Fall Armyworm Tech Prize
What was the Fall Armyworm Tech Prize?
In 2018, Challenge Works launched the $400,000 Fall Armyworm Tech Prize to help farmers in sub-Saharan Africa combat the invasive, crop-eating pest, fall armyworm.
The Prize was run on behalf of Feed the Future, U.S. Government, USAID, The Foundation for Food and Agriculture Research (FFAR), Land O’Lakes International Development, CIMMYT, CABI, The Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC), The Syngenta Foundation for Sustainable Agriculture (SFSA), MEST and BRAC.
Why did we run the Prize?
The fall armyworm is an incredibly invasive species that eats the crops that farmers depend on. Fall armyworm poses a significant threat to food security and is present in 46 of Africa’s 54 countries, particularly those in sub-Saharan Africa.
The prize focused on digital tools and approaches that provide timely, context-specific information that enable smallholder farmers and those who support them to identify, treat, and track incidence of fall armyworm in Africa, avoiding overuse of pesticides which could promote resistance.
Impact of the Prize
- 4.5 million people across Africa utilised or benefited from the finalists’ solutions
- Innovators secured 17 partnerships during the Prize
- The Prize spurred FFAR to sponsor and participate in future innovation competitions
- The Prize attracted 81% of its submissions from African participants, 65% of finalists were from African countries and two thirds of the winners were African organisations
- 68% of finalists had existing solutions, but the Prize inspired them to adapt or improve it to address the problem
- Over 70% of finalists felt they had improved their skills through the Prize
The winners
-
Farm.Ink (Uganda) – Grand Prize Winner
The Fall Armyworm Virtual Advisor is an interactive solution that provides knowledge on how to identify, scout, and treat fall armyworm to its users. The tool is integrated into Farm.ink’s award-winning mobile service, Africa Farmers Club, an online group and chatbot that enables more than 150,000 farmers across Africa to find information about farming. Through the Facebook Messenger platform, the solution gamifies learning and after completing trainings, allows farmers to access the FAW Scouter, a progressive web app that guides farmers through the scouting process. It then provides farmers with personalized recommendations for how to treat fall armyworm on their farms.
-
Akorion Company LTD (Uganda) – Runner-up
An enhancement of the pest and disease diagnostic in the EzyAgric app, using proprietary artificial intelligence to allow smallholder farmers to detect the moth, larva, and eggs of fall armyworm across all possible affected crops.
-
Project Concern International and Dimagi (USA) – Runner-up
AfriFARM is a mobile phone application designed to facilitate education, monitoring, and safe and effective responses to the threat of fall armyworm.
-
Farmerline Limited (Ghana) – Frontier Innovation Winner
CdPAS Mobile combines innovative digital technologies and participatory engagements of stakeholders to predict, identify, monitor, and mitigate the outbreak of fall armyworm across Africa, providing crop disease prediction and advisory services on any mobile phone.
-
Henson Geodata Technologies Ltd. (Ghana) – Frontier Innovation Winner
Igeza is a web and mobile application enabling early detection and notification of fall armyworm to a control center via video, image or voice, with geolocation.
-
eHealth Systems Africa Foundation (Nigeria) – Frontier Innovation Winner
CornBot is a maize disease diagnostic tool using image-based interactive mechanisms in local languages to help farmers identify, track, map, and treat fall armyworm.
Watch this to learn more about the problem of Fall Armyworm…
The finalists
-
Limitless Apps Studios (Ghana)
“Boa Me” is an artificial intelligence-powered, web-based application with a predictive analysis algorithm that provides actionable insights to users. The app combines past data, satellite data, and user information about fall armyworm and translates it into insights that farmers can access through local voice systems, SMS alerts, or a public announcement system.
-
myAgro (United States)
myAgro provides a digital payment platform enabling farmers to use their mobile phones to pay incrementally for fall armyworm specific training, seeds, and other products, which help farmers to prepare and better deal with fall armyworm attacks on their crops.
-
Africa Rising (South Africa)
Africa Rising is a multi-faceted platform that helps farmers understand when outbreaks of fall armyworm might occur, provides advice on best practices, and directly answers farmers’ questions. This is a two-way communication network utilizing chatbots to deliver SMS, interactive voice recordings (IVR), or messages through other popular communications tools such as WhatsApp.
