AgroIntel deploys wireless underground sensor networks that turn invisible soil data into real-time intelligence — for farmers, governments, and the future of food.
Satellites watch crops from above. Weather stations track the sky. But what happens beneath the surface — where harvests are actually won or lost — has remained completely invisible. Until now.
Solar-powered sensor nodes sit 15–30cm underground, reading the soil continuously and streaming it to a cloud AI that predicts failure 72 hours before it happens.
Buried nodes read moisture, temperature, pH, nutrients and microbial activity around the clock.
A low-power mesh network relays data through gateways over LoRaWAN and cellular.
Cloud AI trained on global soil data flags disease and crop stress days before it shows.
Farmers get one clear signal in their language — green, amber, or red. No jargon.
The incumbents fight over large industrial farms in rich countries. We went where nobody looked — and built the first global underground intelligence network.
Underground intelligence is the last unclaimed frontier within it.
Farm subscriptions, government data, agribusiness licensing, carbon credits, crop insurance.
Healthy soil sequesters carbon — and our data is the verification layer it needs.
Every sensor sharpens the AI. Data appreciates while hardware depreciates.
The ground beneath the world's farms is full of intelligence nobody is reading. We're raising a $3M seed round for the head start to read it first.