Maharashtra CM Touts AI as Key to Climate-Proof Farming Revolution

Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis has championed artificial intelligence as a critical tool for developing climate-proof agriculture. He cited the state's MahaVISTAAR AI initiative, which already serves millions of farmers as a one-stop digital solution. Speaking at the India AI Summit 2026, he stressed that for the Global South, agriculture is a pillar of livelihood and national security, not just an economic sector. Fadnavis stated that under PM Modi's leadership, India is placing digital infrastructure and responsible AI at the center of national development to address farming challenges.

Key Points: AI for Climate-Proof Agriculture: Maharashtra CM's Vision

  • AI can build climate-resilient farming
  • MahaVISTAAR app serves 2.5M farmers
  • Agriculture is vital for Global South stability
  • India AI Mission focuses on inclusion and scale
  • Tech addresses fragmented info and climate risks
3 min read

"We need climate-proof agriculture, and AI has potential to do that": Maharashtra CM

Maharashtra CM Devendra Fadnavis highlights AI's role in creating climate-resilient agriculture through the MahaVISTAAR initiative at India AI Summit.

"Today, due to climate change, we need climate-proof agriculture, and AI has the potential to do that. - Devendra Fadnavis"

New Delhi, February 20

Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis on Friday highlighted the potential role of artificial intelligence in achieving climate-proof agriculture and cited the state's MahaVISTAAR AI initiative that seeks to provides "one-stop solution" to farmers.

Speaking to ANI, CM Fadnavis said, "Today, due to climate change, we need climate-proof agriculture, and AI has the potential to do that. So, we are already using AI. We have started MahaVISTAAR. Through it, we have around 2.5 million farmers on our app, and that is a one-stop solution for all the farmers."

He added,"It's a very good thing. I'm very happy. India is leading this revolution in AI, and it will have huge results, especially in the Global South."

The MahaVISTAAR-AI initiative is set to usher in a new phase of tech-enabled, inclusive agriculture in Maharashtra, providing farmers with reliable, accessible, and timely support as they manage the Kharif season and future cropping cycles.

Earlier today, CM Fadnavis 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.

The India AI Impact Summit 2026 brings together policymakers, industry leaders and technology experts to discuss the future of artificial intelligence and its role in driving innovation and economic growth.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Good initiative, but the real test is on the ground. Will the AI advice reach the small farmer in a remote village with poor internet? The government must ensure last-mile connectivity and digital literacy first.
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Arjun K
Finally, some forward-thinking policy. Climate change is hitting our farmers hard with unseasonal rains and droughts. Using AI for crop advisory and soil health can save livelihoods. Jai Kisan!
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Sarah B
Interesting to see India taking a lead in AI for agriculture. The focus on the Global South is crucial. Hope the technology is shared and adapted to benefit small-scale farmers everywhere.
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Vikram M
2.5 million farmers on the app is a good start, but Maharashtra has millions more. The challenge is scaling up and making the advice hyper-local and accurate. The devil is in the implementation.
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Kavya N
As someone from a farming family, I appreciate the intent. But alongside fancy apps, we need reliable electricity, water for irrigation, and fair MSP. AI is a tool, not the entire solution.

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