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Data-driven interventions are widely suggested to be a disruptive force in global food systems1,2,3,4,5. The aim is to use big data and mobile technology to address issues as diverse as low crop yields6, poor human nutrition7, disease8 and climate adaptation1. However, mobile network coverage, handset ownership and affordable mobile service subscriptions are necessary prerequisites to achieve these solutions. Although the footprints of mobile networks and mobile phone ownership have increased in recent years, and the costs of mobile data have declined9, substantial gaps in access remain. Nearly half of the world’s population is estimated to still be without Internet access10. There is concern that this digital divide could stall the realization of human rights11 and the Sustainable Development Goals of the United Nations (UN), particularly those relating to education, equity, health and well-being12.

We define data-driven farming as the use of data to augment decision-making in farming systems and thus improve food system outcomes such as crop yields, profits, environmental sustainability and food security. The potential for data-driven farming to improve food systems has recently expanded due to advances in three key areas: data generation (for example, in mobile devices, field sensors, satellites and ‘farmers as sensors’), data processing and predictive analytics (for example, by using big data stacks, machine learning and deep learning), and human–computer interactions (that is, human-centric approaches to create experiences that improve the ease and use of insights through voice, text and images). Data-driven farming is promoted in areas such as climate services13, digital extension14, precision agriculture3, market information systems15 and agricultural insurance2. There are many specific examples, including the IBM Watson Decision Platform for Agriculture, which uses performance geocomputation and a range of input data, such as high-resolution weather forecasts, for localized prescription farming and crop management16. Another example is the Nuru application of the UN Food and Agricultural Organization, which uses computer vision for in-field pest and disease diagnostics of major food security threats such as the damage caused by the fall armyworm17.

Recent synthesis has estimated that mobile-phone-based digital extension and price information systems in sub-Saharan Africa and India, some of which are data-driven, can modestly improve crop yields, increase adoption of recommended inputs, and raise farmer profits14. Basic benefits of the use of mobile technologies have also been reported in healthcare; for example, where improvements in patient outcomes and reduced healthcare costs have been documented18. However, it is poorly understood how the differential access to mobile technologies in farming communities might limit the vision for achieving data-driven farming, health and nutrition globally19. In particular, donors, governments and research organizations lack sufficient understanding of the spatial distribution of data services across farms, and how existing services intersect with farms that have the greatest need for support and areas which contain the most food-insecure populations20. This lack of understanding of the baseline for data-driven farming limits our ability to assess the feasibility, scalability and probable impact of investment in digital technology projects and interventions in food systems across the world.

Here, we report a global baseline assessment of the state of mobile coverage and access to data services in farming. We use the coverage of mobile services as a measure of availability, which is the basic infrastructural backbone needed for scaling data-driven solutions. We examine how this availability intersects with opportunities for raising productivity and delivering financial, climate and healthcare services. We then assess subnational patterns in mobile phone and Internet access across non-farming and farming populations, for a subset of countries for which subnational data are available. In these countries are found 75%, 88% and 46% of all farming households in Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean, and Asia, respectively. We consider our results within the context of the current needs for closing the digital divide in agriculture on a global scale.

Availability gaps

Our analysis shows that second generation (2G) services (suitable for voice and short message services (SMSs)) cover 84% of croplands globally, but this coverage is 62% for third generation (3G) and 42% for 4G services (Fig. 1a). This pattern of unequal coverage is even more marked across farm size classes. Small farms have disproportionately slower services available to them than large farms (Fig. 1b). Globally, only 37% and 24% of farms of <1 ha receive 3G and 4G services, respectively, whereas 80% and 74% of farms of >200 ha receive 3G and 4G services, respectively.

Fig. 1: The coverage of mobile services across global croplands.
figure 1

a, A global map showing 2G, 3G and 4G mobile coverage across croplands. Croplands not covered by any service are shown in grey. b, Percentage of global coverage across farm size classes. Cropland data37 are centred on the year 2000. Coverage data are from April 2018 and were obtained from Mosaik Solutions (see Methods).

Spatial heterogeneity in coverage is important. High-speed (that is, 3G and 4G) services are predominant in North America and Europe, whereas large coverage gaps exist in sub-Saharan Africa. Across the African continent, network coverage on cropland is only 33% for 3G and 9% for 4G services, and in Asia, it is 46% for 3G and 29% for 4G services. However, coverage in Asia varies by country. For example, the majority of India and Thailand are covered by 3G and 4G services, whereas large gaps exist in China, Vietnam and Mongolia (Fig. 1a).

