Department of Agricultural Economics, College of Agriculture, University of Agricultural Sciences, Raichur-584 104, Karnataka, India
*Corresponding author's e-mail: shruthik952@gmail.com
Online published on 13 March, 2018.
Agriculture in future can be expected to be competitive, knowledge-intensive and market driven. Modern frontier technologies involving systems approach towards efficient crop and input management, land and water use planning are essential for Indian agriculture to meet the challenges in the present context. Further, increasing the productivity level of a pollution free technological factor of production is inevitable. With this concern thepresent study wascarried out in North Eastern parts of Karnataka state, where the precision farming technology was implemented. Hence, an attempt has been made through present paper to study theextent ofusage ofprecision farmingtechnologies at farm level. The technologies implemented were GPS, GIS, variable rate applications of inputs, crop sensors etc. Adopters were aware of benefits of management aspects like size of grid, soil sampling, soil analysis, variable rate of application of fertilizers, laser levelling and harvesting by grids. But still, precision farming has yet to take its firm ground in India by moving from its infant stage. This is possible by dissemination of technology and its benefits by bringing awareness among farming community through efforts of Department of Agriculture byusing SAUs and NGOs as channels.
Precision farming, GIS, GPS, Sensors