Sustainable Economic Projects - Horticulture

NEWA Family CBO mobilizes resources to help members undertake agribusiness activities to supplement their daily income. We have entered into partnership with various agencies and organizations to mobilize for funding and donations to help members construct greenhouses for their horticultural activities.

Through our Climate Smart Agriculture in rural parts of Kenya, we endeavor to support smallholder farmers by providing customized information and services that increase productivity, profitability, and environmental sustainability. 

We are currently working on a new model for agricultural extension: reaching farmers with personalized agricultural advice through their mobile phones. They implement this model in collaboration with partner organizations and governments and gather evidence on its impact. We aim to improve the lives of 5000 farmers in Migori County with our services and support to existing systems.

Using two-way communication and information aggregation, we offer farmers useful information customized by geography, market, and farmer characteristics. As farmers realize the benefits of this service, they have incentives to contribute accurate information into the system that will improve their recommendations over time. They incorporate insights from behavioral economics and social learning theory and make use of A/B testing and machine learning techniques designed to identify what types of information and delivery mechanisms work best for farmers.

Progressive Agriculture for Sustainable Development (PASD) is our flagship climate smart agricultural project that we aim to build on to transforming the way farmers in developing countries receive agricultural advice using research and technology.

Why Progressive Agriculture for Sustainable Development (PASD)

Smallholder farms support more than 23 million people in Kenya, but many rely on inefficient and environmentally unsustainable agricultural practices. Small changes in agricultural practices can substantially improve productivity and profitability. However, offering farmers standardized agricultural advice has limited effectiveness due to variation in local conditions and farmer characteristics. Traditional extension systems have been unable to incorporate and disseminate this information to farmers, in part due to the high costs of operating in rural areas. 

In developed countries, precision agriculture technologies are transforming agricultural production by allowing farmers to better target inputs and management decisions to local conditions. In developing countries, most precision agriculture technologies are beyond the reach of most farmers. However, several technological innovations have created new opportunities to provide customized information to farmers:

  • - Mobile soil analysis labs with spectroscopy improve access to high quality soil data
  • - Satellite and drone photographs enable data collection and validation from above
  • - New weather prediction models generate real-time estimates useful to farmers
  • - Widespread mobile phone use facilitates information delivery and collection

These technologies can be combined with the best available research to improve information content and messaging effectiveness:

  • - Behavioral economics can improve messaging and encourage adoption
  • - Social learning theory can facilitate the diffusion of relevant information
  • - Big data and machine learning allow for personalized advice
  • - A/B tests allow near instantaneous upgrades
  • - Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) make for more rigorous evaluation

Progressive Agriculture for Sustainable Development (PASD) harnesses these innovations in technology and research to improve the lives of smallholder farmers. They are taking ideas from precision agriculture in developed countries and adapting them to the needs and constraints of farmers in developing countries. Because individual farmers are often not able to invest in data collection and experimentation themselves, Progressive Agriculture for Sustainable Development (PASD) brings this customized information to farmers’ fingertips. 

Our Approach

We use an precision model that impact the lives of farmers through two channels:

- The Progressive Agriculture for Sustainable Development (PASD) Research Lab is used to design and operate a service for farmers, either as part of a research pilot or an on-going operation. These spaces serve as a “sandbox” for them to rigorously test ideas while at the same time providing a valuable service to the farmers they serve. They currently have labs in both India and Kenya.

- The Progressive Agriculture for Sustainable Development (PASD) Partnership model scale the ideas that work through partnership with governments and organizations with a shared vision of building, operating, and evaluating a service to farmers. We lend our expertise to co-develop these systems, to perform data analysis, to design pilots and experiments, and to offer advice on system improvements. We currently work with partners in India, Kenya, Pakistan, Rwanda, and Ethiopia.