In terms of high-speed network coverage of areas with the greatest need for support, we find that, globally, coverage in areas affected by nitrogen-deficient soils and severe yield gaps is around 60% for 3G and 22% for 4G services. Coverage in areas that are most dependent on rainfall for crop production is 71% for 3G and 54% for 4G services. Coverage in arid croplands (environments that receive <250 mm annual rainfall) is 37% for 3G and 17% for 4G services (Table 1). Coverage gaps pose important obstacles for developing data-hungry nutrient advisories, climate services and financial services that need mobile Internet access.

Table 1 Current mobile coverage in areas of agriculture and health that may benefit from mobile interventions

We also assessed cross-cutting themes of food insecurity and the incidence of communicable diseases, which together represent compounding factors that increase population vulnerability alongside low crop productivity and climate stressors. These themes underpin efforts to develop mobile health services for rural populations. We find that, of individuals affected by food insecurity globally (as measured by the prevalence of childhood stunting21), 61% are served by 3G and 45% are served by 4G. In Africa, the numbers are particularly low (52% and 22% for 3G and 4G, respectively). Globally, of individuals with malaria (those infected with Plasmodium falciparum), only 37% have access to 3G services and 17% to 4G services. This lack of coverage for at-risk populations poses serious concerns not only for the development of mobile services for populations affected by existing nutritional burdens and diseases, but also for the response of wider populations to food security threats and health impacts of emerging diseases, including COVID-19.

Access gaps

Our analysis highlights differences in household ownership of mobile handsets. Although ownership of mobile phones by farming households in many locations throughout Asia and Latin America is at, or close to, 100%, we find that mobile phone ownership within African countries lags behind that of the rest of the world (Fig. 2a). For example, in Angola, the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Madagascar and Burundi, the subnational averages for mobile phone ownership (for any kind of device) by farming households range between 34% and 51% (Fig. 2a). The numbers are higher in other African countries, such as Malawi, Mozambique, Rwanda, Chad and Sierra Leone, nevertheless, more than 30% of farming households in these countries still do not own a mobile phone.

Fig. 2: Mobile phone ownership and Internet access in farming households.
figure 2

a, Subnational distributions of the percentage of mobile phone ownership in non-farming and farming households across Africa, Asia, and Latin America and the Caribbean (n = 5,429 administrative units). b, Subnational distributions of the percentage of non-farming and farming households that have Internet access (n = 4,905 administrative units). All data are centred in 2018. Lat. Am. Carib., Latin America and the Caribbean.

Furthermore, in some countries, farmer access to mobile phones is similar to, or exceeds, that of non-farmers, whereas in other countries farmers are less likely to own mobile phones than non-farmers. For example, in Angola, Madagascar and the DRC, ownership in non-farming populations is 24%, 12% and 11% (percentage points) higher, respectively, than in farming populations (Fig. 2a). Other studies have pointed to a gender gap in mobile phone ownership, with women being 14% less likely to own one (and 38% less likely in South Asia). This means that there is not only a divide between farming and non-farming populations, but also between men and women within households22, and this poses a particular concern for inclusivity of interventions relating to primary care and child nutrition.

It is well known that Internet access across countries in Asia, Latin America and Africa still lags behind that in other regions of the world such as North America and Europe, but we show that Internet access also varies at the subnational level, and importantly, between farming and non-farming populations. Internet access is generally much lower than mobile handset ownership. For example, the average percentage of farming households with Internet access is low in India (31%), and even lower in Pakistan (21%) and Tajikistan (12%). Similarly, it is 25% in Mexico, 14% in Bolivia and just 5% in Haiti. Furthermore, with the exception of Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana and Namibia, we find that Internet access is less than 40% of households, on average, for the remaining African countries included in our analysis (Fig. 2b). In Costa Rica, Brazil and Angola, the gap between Internet access for farmers and for the rest of the population at the subnational level is on average 19%, 15% and 11%, respectively (Fig. 2b). Farmers in these locations are bearing the burden of the digital divide resulting from unequal Internet access, which is unaccounted for in aggregated statistics.

