process to refine Kratom leaf biomass to an astonishing 82 per cent alkaloid content, surpassing the industry standard of 20-40 per cent

Botanical Refinery, a Denver-based leader in botanical extraction, announces a remarkable breakthrough in Kratom refinement. The company has successfully developed a process to refine Kratom leaf biomass to an astonishing 82 per cent alkaloid content, surpassing the industry standard of 20-40 per cent.

This pioneering achievement not only positions Botanical Refinery at the forefront of the Kratom industry but also marks a significant advancement in the potency and quality of Kratom extracts. The company’s cutting-edge extraction techniques ensure a product that maximises the therapeutic potential of Kratom, providing users with an unparalleled experience.

In a move to share its innovative techniques, Botanical Refinery offers its extraction services to other Kratom brands and companies. This collaboration aims to elevate the overall standard of Kratom products in the market, ensuring that consumers have access to the highest quality extracts.

Botanical Refinery also takes pride in its GMP-certified facility, where it manufactures a variety of finished Kratom products. The range includes potent Kratom shots, delicious gummies, convenient tablets, and more. Each product reflects the company’s commitment to quality, innovation, and consumer satisfaction.

The company has successfully developed a process

In Phase-I of the project, the ADeX Platform is currently deployed in the Khammam district and will be expanded to the entire State over a period

K Taraka Ramarao, Telangana’s IT and Industries Minister, has launched India’s first Agricultural Data Exchange (ADeX) and Agriculture Data Management Framework (ADMF) in Hyderabad. The ADeX has been developed as a digital public infrastructure (DPI) for the agriculture sector and is a collaboration between the State Government, the World Economic Forum, and the Indian Institute of Science.

Speaking on the occasion, Ramarao said both ADeX and ADMF provide the right platform to ensure fair and efficient usage of agricultural data by the industry and startups and significantly boost the data economy, specifically in the agriculture sector. He said these initiatives help lead the country from the front in using innovation and technology to drive food systems transformation and improve farmers’ incomes.

According to newsonair.com, in Phase-I of the project, the ADeX Platform is currently deployed in the Khammam district and will be expanded to the entire State over a period. The software platform facilitates secure, standards-based data exchange between agricultural data users such as agri application developers and agricultural data providers like Government Agencies, Private Companies, NGOs and Universities.

ADMF has been developed after extensive public and industry consultations on data protection, management, and innovation.

In Phase-I of the project, the ADeX

The 2022 report details FMC’s progress in three focus areas: protection, innovation and engagement

FMC Corporation published the 2022 sustainability report, Science-Driven, People-Focused Solutions for Agriculture. The 12th annual report presents the company’s progress on key sustainability commitments, goals and targets, including net-zero emissions, sustainable innovation, product stewardship, and diversity, equity and inclusion.

“Despite unprecedented challenges in 2022, sustainability remained core to how we operate and serve customers around the world,” said Mark Douglas, president and chief executive officer. “By setting aggressive targets and embedding sustainability across the organisation, we continue to deliver real results that benefit agriculture and society while having a direct impact on the long-term viability and success of our company.”

The 2022 report details FMC’s progress in three focus areas: protection, innovation and engagement. Introduced in 2022 as part of its long-term sustainability strategy, these focus areas guide the company’s efforts to address climate change, advance sustainable farming practices and improve the representation of women and minorities in the industry. Key highlights in the report include FMC’s emissions reduction strategy, which resulted in a 3 per cent reduction in absolute Scopes 1 and 2 emissions and a 2 per cent reduction in absolute Scope 3 emissions. These reductions demonstrate strong progress toward the company’s goal to achieve net zero by 2035, which was verified by the Science Based Targets initiative in early 2023.

The report also highlights FMC’s continued investments in new synthetic technologies as well as innovative biological solutions, like pheromones and peptides, to bring unique, environmentally friendly crop protection solutions to farmers worldwide. As part of its increasingly sustainable product portfolio, 100 per cent of new synthetic products in its development pipeline meet the company’s sustainable innovation criteria. Additionally, the company has one of the fastest-growing plant health platforms in the industry.

“FMC is uniquely positioned to deliver solutions to key challenges in agriculture and the environment,” said Karen Totland, vice president and chief sustainability officer. “With world-class innovation capabilities and strategic partnerships, we continue to deliver new technologies that help farmers sustainably protect their crops while building resiliency to climate impacts.”

