Creating a virtual platform to connect the farmers and buyers in accordance with demand & supply to make decision-making easier.
This project aims to reduce post-harvest losses of fruits and vegetables, a significant contributor to greenhouse gas emissions due to unnecessary transportation, excess cultivation, and poor disposal practices. By minimizing these losses, the project seeks to lower emissions and reduce the demand for additional crop production, contributing to climate change mitigation. Core objectives include reducing post-harvest waste, cutting carbon emissions from transport, raising community awareness, and enabling farmers to make informed supply-demand decisions. Key challenges include changing established attitudes among farmers and buyers, introducing them to modern technologies, and navigating potential legal and political barriers. The project’s main outcome will be a mobile application designed to create a farmer-buyer network, enhancing demand efficiency, minimizing waste, and generating data trends for future decision-making. Through these efforts, the project strives to promote sustainable agriculture and climate resilience.
Our ultimate goal of the project is to enhance mitigation towards climate change through mobile application development to reduce post-harvest losses. To make it appealing to the target community, providing a simple & user-friendly interface was crucial. A first version was made in English, but a more inclusive one will also be released in the local languages. The application simplifies selling products by helping farmers identify buyers, thereby reducing useless transport among economic centers. Even small-scale and subsistence farmers will be able to sell their products through this app and also make decisions based on the trends of demand. The impact of the application surpasses mere convenience. By avoiding futile transportation and the accompanying tonnes of vegetables that rot in dumping sites, greenhouse gas emissions are minimized. Farmers can adjust their production to actual demand on account of reduced wastages. Minimization of overproductions minimizes methane emissions even during the production process. Further, the application aids decision-making related to crop variety selection, cultivation, and harvesting, thereby increasing efficiency. We hope to create partnerships with other organizations, like the Department of Agriculture, Sri Lanka, for expansion across the entire agriculture sector and local communities while adding value to climate change mitigation too.
TEAM MEMBERS:
- S. M. S. R. Samarakoon
- H. M. Chathura Kavindya
- P.E. Madhuranga
- W. M. R. K. W. Bandara