Maharashtra Leads India's AI Revolution in Agriculture with New Policy

Maharashtra has become the first Indian state to host a dedicated Global Conference on Artificial Intelligence in Agriculture. Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis inaugurated the event and launched the state's comprehensive AI-based Agriculture Policy for 2025-2029. The government has introduced the MahaVISTAAR app, a digital companion already used by 3 million farmers for crop advice, weather updates, and market prices. The state has signed key MoUs, including with the World Bank and Wageningen University, to build responsible AI infrastructure for farming.

Key Points: Maharashtra First State with AI Conference for Farmers

  • First state AI conference for farmers
  • MahaVISTAAR app with 30 lakh users
  • Rs 500 crore AI Agriculture Policy 2025-2029
  • AI for pest detection & tribal language support
  • MoU with World Bank & Dutch university
3 min read

Maharashtra 1st state to host AI conference for agriculture: CM Fadnavis

CM Devendra Fadnavis announces AI agriculture policy, launches MahaVISTAAR app for 3 million farmers to access crop advisory and market data.

"Maharashtra has resolved to lead the AI revolution in agriculture - CM Devendra Fadnavis"

Mumbai, Feb 23

Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis has said that Maharashtra is the first state in India to organise a dedicated Artificial Intelligence conference for the comprehensive benefit of farmers.

"Farmers must confidently use digital services. Through various digital apps introduced for farmers, they can now communicate in their own language and receive immediate answers to agriculture-related queries. The state government is working to improve farmers' livelihoods by bringing together universities, research institutions, and industries through the Maha-AI Innovation Centre to create a digitally empowered ecosystem," the Chief Minister said on Sunday at the inauguration of the "Global Conference on Artificial Intelligence in Agriculture and Investors' Summit (AI for Agri 2026)" held under the "Maharashtra Agricultural Artificial Intelligence Policy 2025-2029".

Chief Minister Fadnavis said that under the leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, India has given significant importance to digital infrastructure and AI for national development.

The India AI Mission aims to ensure inclusivity, transparency, and large-scale impact through technology, he added.

"Agriculture is connected to every household and every individual. Maharashtra has resolved to lead the AI revolution in agriculture and is the first state to announce a comprehensive AI-based agriculture policy. The government has developed "Maha-Vistar AI" as a digital companion for farmers. Through this platform, farmers can access crop advisory, weather updates, pest management information, market price trends, and government schemes. So far, three million (30 lakh) farmers have accessed the app, and registrations are increasing," the Chief Minister said.

He emphasised that Maharashtra will not merely be an AI user but will become a leader in responsible and impactful AI usage.

"Since not every farmer owns a smartphone or prefers only Marathi, the state government has introduced multilingual and voice-based digital services."

The aim is to expand these services to every taluka and village in the state, CM Fadnavis said.

Maharashtra Agriculture Minister Dattatray Bharne emphasised that even in this era of technology, the farmer must remain at the centre of agricultural innovation.

"Integrating AI, drones, and Internet of Things (IoT) with farmers' traditional knowledge can make Maharashtra's agriculture a global model."

"Maharashtra has allocated nearly Rs 500 crore for implementing the AI-based Agriculture Policy (2025-2029). More than three million farmers have downloaded the MahaVistar app. The state aims to use AI to ensure food security, tackle climate change, empower women, and promote sustainable farming. Artificial Intelligence and Agritech Innovation Centres will be established to deliver AI-based services across districts," he added.

The state government on Sunday launched AI Applications, including Maha Agri-X (Maha-Agri Data Exchange), LLM for Bhili Tribal Language, MahaVISTAAR Voice Telephony App and AI-Based Pest and Disease Detection System: Identifies crop diseases and pests using image-based recognition technology.

Meanwhile, a tripartite MoU was signed between One Step Foundation and the World Bank to document the architectural design, governance frameworks, implementation lessons, and open standards of Maharashtra's AI-enabled digital public infrastructure "MahaVISTAAR".

Another MoU was signed with Wageningen University and Research (WUR) in The Netherlands, under Maharashtra's Agri AI Policy 2025-2029 to promote responsible and effective AI usage in agriculture.

This collaboration will strengthen cooperation between Maharashtra's agricultural universities and international institutions.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Good step, but execution is key. We've seen many digital schemes fail to reach the last mile. The voice-based service for non-smartphone users is a smart move. Maharashtra leading the way is commendable. Let's see if other states follow.
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Arjun K
Finally, some forward-thinking policy! 500 crore is a significant investment. Integrating AI with traditional farming knowledge is the perfect blend. The MoU with Wageningen University is impressive – we need global best practices. Jai Maharashtra! 🇮🇳
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Sarah B
As someone working in tech, I'm thrilled to see India embracing AI for social good. The focus on inclusivity – like the LLM for Bhili language – is crucial. Technology should bridge gaps, not widen them. Hoping this becomes a model for the entire country.
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Vikram M
I have a respectful criticism. While the conference and policy sound great, what about the basic issues? Farmers need fair prices for their produce and timely access to credit. AI is a tool, not a solution to the core economic problems. Let's not get carried away by jargon.
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Kavya N
The pest detection system using image recognition is brilliant! My father spends so much time figuring out what's wrong with his crops. If he can just click a photo and get an answer, it will save time, money, and crops. Hope the app is lightweight and doesn't need high-speed data.

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