Kissan Sampurna is a digital decision-support tool designed to help farmers make informed, scientific crop choices tailored to their land. The system combines photo-based soil observation and a rule-based questionnaire model to recommend the three most suitable crops for cultivation.
This screen facilitates the initial step — uploading a soil image. Farmers can either capture a new photo using their phone camera or choose an existing image from the gallery. The uploaded image is reviewed for surface-level indicators like soil texture, moisture content, and color variation. However, the image serves primarily as a reference input; the core recommendation process is driven by structured rule-based logic.
Once the image is uploaded, the system prompts the user to answer a series of simple yet scientifically important questions, such as:
What was the previously grown crop on this land?
What is the water availability (irrigated or rainfed)?
Is the land flat, sloped, or uneven?
What is the intended purpose — commercial farming or household consumption?
What is the typical duration of crop cycles you prefer?
Is soil red, black, sandy, or clay-based?
Do you use fertilizers or organic inputs?
What is the average rainfall in your region?
Are there any pest or disease issues reported?
Each response is processed against a backend rules engine developed in consultation with agricultural scientists. The system cross-references your inputs with a curated database of crops mapped to soil types, agro-climatic zones, rainfall patterns, and regional cultivation practices.
The output is a ranked list of three crops that are most viable for your land — factoring in sustainability, yield potential, and economic return. These recommendations are grounded in scientific agronomy and regional data, ensuring that advice is not generic but location and situation-specific.
Additionally, for each suggested crop, farmers will be able to view:
Expected yield per acre
Required soil conditions
Water and input needs
Seasonal planting windows
Local demand and price potential
Guidelines for uploading a good soil image:
Take the photo in natural daylight, avoiding shadows
Ensure the frame contains only soil (no tools, feet, or objects)
The image should be close-up, clear, and evenly lit
Avoid images with grass, leaves, or water patches
While the image upload is optional, providing it improves the quality of interpretation and gives added confidence to the farmer. If a user is unable to take a photo, the system still proceeds using only questionnaire-based logic.
The design of this feature considers rural usability:
Language can be selected in the user’s preferred script
The interface uses clean, high-contrast text and large tap areas
Navigation is intuitive and localized, even for users with low digital literacy
All uploaded data is handled with strict confidentiality and will not be shared without consent. This system is built with the intent to increase agricultural productivity, improve decision-making, and reduce dependency on guesswork or misinformation.
Kissan Sampurna is developed under an inclusive, farmer-first approach. It is an example of how technology and government support can together bridge the advisory gap for rural farmers and promote sustainable agriculture in India.
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