Data-driven farming and AI are transforming water management in Chile

Compatibilità
Salva(0)
Condividi

MAIPO RIVER BASIN, Chile — Under a blazing sun in this drought-stricken Andean valley, a Chilean agronomist and a farm worker examined moist soil from a freshly dug pit among rows of almond trees.

The agronomist detected excess moisture 15 inches below the surface and advised adjusting the irrigation schedule to improve water efficiency: two 10-hour sessions weekly instead of one 20-hour stretch.

“Ideally, it would be best to split irrigation into two sessions and space them out a bit,” said Pía González to the farmer.

Felipe Pereira, who runs the farm at the foothills of the snow-capped Andes, agreed to act after the cherry harvest in a few weeks, when more workers would be available. González logged her recommendation on an online platform using Microsoft technology with hundreds of data points about the plot — the centerpiece of a pioneering solution helping farmers decide how and when to irrigate.

González works at Kilimo, a water stewardship platform operating in seven countries in the Americas — including the U.S., Mexico and Chile — that collaborates with farmers to optimize agricultural water use and help companies advance their water security goals.

Its tool combines satellite images, weather and soil data, field advice and evapotranspiration estimates, which measure the amount of water lost from plants and the environment to the atmosphere. It recommends weekly irrigation levels while allowing staff to monitor plots and confirm water savings almost in near real time.

“The aim is to put more thought into the orchard — precision agriculture,” explained Pereira, a young farm manager passionate about bringing data and science to an industry that has been mostly informal and unstructured for too long.

Kilimo says the strategy is working. According to Kilimo, the three-year irrigation management project involving Pereira’s farm and 10 others has saved 60 million cubic feet of water in the Maipo River basin, one of the world’s most stressed waterways supplying Santiago, Chile’s capital, and the country’s farm heartland.

A separate drip irrigation initiative saved 14 million cubic feet for a total of 74 million cubic feet of water — enough to supply 10,000 households in Santiago in a year, according to Kilimo. 

Jairo Trad, CEO of Kilimo, calls it a win-win: farmers cut water use and costs, improve margins and earn annual incentives once savings are verified against a baseline using rigorous methodology. Communities benefit from reduced water waste, while Kilimo secures funding for future projects by proving results to corporate partners. These, in turn, meet water-security goals with verified, auditable outcomes.

“Water for agriculture is essentially free … The challenge was to give value to water,” said Trad.

Next step: An agentic monitoring system

Monitoring, reporting and verifying water efficiency results is essential for Kilimo, not only to provide reliable data but also to secure the funding needed to scale its water management model across the region. These operations run on Microsoft Azure.

“For us, that’s what matters most … the importance of measuring impact,” Trad adds.

The company has developed a centralized reporting ecosystem in partnership with Microsoft using Microsoft Foundry to integrate several AI tools, including models from Azure OpenAI, and featuring three specialized agents.

One is for general balance information, another for project tracking and a third for managing contractual data by client to ensure confidentiality and prevent data overlapping. The agents allow users to obtain consolidated answers without searching across multiple sources.

The solution also incorporates Microsoft Document Intelligence to analyze contracts and streamline internal processes. A coordinating super agent integrates responses from the three agents and delivers centralized information to the user. For now, the system is used internally but Kilimo plans to soon make it available to financing partners through a reporting platform where they can track projects.

The Maipo River water management projects, created in partnership with Microsoft, marked a turning point for the company, Trad said. Kilimo has since secured over $25 million in contracts to restore 1.4 billion cubic feet of water — enough to fill over 10,000 Olympic-size pools — across 15 watersheds from Chile to the U.S., transforming both the company and the water conservation sector.

Founded in 2014 by Trad and Juan Carlos Abdala, both computer engineers, Kilimo grew out of lessons learned from an earlier startup and set its sights on tackling one of agriculture’s biggest challenges: efficient irrigation and water management.

The Maipo River basin was an ideal target: The region faces an “extremely high” risk of water stress, according to the World Resources Institute, supplying 80% of Santiago’s water, which accounts for 40% of Chile’s population and gross domestic product (GDP). After 14 consecutive years of drought until 2022, according to the country’s environmental ministry, rising average temperatures persist.

1 of 9Juan Ortega (left), manager of Lo Herrera farm, joined a specialized drip irrigation program for his grape and plum orchards. Photo by Fernando de la Orden.

2 of 9Agronomists frequently visit farms to take soil samples, offer irrigation advice, and collaborate with farmers on best practices. Photo by Fernando de la Orden.

3 of 9The online platform allows staff to monitor plots and confirm water savings almost in real time. Photo by Fernando de la Orden.

4 of 9Kilimo’s monitoring tool combines satellite images, weather and soil data, and other information to make irrigation recommendations. Photo by Fernando de la Orden.

5 of 9Pía González, an agronomist with Kilimo, regularly visits farmers to help them improve their water strategy. Photo by Fernando de la Orden.

6 of 9Felipe Pereira, who runs the farm Agrícola San José at the foothills of the snow-capped Andes, has optimized water usage since working with Kilimo. Photo by Fernando de la Orden.

7 of 9Jairo Trad, Kilimo’s CEO, says the challenge for his company was to give value to water. Photo by Fernando de la Orden.

8 of 9Rosario Gumucio, Kilimo’s project manag
Recapiti
stclarke