This survey information can then be used to
provide a clearer picture of what is happening
throughout the agricultural value chain.
• Field Services ? Provides tools to support on-site
training for farmers, extension agencies and also
provides helplines and technical support via call-
center services.
4.7.2 Ezaraat
Ezaraat is a Management Information System ap-
plication that has both a web and a mobile inter-
face. It also supports help-line facilities. The Ezaraat
project was developed by the Centre for Agriculture
Bioscience International (CABI) with funding from
the UK Department for International Development
(DFID) to improve the reach of extension services in
Punjab district of Pakistan.
The system comprises a mobile interface for farm-
ers and extension agencies and a web based inter-
face for institutional users. The hub of the system
is a communication centre which links the farmers
and extension agencies via a mobile interface and the
agricultural agencies and other institutions via a web
based interface. A farmer sends queries for weather
information, fertilizer availability and other exten-
sion based information. These queries are routed to
the extension agents on the field via the information
communication centre. The communication centre
is supported by a database for farmer and agricul-
tural related information. The extension agents pro-
vide answers to farmers queries based on information
they have retrieved from the field and supporting in-
formation from the communication centre database.
Queries that cannot be answered by the extension
agencies are sent to expert panels on the particular
area of expertise via conference call facilitated by the
call entered connected to the communication centre.
4.8 Potentials of Cloud Computing for
Agricultural Information Delivery
Cloud Computing (CC) is defined by (Mell and
Grance, 2011) as a model for enabling ubiquitous,
convenient, on-demand network access to a shared
pool of configurable computing resources (e.g. net-
works, servers, storage, applications, and services)
that can be rapidly provisioned and realized with min-
imal management effort or service provider interac-
tion?. It is useful in developing countries, grappling
with the problem of inadequate on-site ICT Infras-
tructure caused by limited resources to build robust
Data Centres and manage them appropriately. CC
has the potential to provide a quicker, cheaper way
of bridging the digital divide that has developed be-
tween developed and developing countries, and could
provide developing countries with the necessary tools
to exploit the potentials of the information revolution.
There are many existing factors that will support
the adoption of CC in Nigeria but the major ones are,
namely; recent revolution in mobile technology, avail-
ability of skilled manpower, high volume of research
in this novel area and the sudden influx of multina-
tional data players in Nigeria seeking to invest due to
the huge opportunities on ground (Dogo et al., 2013).
The recent drop in oil prices which provides most
of Nigeria?s revenue has made it more imperative to
look to other sectors of the economy to drive develop-
ment and job creation. ICT based agriculture has the
potential to improve the economy and create jobs.
According to (Ballantyne et al., 2010), the use of
ICT to connect farmers and producers to new agri-
cultural knowledge and technology has been tested
and found very useful, to the extent that ICT is now
considered to be transforming agricultural extension.
Cloud Computing provides a leap forward in agricul-
tural development if properly applied, enabling sus-
tainable and optimised utilization of these comput-
ing resources for agricultural extension information
delivery. It also provides for networking between
farmers and extension agencies even across large geo-
graphical areas. These cloud based resources could be
scaled to meet the particular computing need of farm-
ers and extension agencies on demand and at minimal
cost. It will enable the extension agencies to focus
on their core mandate of agricultural extension deliv-
ery rather than managing computer resources. The
combination of cloud and mobile technologies would
reduce the expenditure on information delivery and
monitoring by extension agencies, while increasing
the overall coverage of farmers by these agencies.
More farmers can be reached on time at less cost
and risk to human life with mobile phones. Presently
most extension agencies in Nigeria have to deploy ex-
tension agents to remote areas at great cost and high
risk. This is much more challenging in flash points
like the North east. Data ranging from location infor-
mation and other farmer specific information can also
be easily collected from the field promptly and regu-
larly. This information alongside with location spe-
cific information like weather information etc can be
very critical to the productivity of farmers. This infor-
mation can also be analysed on the Cloud at minimal
cost to the extension agencies. The Cloud could also
provide data storage which can be scaled on-demand.
This data store could serve as pooled information to
aid improved information delivery based on analysed
results. Farmers? activities and progress can also be
Prospects of Cloud and Mobile Computing Adoption for Dissemination of Agricultural Information in Developing Countries
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