The 2022 report details FMC's progress in

Aleph Farms, the first cultivated meat company to grow steaks directly from non-genetically engineered animal cells, has nnounced that it has been officially recognized by the Agriculture Innovation Mission for Climate (AIM for Climate) as an Innovation Sprint Partner. As part of this innovation sprint, $40 million is being invested in cellular agriculture R&D over the next five years through Aleph Farms. 

It will introduce its products into global markets as soon as regulatory processes conclude and approvals are finalized. 

Cultivated meat is also far more efficient than cows at converting feed into meat. By requiring 95% less land, cultivated meat opens up new opportunities for land use, including producing more food and re-wilding habitats for biodiversity, the latter of which further reduces emissions.

“Enhancing food security via cellular agriculture empowers communities and fosters regional cooperation, spurring economic growth in the process. This is why we are especially proud to be allocating these R&D funds as an AIM for Climate Innovation Sprint Partner,” said Didier Toubia, co-founder and CEO of Aleph Farms. “With cellular agriculture, humanity is better equipped to overcome significant food-related challenges and bring agricultural systems back into balance.”

Aleph Farms, the first cultivated meat company to

Gujarat Governor Acharya Devvrat, who is also a deep-rooted researcher, has shared some of the Agritech innovations developed by him with Union Minister of State (IC) Ministry of Science and Technology; Minister of State (IC) Ministry of Earth Science; MoS of Prime Minister’s Office and Ministry of Personnel, Public Grievances & Pensions Dr Jitendra Singh, at Raj Bhavan. 

Devvrat, who is a great votary of natural farming as a way to avoid the ill effects of chemicals used in conventional farming, said that he has launched a PhD programme in Natural Agriculture by Gujarat University at the Indian Institute of Sustainability (IIS), which will cover various aspects like rural management, environment management, innovation, Agri-entrepreneurship, Agribusiness and Value Chain Management.  He also endorses the idea of an integrated approach to promote Agri-tech Start-ups to make farming easy and more profitable. Dr Jitendra Singh also informed Acharya Devvrat the success of Purple Revolution in J&K is now being replicated in other hilly States with similar climatic conditions like Uttarakhand, Himachal Pradesh and in North-Eastern States as a pilot project

Gujarat Governor Acharya Devvrat, who is also

The new partnership will promote Evonik’s agribusiness capabilities and help to leverage its innovation in the area through better connections to the regional agribusiness ecosystem

Evonik has recently entered into a technological cooperation agreement with the AgTech Garage innovation centre in the Piracicaba Technology Park, in the state of Sao Paolo. The new partnership will promote Evonik’s agribusiness capabilities and help to leverage its innovation in the area through better connections to the regional agribusiness ecosystem.

“We are committed to developing innovative and sustainable solutions for the South American agricultural market. This partnership with AgTech Garage will help us to strongly connect with large companies and startups to promote and develop new technologies for the agricultural industry through open innovation”, said Diego Abreu, Global Marketing Head of Evonik Interface & Performance’s agricultural market segment.

AgTech Garage is one of the world’s main innovation hubs specialising in agrobusiness, promoting initiatives that connects startups, producers, investors, academics, scientists, and other stakeholders to develop technological solutions that contribute to a more sustainable, competitive, and socially inclusive agribusiness across the entire value chain. With established partnerships and the support of leading companies, AgTech Garage’s network provides an innovation dynamic: open, connected, collaborative and agile.

The new partnership will promote Evonik's agribusiness

Cambodian farmers have rapidly expanded their planting areas and started applying XAG’s agricultural drones for productivity boom

XAG has recently introduced drone technology in Cambodia’s cassava cultivations to help small-scale farmers earn better yield while bringing down the costs of farm input. Cassava is the most important agro-industrial crop in Cambodia that provides employment and livelihood to thousands of rural workers. XAG delivers new energy to this sector with its agricultural drones that can use less water and chemical and ease the workload on farm. 

To meet the growing demand of cassava-based products including food, flour, paper and alcohol, Cambodian farmers have rapidly expanded their planting areas and started applying XAG’s agricultural drones for productivity boom.

Chhay Thi is an early adopter of spray drone who owns 20 hectares of land in Varin District, Siem Reap Province of Cambodia. This May, he ordered services from XAG local partner Red Sparrow Cambodia and had the XAG Agricultural Drone to demonstrate autonomous weeding on his 10-hectare cassava field.

