FAO Investment Centre

Digital Agriculture

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Digital technologies have taken root in agriculture, boosting efficiency and productivity and tackling bottlenecks in food safety, postharvest handling, market access, finance and supply chain management.

Yet, agriculture is still one of the least digitized sectors in the global economy.

Digital solutions such as mobile payments, e-advisory, applications to assess input quality and provide traceability, e-commerce platforms, fintechs and weather-based insurance can be game changers for farmers.

The FAO Investment Centre works with Members and partners to accelerate investments in digital agriculture. Activities include working on policy aspects, introducing digital technologies into investment projects, using digital solutions for improved land administration, and producing investment briefs and digital agriculture profiles on various countries.

At a glance

  • With the World Bank, FAO is carrying out policy work in Malaysia on food systems digitization. 
  • With the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, FAO is promoting precision agriculture solutions in horticulture, traceability systems in dairy and a digital certification system for agriculture trade. 
  • Together with the UN Capital Development Fund, FAO has promoted digital solutions in transhumant livestock systems in the Sahel region.
  • And with the African Development Bank, FAO has produced a digital agriculture investment toolkit. 
  • FAO published diverse studies with partners on digitization, including on funding the digital transformation of land administration; digital technologies in Ukraine’s grain sector (EBRD); digital agriculture in action in India (ICRISAT); and the use of digital technologies to strengthen agriculture human capital (IFPRI). Publications on Türkiye and Serbia are forthcoming. 

The private sector is central to digitization efforts, as it provides most of the research and development for digital solutions on the ground. But for that to happen, public interventions need to bridge the digital divide, which still excludes many small farmers, and to make the business environment more conducive for providers.

Latest stories
Latest publications
03/2023

This publication is part of the FAO-World Bank Cooperative Programme and aims to review and inform on the latest applications...

09/2022

Digital transformation involves changing land administration systems from paper to 100 percent digital. It leads to greater activity and better...

09/2022

Comprising 30 percent of agricultural output and with an area of 15 million hectares, the grain sector is a pillar...

06/2022

Agriculture is becoming more knowledge-intensive. Access to timely, accurate information tailored to specific locations and conditions is critical to helping...

12/2021

Strengthening the skills and capabilities of agricultural producers, especially smallholder producers, to successfully manage their agricultural enterprises requires sustained investment...