Abstract:
Agriculture is transforming due to Agriculture 5.0, including smart agriculture, AI, IoT, Society 5.0,
big data analytics, blockchain, digital twins, robotics, drones and immersive reality, and digitally
delivered services and apps. There are numerous examples at various points in the agriculture value
chain: traceability technologies and digital logistics services have the potential to streamline agri food supply chains while also offering consumers reliable data, information, knowledge; remote
satellite data and in-situ sensors increase accuracy and lower the cost of crop growth and water or
land quality monitoring; automated farm equipment allows for fine-tuning of inputs and decreases
the need for manual labour. The development and application of mobile technology, distributed
computing, and remote sensing services are now enhancing smallholders' admittance to data,
information, knowledge, financing, markets, and education in the agriculture. Digital technologies are
creating new opportunities to include smallholders in a digitally driven agriculture. The entire
agriculture chain will shift as a result of digitalization. It is possible to achieve highly optimal,
customized, intelligent, and anticipatory resource management throughout the real-time and
hyperconnected system. Traceable and coordinated value chains will be more precisely, allowing for
managing various farms, crops, and animals according to their unique ideal prescriptions. Digital
agriculture will result in highly productive, proactive, and responsive systems to changes like those
caused by climate change. This could result in improved sustainability, profitability, and food
security. The technologies employed frequently draw on the ideas of the Internet of Things and
include sensors, communication networks, unmanned aerial systems (UAS), artificial intelligence
(AI), robotics, and other cutting-edge gear. Digital agriculture can increase productivity, consistency,
and resource and time usage. This has significant advantages for farmers as well as global social gains.
Creating new, disruptive opportunities allows organizations to share data, information, knowledge,
across conventional industry borders. According to our research, the following development in
Agriculture 5.0 research, recent developments, policy, and practice need to be reflected: smart
agriculture, AI, IoT, Society 5.0, big data analytics, blockchain, digital twins, robotics, drones and
AR/VR/immersive reality.