AI Can Transform Strained Global Food Systems, Says Devendra Fadnavis

Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis addressed the India AI Summit 2026, stating that global food systems are under severe strain from climate volatility and fragile supply chains. He emphasized that for the Global South, agriculture is a pillar of livelihood and national security, not just an economic sector. Fadnavis outlined how the India AI Mission aims to use artificial intelligence to deliver inclusion and scale, with agriculture at its core. He detailed specific AI applications, such as hyper-local weather forecasts and precision irrigation, to help over half a billion Indians dependent on farming.

Key Points: Fadnavis: AI Key to Transforming Agriculture Amid Global Strain

  • Global food systems under strain
  • AI as a tool for inclusion and scale
  • Challenges for smallholder farmers
  • India AI Mission's agricultural focus
  • AI enables precision farming solutions
3 min read

Global food systems under strain, AI can transform agriculture: Devendra Fadnavis

Maharashtra CM Devendra Fadnavis highlights AI's role in solving agriculture challenges like climate change and supply chains at India AI Summit.

"AI can provide hyper local weather predictions, early pest outbreaks warnings, precision irrigation and fertilizer guidance. - Devendra Fadnavis"

New Delhi, February 20

Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis on Friday highlighted the mounting global challenges facing the agriculture sector, saying food systems worldwide are under strain due to climate volatility, falling water tables, deteriorating soil health, fragile supply chains, and unpredictable global markets.

Speaking at the India AI Summit 2026, Fadnavis said that for countries of the Global South, agriculture is not just an economic activity but a pillar of livelihood, social stability, and national security. He added that India recognises this reality deeply and, under the leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, has placed digital public infrastructure and responsible artificial intelligence at the centre of national development.

"We meet at a very defining moment. Across the world, food systems are under strain, climate volatility is intensifying, water tables are falling, soil health is deteriorating, supply chains are fragile, and global markets are unpredictable. For countries from the Global South, agriculture is not merely an economic sector, it is livelihood, social stability, and national security. India understands this very deeply, and under the visionary leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, India has placed digital public infrastructure and responsible AI at the centre stage of national development," said Fadnavis.

He said the India AI Mission aims to use technology to promote inclusion, transparency, and scale, with agriculture at its core. Noting that over half a billion Indians depend directly or indirectly on farming, Fadnavis pointed out that smallholders continue to face fragmented information, rising input costs, climate uncertainty, and limited access to credit and markets.

"The India AI Mission is about using technology to deliver inclusion, transparency, and scale. Today, agriculture must sit at the heart of this mission. Over half a billion Indians depend directly or indirectly on agriculture, yet small holders face fragmented information, pricing input cost, climate uncertainty, and limited access to credit and markets," said Fadnavis.

Fadnavis further said traditional extension systems, despite their commitment, are unable to match the scale and speed required to address these challenges. He asserted that artificial intelligence can transform the sector by enabling hyper-local weather forecasts, early pest outbreak warnings, precision irrigation and fertiliser guidance, crop-based credit assessment, transparent and traceable supply chains, and real-time market advisories.

"Traditional extension systems, however committed, cannot match the scale and speed required. Artificial Intelligence changes this equation. AI can provide hyper local weather predictions, early pest outbreaks warnings, precision irrigation and fertilizer guidance, credit scoring based on crop intelligence, transparent traceable supply chains, and real time market advisories," he said.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
The points about climate volatility and falling water tables are so critical. In Punjab, the water crisis is real. If AI can guide precision irrigation, it could save our groundwater. The vision is good, but execution and reaching small farmers is key.
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Rohit P
Hoping this isn't just another summit speech. We hear about digital infrastructure often, but on the ground, many farmers still struggle with basic smartphone literacy and internet connectivity. The mission must include massive digital literacy drives first.
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Priya S
Transparency in supply chains is the most needed reform. If AI can help farmers get fair prices by cutting out middlemen, it will be revolutionary. My father was a farmer, and I've seen the struggle firsthand. This gives hope. 🤞
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Michael C
Interesting perspective from India. The global south leading in Agri-tech application could set a template for other developing nations. The focus on inclusion and scale is what differentiates this from Silicon Valley's approach.
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Kavya N
Early pest warnings through AI? That would be a blessing! Last season, our tomato crop was wiped out by a disease we couldn't identify in time. If technology can prevent such losses, it will save countless families from debt.

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