Farmers, particularly smallholders, not only depend on the installation of mobile networks and owning mobile handsets, but they must also pay for data access. However, the access problems of people living in poverty are often masked because the often-cited average costs of data are based on mean incomes23. We disaggregated the costs of accessing data for ten income groups across 83 countries in Africa, Asia, and Latin America and the Caribbean, and show that, for the poorest 10% of the population, the cost of fully engaging in the digital economy is still prohibitively high (Fig. 3). The situation is worst for some countries in sub-Saharan Africa (the Central African Republic, the DRC, Guinea-Bissau, Chad, Sierra Leone, Togo, Madagascar and Malawi) where the cost of a basic 1 GB monthly plan ranges from as much as 64% to 188% of the annual income of the poorest 10% of the population. Although incomes have risen and average Internet access costs have declined in Africa in recent years, the cost of a basic 1 GB monthly plan in the last quarter of 2018 was still estimated to be more than a quarter of the annual income of the poorest 10% in countries of the continent (Fig. 3 inset). To put this into perspective, the 2025 target adopted by the Broadband Commission for Sustainable Development is that entry-level broadband should be made available in all countries at 2% of gross national income per capita24.

Fig. 3: The cost of mobile data for the poorest 10% of people.
figure 3

The cost of 1 GB of data per month as a percentage of annual income in Africa, Asia, and Latin America and the Caribbean in 2018. CAF, Central African Republic; GNB, Guinea-Bissau; Lat. Am. Carib., Latin America and the Caribbean. Inset, a time series of the median cost of 1 GB of data from 2015–2018 for Africa, Asia, and Latin America and the Caribbean. The vertical axis label of the inset graph is the same as for the main graph.

Key recommendations

Our analyses show that substantial gaps still exist in the availability of, and access to, data services for the world’s farming populations. These gaps preclude the participation of many smallholders in the latest technological innovations and need to be addressed if we are to move towards fairer, more inclusive and equitable food systems globally. Here, in light of these findings, we outline some key recommendations for governments, agricultural development organizations, funders, entrepreneurs and academics.

Invest in ‘last-mile infrastructure’ innovation

Closing the coverage gap will require continued innovation in three critical areas of last-mile infrastructure: energy (for example, moving from diesel generators to cost-efficient fuel cell generators or solar energy)25, cell towers (for example, installing ‘light towers’ with reduced complexity or deployment costs) and backhaul technologies (for example, complementing fibre optics with innovations such as scalable microwave ‘pay-as-you-grow’ solutions). Although efforts to bridge coverage gaps using these, as well as other more radical cross-cutting innovations that use satellites and wide-area deployments—such as Google’s project Loon, OneWeb, or SpaceX’s Starlink—exist, their success remains to be proven in many farming landscapes in the world, and particularly in the African continent. Such investments need to be supported by policies that lower regulatory friction, increase open competition and reduce capital risks for the private sector, especially in the early stages of deployment.

Increase handset affordability

Business model innovation will be required to provide handsets that are both affordable and capable of a seamless broadband experience. Existing business models include upfront payment for handsets (which is not possible for the poorest sectors of society), asset financing (which allows access to credit but has default risk) and third-party provision (by governments, non-governmental organizations and private companies that derive value from the user, but is often not sustainable). Average device costs in emerging markets remain high (approximately US$100)26. Affordability should be addressed from two perspectives. On the one hand, incomes need to be increased by financing business growth and job creation, particularly for women and underserved groups in rural communities27. On the other hand, device costs need to be reduced by blending business models that create value between state actors, financial institutions, mobile network operators, device manufacturers and content providers24. Here, national agricultural research services and research for development organizations can play important roles to assist in the design of localized solutions for farming populations.

Make data access universal

Innovation in infrastructure and business models can help to reduce the cost of deploying the last-mile infrastructure, which, in turn, should be reflected in the price of data for farmers. However, further actions will probably be required to ensure accessibility to all. Given the importance of mobile technology, to bring everyone online globally currently translates to universal access to mobile broadband. In addition, because the poorest farmers are unable to buy data, mobile broadband must be made a public good. Although a public and donor-funded Universal Service and Access Fund has been proposed to connect the poorest households in Africa to the Internet24, universal access should be made available to farmers globally.

