
India's Deepflow Brings AI to 1,000+ Farms Fighting Climate
A startup in Kerala is putting weather stations and soil sensors directly in farmers' hands, turning ancient agricultural wisdom into AI-powered decisions. The tech has already helped more than 1,000 farms across India manage crops smarter in an era of unpredictable weather.
In the heart of Kannur, Kerala, a small team of engineers realized that India's farmers were fighting climate change with one hand tied behind their backs.
Deepflow Technologies set out to fix that gap. The agritech startup builds portable devices that measure everything from soil pH to rainfall in real time, then pairs that data with AI to give farmers instant, hyperlocal weather forecasts and crop advice.
Their Augmented Weather Stations sit right in the fields, continuously tracking temperature, humidity, and rainfall. That ground-level data gets combined with advanced weather models to generate alerts specific to each farm, not just each district.
The game changer is their Portable Soil Assessment Device. Farmers can test their soil's pH, moisture, and nutrient levels on the spot without waiting days for lab results or relying on guesswork passed down through generations.

Deepflow didn't stop at individual farmers. They built the Krishi Bhavan platform, software that helps farmer collectives, government departments, and agricultural extension agencies plan and track entire growing seasons across multiple crops simultaneously.
That last part matters because most agritech solutions focus on a single crop like rice or wheat. Deepflow designed their system to handle the messy reality of Indian agriculture, where small farmers grow multiple crops on the same land throughout the year.
The startup's integrated approach combines old-school boots-on-the-ground data collection with cutting-edge digital tools. Extension workers can now walk into a field, test the soil in minutes, check the weather forecast for the next two weeks, and recommend exactly which fertilizer to use and when.
The Ripple Effect
More than 1,000 farms across India now use Deepflow's technology. For farmer-producer organizations managing hundreds of members, the platform means they can finally give personalized advice at scale instead of generic tips that work for some farms and fail for others.
The timing couldn't be better. As extreme weather events become more frequent and unpredictable across India, farmers need hyperlocal forecasts more than ever. A village five kilometers away might get heavy rain while another stays bone dry.
By putting sophisticated climate intelligence into the hands of smallholder farmers, Deepflow is leveling a playing field that has tilted against them for decades. Better data means better decisions, which means better harvests and more resilient livelihoods even as the climate shifts.
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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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