MUMBAI, India, Feb. 6 -- Intellectual Property India has published a patent application (202631009502 A) filed by Govind Yadav; Sandeep Kumar; and Dr Arif Habib, Ranchi, Jharkhand, on Jan. 30, for 'a system and a method for adaptive solar-powered irrigation and wildlife deterrence using context-aware intelligent control in forest and tribal agricultural regions.'

Inventor(s) include Govind Yadav; Sandeep Kumar; and Dr Arif Habib.

The application for the patent was published on Feb. 6, under issue no. 06/2026.

According to the abstract released by the Intellectual Property India: "The present disclosure relates to a system and a method for adaptive solar-powered irrigation and keeping animals away from crops in forests, tribal areas, and other remote agricultural areas. The system has a unit for collecting solar energy, a unit for storing energy, several units for sensing environmental and animal activity, an irrigation unit, a wildlife deterrence unit, and a processor that runs embedded control logic. The processor looks at sensor data in real time to figure out how much water stress the crops are under, whether animals are present, how much solar energy is available, and how to divide energy between irrigation and deterrence tasks. To stop animals from getting used to something, adaptive, non-repetitive deterrence patterns are made. At the same time, irrigation is controlled to make sure that groundwater stays healthy. The method lets things run on their own and uses less energy without needing electricity from the grid. This disclosure offers a technically advanced, integrated solution that boosts agricultural productivity, makes the best use of renewable energy, and protects wildlife in tough environmental conditions over the long term."

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