Best practices across the world

Six things the world already knows

← Back to the vision

The deck’s slide 3 promised “best practices across the world.” Here are six — each chosen because India can borrow a specific mechanism, not a slogan. We are not the first country to face any of these problems; we can be the first to assemble the answers into one cycle.

Tap any card to see what India can borrow ↻

European Union

IACS / LPIS — ‘checks by monitoring’

Every subsidised parcel is geo-referenced, and Sentinel satellite time-series verify what was actually grown — replacing most physical field inspections.

27 nations

audit farm subsidies by satellite, not by field visit

Tap to see what India can borrow ↻

What India can borrow

Make satellite verification the default audit layer for PMFBY crop-insurance claims and the crop-sown registry — fewer disputes, faster payouts, far less fraud.

↻ Tap to flip back

Brazil

ZARC — agro-climatic risk zoning

Planting-window advisories by municipality × crop × soil. Rural credit and insurance are legally conditioned on planting in the right window for the conditions.

40+ crops

zoned by sowing window, soil and municipality

Tap to see what India can borrow ↻

What India can borrow

Incentive-compatible advisory — the honest version of the deck’s Agri-Match: condition credit and insurance on risk-zoned choices, never a quota.

↻ Tap to flip back

Kenya

M-Pesa rails → DigiFarm

Mobile-money identity lets smallholders without land collateral receive bundled input credit, advisory and market access — built on a phone number, not a title deed.

~96%

of Kenyan households use mobile money

Tap to see what India can borrow ↻

What India can borrow

Transaction-history-based credit scoring for the tenant and oral-lessee farmers that the Kisan Credit Card shuts out for want of a title.

↻ Tap to flip back

Israel

Drip & deficit irrigation

National water accounting plus farm-level fertigation give the world’s leading ‘crop per drop’ — growing more food on a fraction of the water.

~95%

water-use efficiency under drip, versus ~45% flooding the field

Tap to see what India can borrow ↻

What India can borrow

Micro-irrigation as the Central Dry Zone’s only durable groundnut strategy — India has already invoked the ‘Israel model’ in its micro-irrigation budgets.

↻ Tap to flip back

China

Digital villages & sown-area guidance

State sowing-guidance plans plus e-commerce ‘Taobao villages’ that pull rural produce directly into national demand through online aggregation.

7,000+

‘Taobao villages’ selling produce into the national market

Tap to see what India can borrow ↻

What India can borrow

The demand-side aggregation — village clusters plugged into a national market — but NOT the coercive quota planning. Borrow the e-commerce rail, leave the command.

↻ Tap to flip back

India & the Global South

AI as the extension agent

LLM chat advisers, computer-vision crop diagnosis and ML sowing advice put a personalised agronomist in every farmer’s phone — answering in their own language, at any hour.

250k+

farmers already served by a single AI adviser (Farmer.Chat)

Tap to see what India can borrow ↻

What India can borrow

Build the AI advisory layer directly on AgriStack — voice-first and in every language — so extension finally reaches the farmers it has always missed.

↻ Tap to flip back

Why the Israel lesson matters: water per drop

Field-water that actually reaches the crop — drip irrigation versus flooding the field.

  • Drip irrigation~95%
  • Flood irrigation~45%

Water-use efficiency, indicative ranges. Netafim

None of this is untested. Every mechanism above is running, at national scale, somewhere on earth. The blueprint’s claim is only that they belong together.

And then India can return the favour

Borrowing runs both ways. A cycle proven in a dry Karnataka district — built for small, rainfed, multilingual farming — is exactly the model the rest of the developing world needs. That is where this story goes next.

From a district to SAARC, ASEAN and the world →