“If I have an XAG drone in busy seasons to help me with crop protection, I can save $8-10 per hectare that is formerly spent on manual spraying. Drone operation also reduces the use of chemical by 10-30 per cent, so the resources and money saved can be reallocated to the other crop cultivation,” said Chhay Thi who witnessed the whole process of drone spraying demonstration.

Cambodian farmers have rapidly expanded their planting

RICH has been scouting for innovations in the agriculture sector and prepared a compendium with a list of start-ups and companies using emerging technologies to solve agriculture problems. Rashmi Pimpale, CEO, RICH reveals more about the initiatives in interaction with Agro Spectrum India

What will be the latest innovations in the agriculture sector from RICH?

Launched in 2017 by the Government of Telangana, Research and Innovation Circle of Hyderabad aims to solve complex local and national challenges by facilitating collaborative networks between diverse stakeholders of the research and innovation space. In 2021, RICH was appointed to lead the Science and Technology Cluster for Hyderabad under an initiative spearheaded by the Office of Principal Scientific Adviser (PSA) to the Government of India.

While RICH does not develop innovations by itself, its mandate is to act as an advisory platform for start-ups. However, we have supported innovators, start-ups, and researchers working on solving farming challenges. By fostering collaborations between various entities in the agriculture sector, we have tried to create a supportive ecosystem for innovators in the agri-tech space.

RICH has been scouting for innovations in the agriculture sector and prepared a compendium with a list of start-ups and companies using emerging technologies to solve agriculture problems. The compendium was submitted to the Office of Principal Scientific Adviser (PSA). In one of our latest projects with AgHub, the agri-innovation hub of Professor Jayashankar Telangana State Agricultural University (PJTSAU), we screened the compendium with the professors of PJTSAU to shortlist 21 emerging technology companies. We selected ten start-ups with impactful solutions for the first cohort. While our role was mainly to identify start-ups, PJTSAU’s role was to support them in conducting the field pilots for their technologies. So far, eight out of the ten shortlisted start-ups have completed their field trials, and we have been closely monitoring these pilots.

We are collaborating with the Dept. of Agriculture and the Emerging Technology Wing, Dept. of ITE&C, Govt. of Telangana, to implement a project titled “Emerging Technologies for Agricultural development”. The project is funded by the Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare, Govt. of India, under the National e-Governance Plan in Agriculture (NeGPA). As part of the implementation plan, we will demonstrate solutions using emerging technology to solve five farming challenges: crop monitoring, irrigation management, nutrient management, farm automation, and traceability. We have already started working with two start-ups, KrishiTantra and Aquastride, to demonstrate the on-ground deployability of nutrient management and irrigation management. Both the start-ups have completed their field pilots in the Maheshwaram Mandal block, Rangareddy district, Telangana and are ready for further deployment across the state.

How do you plan to create sustainable impact by developing indigenous solutions for the agri sector?

India has different agricultural ecosystems depending on the region, soil parameters, water availability, etc. One solution does not solve the challenges farmers face in all areas. Hence, traditional knowledge and indigenous solutions are required to find sustainable solutions to farming problems, one region at a time.

We continually partner with other organisations to work on indigenous solutions in the agriculture sector. Recently, we have started working with the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) in their Data for Policy project to develop data-driven climate-resilience policies in Telangana. To find solutions relevant to the agriculture space in the state, we are conducting field studies to understand the farmer’s issues, identify indigenous climate-resilient practices, and scale localised solutions with the potential to create a more considerable impact. We believe grassroots innovations have a higher potential to create a sustainable solution.

RICH has also initiated efforts to address the issues of dryland agriculture systems through dialogue with a wide spectrum of stakeholders and community outreach programmes.

RICH is spearheading the conversation around dryland agriculture. Tell us more about the initiative. 

India’s 68 per cent cultivated area is drylands, supporting 40% of farmers. It produces 44 per cent of our food requirements. In Telangana, 25.29 lakh hectares out of 53.15 lakh hectares of gross cropped area is irrigated. The rest are rainfed areas making dryland agriculture a prime focus for RICH.

Some of the significant challenges dryland farmers face are low yields and crop losses due to poor resilience to climate change, which has drastically affected this food system in the region. As part of our initiatives on dryland farming, we submitted a paper titled ‘Dryland Food Systems in Telangana’ at a Pre-Summit event for the United Nations Food Systems Summit. In this paper, we highlighted the challenges farmers face in India’s dryland agricultural ecosystem.

