
AI Grows Strawberries Year-Round in 113°F Heat
Indian farmers are using artificial intelligence to grow crops in conditions once thought impossible, including strawberries in desert-level heat. From climate control to supply chain optimization, AI is transforming agriculture from guesswork into precision science.
Strawberries are thriving in 113-degree Fahrenheit heat in Ahmedabad, India, and artificial intelligence is making it possible.
Purple Farms uses AI-driven climate control to grow the delicate fruit year-round, even during peak summer when outdoor temperatures would normally kill the plants. Climate is no longer a constraint for what farmers can grow or when they can grow it.
Over the past few years, precision farming has moved from experimentation to everyday practice across India. Satellite imaging, algorithms, and AI models now shape farming decisions long before a seed touches the ground, helping farmers optimize yields and adapt to unpredictable weather patterns.
The technology extends beyond just growing crops. Vijay Singh, CEO of Shunya Agritech in New Delhi, uses AI to manage supply chains, ensuring produce gets from farm to market with less waste. The system predicts demand, tracks quality, and coordinates logistics in real time.

Bengaluru-based Cropin has partnered with SatLeo Labs to combine thermal and satellite signals with AI-driven agricultural intelligence platforms. Farmers can now monitor crop health across thousands of acres from their phones, catching problems before they spread.
The Ripple Effect
This technological shift is reducing risk for farmers who have historically lived season to season, vulnerable to weather and market fluctuations. Data-led decision-making helps them know exactly how much water, fertilizer, and attention each section of their field needs, cutting costs while improving harvests.
For a country where agriculture employs nearly half the workforce, AI's ability to make farming more predictable and profitable could stabilize livelihoods for millions of families. The same tools that grow strawberries in extreme heat can help small farmers protect their rice, wheat, and vegetable crops from increasingly erratic weather patterns.
Tomorrow's farms are learning to think, one data point at a time.
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Based on reporting by YourStory India
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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