Identify interim solutions

SMS-based advisories and alerts, and interactive voice response services that can run on low-end handsets, even if jointly owned or shared between community members, offer an important opportunity for addressing bundled issues of productivity, market connectivity, financial transfers, credit access, input use and within-season management, across large areas of farming landscapes globally2,14,28. These lean front-end solutions can be built on sophisticated back-end services that interface with the Internet and integrate remote sensing, ancillary data sets, and mechanistic and statistical prediction tools2. These interim solutions are essential for participation and inclusion, given current availability and access patterns.

Operationalize these findings

This baseline analysis assesses the digital divide in farming and regular operational updates will be required to track progress in access and availability of information and communications technology (ICT)-enabled solutions for agriculture. However, additional metrics, from availability and access to utilization, are also needed. Utilization depends on capacity building, skills transfer, digital literacy, cultural appropriateness of services and the agency to use services, particularly across ages and genders. We recommend core public research funding for this effort so that entrepreneurs, philanthropists and academics can better target their data-driven farming interventions, and so that the benefits of these interventions can be transparently assessed for positive farming and population health outcomes.

The idea of a technology revolution in agriculture has captured the minds of—and has secured funding from—donors, governments, national agricultural research services, development organizations, academic institutions and countless industry start-ups in recent years1,2,3,4,5. This vision is currently hindered by gaps in connectivity for farming populations. Emerging technologies such as 5G promise even more capabilities29, but the benefits for data-driven farming can never be fully realized as long as poor farmers are left behind19. A re-ignition of international efforts to deliver agricultural research for development is needed, this time not for the exchange and delivery of advanced seeds but for the exchange and delivery of data. This effort requires a fresh outlook, learning from the failures of previous revolutions in agriculture30, putting co-creation, knowledge sharing and farmer empowerment at the core, and seeking solutions that harmonize across the Sustainable Development Goals, particularly those related to education, gender inclusion, and access to water and energy25,31. The work presented here may provide a step in that direction and allows for the design of more targeted interventions for all those invested in solving farming problems by using data.

Methods

Details of the methods underlying specific components of this study are given below.

Coverage gaps

For the mobile service availability layers, we used a geographical information system data set, developed by Mosaik Solutions, on global mobile network coverage in 2018 for 910 entities running 2,391 networks in 229 countries and territories, and representing 2G (CDMA, 1XRTT, GSM, GPRS, EDGE), 3G (EVDO, UMTS, HDPA/+) and 4G (WiMax, LTE) services. This data set includes data provided directly by service operators, as well as data available on operator websites, in filings from regulatory bodies, and in the public domain, and is recognized as an industry standard reference32. Our map of smallholder farms was developed following the methods of ref. 33 and updated with the crowd-sourced field sizes of ref. 34. Global layers representing nutrient deficits for 17 major crops35 and aridity (annual precipitation <250 mm (ref. 36)) were intersected with cropland data37 (for aridity) and relevant crop types38 (for nutrient deficiency) to create layers of cropland areas affected by each condition. Hotspots of yield gaps39 were computed using the 90th percentile of the ratio of yield gaps to yield potentials. Hotspots of rainfall-dependent croplands were computed using the 90th percentile of the ratio of green water to total water used for crop production from ref. 40. We also assessed the cross-cutting themes of food insecurity and the incidence of communicable diseases. We estimated the number of people affected by food insecurity using maps21 that proxy food insecurity from the prevalence of childhood stunting, and we computed Africa-wide estimates using the updated data set of ref. 41. We computed the number of people infected by P. falciparum using 2017 prevalence data from the Malaria Atlas Project (https://malariaatlas.org/), and 2017 population estimates from LandScan42. For all layers, the coverage gap was computed as the proportion of each layer of cropland area and population classes covered by the 2G, 3G and 4G footprints.