Before submitting the paper, we convened an online dialogue on the topic with relevant stakeholders, including those from the State and Central Government, researchers, farmers, innovators, and others. 

During this discussion, we identified the following challenges in the dryland ecosystems of Telangana:

• Irrigation Water supply: Farmers depend on rain-fed agriculture. In the absence of rainfall, it is essential to strategize for other possible irrigation methods.

• Genetic erosion: Farmers are experiencing an increased loss of local crop varieties.

• Local seed systems: Communities have weak storage systems and fail to preserve local seeds.

• Subsidies for locally cultivated seeds: Farmers purchase seeds every cropping season from the government at subsidised rates. There is a need to support local seed systems by extending subsidies to local seeds.

• Increase in pest population: Dryland crops are increasingly infested by pests and diseases. Mono-cropping has contributed to this surge.

• Lack of marketing infrastructure: Farmers need platforms to sell their produce in their villages and neighbouring areas.

• Loss of soil fertility, soil degradation, and crop loss due to climate change (rainfall pattern has changed).

• Crops like cotton and soya have replaced millet, pulses (black gram, green gram), and oilseeds (safflower, Niger).

• Government subsidies don’t reach the last mile.

• Less price realisation as the farmers sell their produce to local traders.

• Lack of investments with FPOs and dryland farmer groups for bulk marketing.

We have recorded feedback and suggestions from participants, and we are working on them by identifying start-ups that use technology to solve problems in dryland farming. Our objective is to help foster research and innovation that can solve these issues and create an impact.

We are working on a similar project with the Atal Community Innovation Centre of the Chaitanya Bharathi Institute of Technology (ACIC–CBIT), Hyderabad. As a part of this project, we conducted a Community Outreach Programme in the dryland regions of Telangana and identified 19 major problems faced by farmers in this region. We jointly organise events like hackathons to promote grassroots and student innovators working on feasible engineering solutions to solve pressing farming issues.

Apart from India, are you working with any other countries on the dryland agriculture initiative?

Our focus area lies in India, but we have reached out to Rwanda in Africa through the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FICCI). FICCI has implemented the India-Rwanda Innovation Growth Programme (IRIGP). RICH played the role of a technical agency to identify, mentor, and support Rwandan start-ups in the agriculture space. In a capacity-building workshop conducted by FICCI in Kigali for the Rwandan and Indian start-ups, our Food & Agri Director, Bhubesh Kumar, extended his expertise to eleven agro-companies from Rwanda and mentored a few working on dryland farming problems in India and Rwanda.

How will this initiative help farmers in the long run?

RICH has a focussed approach in identifying innovators and supporting their simple yet effective solutions. We look for grassroots innovators and start-ups who have worked on-ground to identify the challenges a farmer faces before developing any solution instead of companies who devise a solution first and then try to solve a problem using it. The RICH team interacted with the farmers to understand their challenges they face and find solutions for those.  

We emphasise a product’s usability, feasibility, and affordability before extending our support to scale it from lab to market. Through this approach, we have supported relevant innovations that show higher impact. For instance, we identified a dryer developed by a start-up in one of our community projects with ACIC-CBIT. The dryer was optimal for multiple crops and easy to use for farmers.

What will be your funding mechanism for these types of initiatives?

We are not a funding agency for start-ups but foster collaborations between start-ups and relevant organisations. It means we connect start-ups with different organisations based on their needs. If a start-up requires funding, we connect them with suitable incubators or venture capitalists. However, we help start-ups by facilitating business partnerships. For instance, Bio-prime is a start-up supported by RICH. We facilitated business partnership with Delta Agrigenetics, which helped them increase their sales by 45 per cent in two years. This growth has helped them pitch and bag a VC funding from Omnivore Capital.

What will be your future collaborations in the pipeline? 

We are working on a few programmes in the agriculture space. The two significant projects we would want to highlight are:

1. We have recently signed an MoU with Evergreen Energy Enterprises Inc. (EEE) to help develop and deploy an integrated emerging technology-based farm service platform- “Smart Crop” to cultivate oil palm in Telangana under the National Mission on Oilseeds and Oil Palm (NMOOP). This platform enables enrolling farmers, supplying quality seedlings, testing soil quality, automating irrigation, monitoring crops using drones, smoothing the harvesting process, and many more.