-
Technoplus IT Solutions (Uganda)
Agri-Poll is a smart survey platform that allows extension workers and key stakeholders to gather, analyze, and disseminate images (of pests and crops), location, time, weather, and environments in which the pests have been detected via feature phones, smart phones, and web platforms. The information is analyzed to aggregate and provide actionable information.
-
Saillog (Israel)
Saillog is developing a digital monitoring system enabled by an app that leverages and deploys artificial intelligence to provide diagnoses and generate warning alerts for fall armyworm outbreaks based on geographical spread and forecasting models.
-
Arris Technologies (United States)
Arris Technologies is developing a monitoring solution using solar-powered LED lure, intelligent cameras, and a convolutional neural network to detect and alert central pest management authorities and local farmers via SMS of fall armyworm outbreaks.
-
Digicult (Taiwan)
Digicult is a digital platform using mobile communication devices, multimedia processing, and crowdsourcing to effectively help farmers prevent and fight fall armyworm. Digicult provides digital training modules for farmers and uses crowdsourcing to find agents with suitable mobile devices who can support farmers who do not have access to advanced devices. Digicult analyzes and shares fall armyworm data from interactions between the platform and farmers, providing visualization maps for government and other entities to assess the endangered regions.
-
VineTech (Kenya)
Fall Armyworm Identification, Verification and Mitigation is a technology-based solution that employs drones, user-friendly mobile technology, and databases/maps, which, together can properly identify fall armyworm and provide appropriate treatment options. An initial notification sent via USSD/SMS from a farmer will trigger a nearby extension officer to visit the farm to assist within 24 hours.
-
FarmSmartng/Ayaja Agro-Allied Ltd. (Nigeria)
The FarmSmart Pest and Disease (PAD) app is a mobile app that farmers and farm supervisors can use to take pictures of diseased or ravaged plants. It sends these images to the back-end, where artificial intelligence and machine learning algorithms bring up suggestions of what the issue might be from a database containing similar cases, including suggestions for possible interventions. PAD also taps into expertise from researchers, manufacturers, and financial institutions – to enable rapid response.
-
ENDELEA UGANDA (Uganda)
LEA is a simple digital app designed – after extensive research and consultation with farmers – to work both online and offline. The user will use the app to take a picture of the diseased plant. The app will then instantly identify whether the problem is fall armyworm, the stage of growth, and extent of crop damage, then give treatment options and approved pesticides with their genuine suppliers. LEA can be used by farmers directly who can operate smartphones or through extension workers and model farmers.
-
MEDIAE (Kenya)
Shape Up Against Armyworm provides up-to-date information weekly on fall armyworm through the Shamba Shape Up (SSup) TV/Radio series. These two- to three-minute messages will reach an audience of 4 million to mitigate against fall armyworm. The SSup Media series will provide updates and map locations of at-risk areas, recommended practices for control, access to inputs, and links to further information, especially via the iShamba mobile call centre and SMS services.
-
FHI 360 (United States)
UDefeatFAW incorporates interactive radio and SMS/interactive voice response (IVR) for two-way communication with smallholder farmers on pesticides, the first defense in managing fall armyworm. UDefeatFAW will drive farmers to other technology platforms; shift social norms; build skills; deliver vouchers for appropriate, affordable pesticides; and direct farmers to services and support, such as interactions with agricultural extension workers at demonstration plots.
-
Mercy Corps, Wefarm (United States)
WeFAW is a monitoring, early warning, and response system developed by Mercy Corps, Wefarm, and three other key partners. The platform will both share information with farmers, as well as gather data and insights from them. Combining these with remote sensing and other data sources, WeFAW will continue to develop its algorithms to enhance its detection, prevention, and expert advice capabilities on the fall armyworm.
-
Intella (Kenya)
Zaois-Tech is a three-tier networking approach involving farmers, extension officers, and government whose interactions are governed by an integrated, online-based portal to gather, store, analyze, and disseminate information to support action against fall armyworm.
Who were the challenge judges?
- Chris Burns, Chief Digital Development Officer and Director for Technology in the Innovation, Technology and Research Hub at USAID
- Joel Wipperfurth, Director of Business Operations and Retail Execution at WinField United
- Josephine Okot, Board of Directors , International Fertilizer Development Center (IFDC)
- Ethel Cofie, CEO and DirectorCEO and Director, Edel Technology Consulting
- Sally Rockey, Executive Director at Foundation for Food and Agriculture Research
- Lungisa Matshoba, Co-founder & CTO at Yoco
- Bruce Cameron