Access gaps

We assessed access gaps in mobile phone ownership and Internet access across Asia, Africa, and Latin America and the Caribbean by compiling and harmonizing a sample of available subnationally representative micro-level data from the Demographic Health Surveys (https://www.dhsprogram.com), the Integrated Public Use Microdata Series (https://www.ipums.org), the Living Standards Measurement Study from the World Bank (https://www.worldbank.org/en/programs/lsms), and country-specific agricultural censuses, general household surveys and family panel studies (see Data availability for our accompanying data set). We define a farming household as one that owns usable land for agriculture or one in which a household member works in an agricultural occupation. Household mobile ownership is defined as a household that owns at least one mobile phone, and Internet access is defined as a household that has access to the Internet, through any device. Our sample represents farming and non-farming household-level mobile ownership in 70 countries (38 in Africa, 15 in Asia and 17 in Latin America and the Caribbean) and in 5,429 subnational units (941 in Africa, 848 in Asia and 3,640 in Latin America and the Caribbean). Our sample also represents farming and non-farming Internet access in 48 countries (20 in Africa, 11 in Asia and 17 in Latin America and the Caribbean) and 4,905 subnational units (522 in Africa, 931 in Asia and 3,452 in Latin America and the Caribbean).

To centre mobile phone ownership data, we used available panel data sets of ownership (from 2005 to 2017), for countries in each region (ten in Africa, five in Asia and two in Latin America and the Caribbean). We estimated time-dependent percentage point differences in ownership within each region and for farming versus non-farming populations. We used the following shape-constrained generalized additive mixed model43:

$$y_i \sim {\mathrm{bin}}\left( {n_i,p_i} \right)$$
(1)
$$\begin{array}{l}p_i = {\mathrm{logit}}^{ - 1}\left( {\alpha _0 + \alpha _{1...m}rf_i + \mathop {\sum}\nolimits_{l = 1}^q {\beta _{il}b_{il}\left( {rf_it_i} \right) + \delta _{j[i]}} } \right)\\ {\mathrm{for}}\,i = 1,...n\,{\mathrm{observations}}\end{array}$$
(2)
$$\delta _j = N(0,\sigma _\delta ^2)\,{\mathrm{for}}\,j = 1, \ldots J\,{\mathrm{countries}}$$
(3)

Here, yi is the observed number of households owning a mobile phone, ni is the number of households surveyed, and pi is the fraction of households that own a mobile phone; bil(rfiti) are the lth monotonically increasing P-spline basis functions for year (t) and the region and farming versus non-farming populations (rf); q is the number of basis functions, βil are the spline coefficients; δj are random intercepts (with variance \(\sigma^2_\delta\)) to account for non-independence of observations in countries; and α terms are fixed intercepts representing differences in fractional ownership for each rf combination.

To centre Internet access data, we used national time-series data of individuals using the Internet (1990–2016) from the World Bank and the International Telecommunication Union (https://www.data.worldbank.org/indicator) to estimate time-dependent percentage point differences in access for each country between the observed years of sampling and a common focal year, using the following generalized additive model44:

$$y_i = {\mathrm{beta}}\left( {\mu _i,\phi } \right)$$
(4)
$$\begin{array}{l}\mu _i = {\mathrm{logit}}^{ - 1}\left( {\alpha _0 + \alpha _{1...m}c_i + \mathop {\sum}\nolimits_{l = 1}^q {\beta _{il}b_{il}\left( {c_it_i} \right)} } \right)\\ {\mathrm{for}}\,i = 1, \ldots n\,{\mathrm{observations}}\end{array}$$
(5)

Where yi is the observed proportion of individuals with Internet access, μi is E(y), ϕ is a precision parameter, bil(cti) are lth cubic-spline basis functions for year (t) and country (c), and α terms are fixed intercepts representing differences in percentage access for each c.

We centred access data on the year 2018 and used the percentages of farming and non-farming households who own mobile phones or have Internet access at each subnational unit within a country. For visual comparison of access within countries and between farming and non-farming populations, we fit Gaussian probability density functions to the mobile phone and Internet access metrics using subnationally representative sampling units (see Data and Code availability for raw time-centred data underlying these plots).

Cost of data

To identify the costs of data for people living in poverty, the cost of 1 GB of prepaid mobile access as a percentage of income was obtained from the Alliance for Affordable Internet (https://a4ai.org/) for 83 countries in Africa, Asia, and Latin America and the Caribbean. To disaggregate these data by income groups within each country, we used the income shares from the World Bank and re-computed the index of the Alliance for Affordable Internet using the income of the poorest decile of each country. To account for differences in sampling effort, we estimated the difference (a bias estimate) between the median regional cost of data in 2018 (the year with most complete coverage) and the median regional cost in 2018 when coverage equalled that of 2015–2018. We then bias corrected the time series by adjusting the median costs for the years 2015–2018 to known differences observed in 2018.