Design and Market Integration of a Low-Cost Smart Agro-Sensing System for Enhancing Smallholder Farm Productivity in Emerging Economies
  • Author(s): Irene Peter Chibwaye
  • Paper ID: 1715395
  • Page: 3374-3386
  • Published Date: 06-04-2026
  • Published In: Iconic Research And Engineering Journals
  • Publisher: IRE Journals
  • e-ISSN: 2456-8880
  • Volume/Issue: Volume 9 Issue 9 March-2026
Abstract

This study presents the conceptual design, market integration strategy, and economic feasibility of a low-cost smart agro-sensing system (TIK) developed to address persistent productivity challenges among smallholder farmers in Tanzania. The agricultural sector, which employs approximately 65% of the population and contributes nearly 29% to national GDP, remains constrained by limited access to modern technologies, unreliable climatic conditions, and inadequate market linkages. The proposed system integrates wireless soil and environmental sensors with a mobile application capable of operating offline, enabling real-time monitoring of soil pH, moisture levels, weather patterns, and fertilizer requirements. By leveraging satellite data and embedded analytics, the system provides actionable recommendations to farmers regarding crop selection, irrigation scheduling, and harvesting cycles. Additionally, the platform incorporates a digital market infrastructure that connects farmers to buyers, addressing post-harvest commercialization challenges. The study further evaluates a non-equity strategic alliance between a U.S.-based technology firm (FiberTech) and a Tanzanian software company (AgroFocus) as an effective model for technology transfer and localized deployment. Financial projections indicate an initial slow adoption phase with revenue growth from $250,000 in year one to $7 million by year five, driven by increasing market awareness and scalability across Tanzania’s 31 regions. Despite early-stage financial losses, long-term projections suggest strong market penetration due to high demand among small-scale farmers, who constitute over 80% of agricultural producers. The findings demonstrate that affordable, context-specific digital agricultural technologies, combined with strategic partnerships and adaptive market entry strategies, can significantly enhance productivity, improve income levels, and contribute to sustainable agricultural transformation in emerging economies.

Citations

IRE Journals:
Irene Peter Chibwaye "Design and Market Integration of a Low-Cost Smart Agro-Sensing System for Enhancing Smallholder Farm Productivity in Emerging Economies" Iconic Research And Engineering Journals Volume 9 Issue 9 2026 Page 3374-3386 https://doi.org/10.64388/IREV9I9-1715395

IEEE:
Irene Peter Chibwaye "Design and Market Integration of a Low-Cost Smart Agro-Sensing System for Enhancing Smallholder Farm Productivity in Emerging Economies" Iconic Research And Engineering Journals, 9(9) https://doi.org/10.64388/IREV9I9-1715395