Wipro and Cropin Forge AI Alliance for Climate-Resilient Food Systems
How Wipro and Cropin's AI partnership is cultivating data-driven solutions for a resilient and transparent global food future.
July 15, 2025

In a significant move to bolster the global agribusiness sector against the headwinds of climate change and supply chain instability, technology services giant Wipro has partnered with Cropin, a leading AI-powered platform for agriculture.[1][2][3] This strategic collaboration aims to merge Wipro's extensive experience in technology and consumer industries with Cropin's specialized agricultural intelligence to create data-driven, climate-resilient solutions for food businesses worldwide.[4][5] The partnership intends to tackle long-standing challenges in the agricultural value chain, including fragmented data, limited transparency, and the increasing unpredictability of the operating environment due to volatile weather and geopolitical risks.[1][2]
The core of this partnership lies in the integration of Cropin's sophisticated AI platform with Wipro's broad technology services and consulting capabilities.[5][1] Cropin has developed an extensive "agri-intelligence" platform that utilizes artificial intelligence and machine learning to provide valuable insights at the farm level.[5][1][6] The company's crop knowledge graph covers 400 crops and 10,000 varieties across 103 countries, having digitized 30 million acres of farmland and impacted over 7 million farmers.[1] This platform can monitor crop health remotely using satellite imagery, predict yields, and offer data-driven advice to farmers.[6] By combining this with Wipro's expertise in digital transformation, supply chain optimization, and its global reach, the collaboration is poised to offer scalable and intelligent solutions.[1][7] The joint offerings will enable agribusinesses to enhance their operational agility, improve decision-making through farm-level insights, and effectively scale their sustainability initiatives.[5][3] The goal is to create more efficient, resilient, and compliant supply chains that can withstand the pressures of a changing climate and evolving regulatory landscapes.[5]
The implications of this collaboration extend far beyond the immediate agribusiness sector. The joint solutions are designed to benefit a wide range of related industries, including retail, consumer packaged goods (CPG), food service, and even quick-service restaurants (QSRs).[4][5][1] These sectors face similar challenges in ensuring supply chain intelligence, traceability, and climate resilience.[1] For instance, a retailer like Walmart has previously collaborated with Cropin to optimize its fresh produce supply chain by improving yield forecasting and monitoring crop health, thereby reducing waste and ensuring a steady supply of high-quality products.[8] The Wipro-Cropin partnership aims to provide these downstream industries with the tools to better manage their sourcing, mitigate risks associated with weather and market volatility, and meet the growing consumer demand for transparency and sustainability.[4][5][8] This ability to provide end-to-end visibility and data-driven insights across the entire food value chain is a critical step towards building a more robust and adaptive global food system.
The partnership arrives at a critical juncture for the global food and agriculture industry. Climate change is no longer a distant threat but a present reality, with increasingly frequent extreme weather events disrupting agricultural production worldwide.[9][10] This climatic volatility, coupled with geopolitical instability and trade tensions, is fundamentally reshaping the agribusiness landscape.[5][1] Furthermore, there is mounting regulatory pressure, such as the EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR), and a clear shift in consumer expectations towards greater traceability and sustainable practices.[5][1] In this context, the adoption of AI and data-driven technologies is not just an opportunity for optimization but a necessity for survival and growth.[11][12] AI-powered models can predict weather patterns, detect diseases early, and recommend optimal resource allocation, empowering farmers and businesses to make proactive, informed decisions.[11][13]
Ultimately, the collaboration between Wipro and Cropin represents a significant step forward in the application of AI to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time. By focusing on data-driven climate resilience, the partnership aims to create more sustainable, efficient, and transparent food systems.[5] It addresses critical barriers to digital transformation in agriculture, such as fragmented data systems and a lack of visibility across the value chain.[1][2] Krishna Kumar, the founder and CEO of Cropin, emphasized that the partnership is a "strategic step toward building data-driven, climate-resilient, and compliant supply chains at scale."[5][1] Shiva Jayaraman, a Senior Vice President at Wipro, echoed this sentiment, stating that "AI is redefining how agribusinesses operate—from sourcing and production to distribution, compliance, and sustainability."[5][1] This venture signals a broader trend in the AI industry, where technological innovation is increasingly being harnessed to foster sustainability and build resilience in foundational sectors like agriculture, promising a more food-secure future.