2. We have collaborated with the Emerging Technologies Wing and the World Economic Forum to scale up emerging technologies identified under the AI4AI project. We are also working with the Dept of Agriculture, Govt of Telangana, to scale up the technologies successfully demonstrated under the NeGPA project among Telangana farmers.

Sanjiv Das

sanjiv.das@mmactiv.com

RICH has been scouting for innovations in

Corteva, Inc has announced that its Chief Executive Officer, Chuck Magro, will speak at the BMO Global Farm to Market Conference at 11:00 am Eastern Time on Wednesday, May 18, 2022. BMO Capital Markets hosts a variety of conferences each year that bring together institutional investors with corporate or government entities that need capital. 

Remarks will be webcast live. Registration for the webcast can be accessed through the Corteva Investor Relations website. A replay of the presentation will be available after the presentation ends and will be accessible for 90 days.

Corteva is a publicly traded, global pure-play agriculture company that combines industry-leading innovation, high-touch customer engagement and operational execution to profitably deliver solutions for the world’s most pressing agriculture challenges.

Corteva, Inc has announced that its Chief

The ICAR-Indian Institute of Soil Science, Bhopal has recently organised national webinar on “Agritech innovations to leap forward sustainable management of soil and environment”

The ICAR-Indian Institute of Soil Science, Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh has recently organised national webinar on “Agritech innovations to leap forward sustainable management of soil and environment”.

Delivering the inaugural address, the Chief Guest, Dr Suresh Kumar Chaudhari, Deputy Director General (Natural Resource Management), ICAR highlighted the importance of the scientific management of soil and water using the agri-innovations like Sensors, Unmanned Aerial Vehicles, Artificial Intelligence and Cloud-based Solutions. The nature-based solutions for reducing the reliance on the high input agriculture were also stressed by the DDG.

Dr Ashok K Patra, Director, ICAR-IISS, Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh underlined about the ICT based Agritech innovations in doubling the farmers’ income.

Dr Praveen Pankajakshan, VP Data Science & AI, Cropin (India) delivered the Keynote Address on “Crop Mapping using AI & Remote-Sensing for Eco-Agriculture and Sustainability (CARES)”. The ways in which the Cropin is dealing with the issues like crop diversity, soil restoration, climate smart agriculture, carbon storage using prediction models and identification of crop pests & diseases were stated by Dr Praveen.

Dr Sara Malvar, Senior Research Software Development Engineer, Microsoft, Brazil and Tusher Chakraborty, Software Engineer – II, Microsoft, India also delivered the keynote address on “FarmBeats and Terra Vibes: Empowering farmers with affordable digital agriculture and earth observation solutions”.

The ICAR-Indian Institute of Soil Science, Bhopal

The company is investing $5 million to expand its INFUSE by Cargill service and the centre will serve as a regional innovation hub, supporting dairy customers throughout the Middle East, Turkey and Africa

In a move to help dairy manufacturers better respond to evolving consumer demands, Cargill Turkey has opened a state-of-the-art technical application centre and a high-tech ingredient blending production plant in Bursa, Orhangazi. The company is investing $5 million to expand its INFUSE by Cargill service and the centre will serve as a regional innovation hub, supporting dairy customers throughout the Middle East, Turkey and Africa (META).

First introduced in Europe in 2020, INFUSE delivers ingredient solutions that meet new demands around nutritional balance, plant-based, and label-friendliness. It offers the ease of a blended solution that speeds up development cycles, so it can get innovations to market faster.

The Application Centre has an ability to offer solutions for the current consumer trends like calorie or fat reduction, fibre and protein enriched foods, or plant-based foods etc. Besides these emerging trends, Cargill wants to meet META dairy manufacturers’ needs like offering more affordable products to market or solving their supply chain hurdles by offering them customised easy-to-apply blends. The centre includes pilot facilities that mimic full-scale dairy processing production lines, enabling Cargill ingredient and application specialists to rapidly test ingredient solutions in real-world conditions.

Cargill Foods META Executive Committee Member & Chief Product and Marketing Officer, Cem Beysel, said that the centre will serve as a regional innovation area. Beysel added, “As Cargill, we have been trying to support food and beverage manufacturers both in Turkey and in the Middle East and Africa with our ever-expanding products and services. With this investment in Bursa Orhangazi, we will serve our customers as if this place is their own R&D centre. The Application Centre offers manufacturers texturising blends.”

