SAS Uses Advanced Analytics to Strengthen Food Security for South African Micro-Farmers

SAS Uses Advanced Analytics to Strengthen Food Security for South African Micro-Farmers Image Credit: dolgachov/Bigstockphoto.com
SAS worked with partners to help South African micro-farmers improve crop planning using advanced analytics, supporting higher income potential and stronger local food security.
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SAS, a global leader in data and AI, announced it helped South African micro-farmers improve crop decisions, increase income potential and strengthen food security through a Data for Good initiative that applies advanced analytics to some of the world’s most resource-constrained farming environments.

Through a collaborative project with dataDecisions.ai and The Dream, SAS analyzed seasonal crop, growth-cycle and market pricing data from micro-farms located near South Africa’s Cradle of Humankind. This is a UNESCO World Heritage region where farmers often grow food in small plots adjacent to homes and informal settlements, with limited access to technology, financing or reliable markets.

SAS applied analytics to help the region’s micro-farmers determine which crops to grow, when to grow them and in what quantities to maximize yield and economic return under constrained conditions. The analysis examined crop performance across four seasons, factoring in growth periods, yield variability and market selling prices.

By identifying more profitable and resilient crops, micro-farmers could reduce guesswork, prioritize limited resources like water and labor, and make more informed planting decisions without requiring expensive sensors or digital infrastructure.

Supporting dignity, food security and economic opportunity

Unlike commercial agriculture, micro-farming in this region directly supports household survival and community nutrition. Many farmers face unstable yields and limited access to buyers or pricing information, making data-driven insight especially impactful.

The project’s findings help create a pathway from informal growing to more predictable income and market participation, reinforcing micro-farmers’ role as essential contributors to local food systems rather than peripheral producers.

Hadley Christoffels, Founder of dataDecisions.ai

Food security will not be solved by commercial agriculture alone. If we are serious about building a more resilient food system, micro-farmers must be treated as essential contributors to the formal economy, not as an afterthought. They are producing food where hunger is most immediate, yet too often they do so without the data, insights and decision support needed to make every resource count.

Last modified on Thursday, 02 July 2026 06:39

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