ASTANA, Kazakhstan, April 28. Kazakhstan is
scaling up the use of artificial intelligence and satellite
monitoring technologies in agriculture to boost crop yields and
optimize costs, Trend
reports via the Kazakh government.
Chairman of the Grain Union of Kazakhstan Bakhtiyar Ospanov said
at a government meeting that digital solutions are being actively
implemented in the agro-industrial complex.
As part of precision farming policies, the company has
introduced the international NDVI satellite monitoring system.
Artificial intelligence analyzes crop conditions, identifies plant
water stress, and detects seeding errors. Operational data shows
that targeted adjustments to agricultural practices based on AI
recommendations increase yield quality by 10–15 percent per
field.
“Our digital platform is evolving from a simple accounting
system into an intelligent agribusiness management tool. As a
result of its implementation, we have achieved a 5-10% reduction in
operating costs, a 10-20% increase in production efficiency, and a
significant reduction in the human factor,” Ospanov said.