Three pillars serve as the foundation for Cargill’s customer focus in META: an unwavering attention to providing on-trend solutions, a commitment to speed to market, and access to deep technical expertise and resources to create ingredient blends tailored to meet each customer’s unique needs.

“With more than 300 ingredients in our toolbox, we can quickly develop, deliver and optimize prototypes, dramatically shortening bench development time,” Beysel said.

The company is investing $5 million to expand

Bayer will present three new bio technologies, crop protection innovations, digital solutions and new business models during the 34th edition of the Rural Coopavel Show

Bayer, a global company focussed on Life sciences has announced that it will present three new biotechnologies, crop protection innovations, digital solutions and new business models during the 34th edition of the Rural Coopavel Show. The event will be the first opportunity to share in person at a fair – since the beginning of the pandemic – the solutions developed to contribute to a more productive and sustainable agriculture, in addition to showing what will be built collaboratively with farmers in the coming years.

According to Fábio Prata, marketing director for Bayer’s clients in Brazil, “One of our missions as an organisation is to support producers to produce more, in the same area and in a more sustainable way. During the Show Rural Coopavel, we will have the opportunity to show up close, albeit with restrictions due to the moment we are going through.”

Between February 7th and 11th, visitors to the event will be able to check out the new digital model that Bayer has developed for its customers through Espaço Bayer, a virtual platform that offers an immersive and fully customised experience based on the needs and peculiarities of the producer. 

“Our priority is to be closer and closer to our customers, regardless of the channel, so that we can understand the producer’s pain and deliver solutions that generate value”, says Bayer’s marketing director. In addition to exploring the benefits of the program, producers will have the opportunity to learn more about exclusive experiences, as well as access services redeemable through their program points, which can be accumulated by purchasing solutions from any of the brands on display.

During the Rural Coopavel Show, visitors will be able to follow this path of digital transformation of the countryside and experience the features of Climate FieldView, Bayer’s digital agriculture platform that already maps more than 22 million hectares in Brazil. 

Bayer will present three new bio technologies,

The 12th AGROVISION, India’s Premier Agri Summit, scheduled from December 24-27, at Reshimbagh Ground, Nagpur, will witness the latest agricultural technologies.

Modern agricultural practices use mechanised equipment for irrigation, tilling, and harvesting along with hybrid seeds, and adopting these innovations in India will help the agriculture sector to grow. In the event, experts will share insights on ‘Modern agriculture changing rapidly with technological innovations in India’.

Agrovision has completed 11 years of its march and brought about a profound impact on the farm economy of Central India.  Agrovision was conceived in the year 2007 to create a common platform for the farmers, industry, and government and bring together every important entity in agriculture to create a better future for the farmers. The vision of Agrovision is to create a more knowledgeable, practical and a smart farmer.

Farmers from in and around Vidarbha and adjoining states will be participating in the event this year. Apart from this, there will be free interactive workshops for farmers. Conferences on current issues in agriculture and allied agri sectors will be held. Around 400 exhibitors are likely to participate in the event.

The exclusive media partner is Agro Spectrum India along with BioSpectrum India and NuFFooDS Spectrum India. MM Activ Sci-Tech Communications is the organiser of the event.

The 12th AGROVISION, India’s Premier Agri Summit,

The section will showcase latest technologies & innovations transforming agriculture.

The 12th AGROVISION, India’s Premier Agri Summit, scheduled from December 24-27, at Reshimbagh Ground, Nagpur, will witness the latest technology & innovations transforming Agriculture with the latest products and start-ups from all around India. The conference will have a special pavilion for ‘Technology Innovation’ at the 12th Agrovision.

As Agriculture witnesses new innovations and technology, it becomes important to understand latest innovations and products. In the workshop at Agrovision 2021, experts will be present throughout the expo to give detailed information on latest technologies, products and agri-tech start-ups.

Farmers from in and around Vidarbha and adjoining states will be participating in the event this year. Furthermore, conferences on current issues in agriculture and allied agri sectors will be held. Around 400 exhibitors are likely to participate in the event.

The exclusive media partner is Agro Spectrum India along with BioSpectrum India and Nufoods Spectrum India. MM Activ Sci-Tech Communications is the organiser of the event.

The section will showcase latest technologies &