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RoboCare has secured a six-figure investment from 216 Capital to expand across Africa and the Middle East and improve its AI precision agriculture platform.
RoboCare, a Tunisia-based agritech startup, has secured a six-figure investment from 216 Capital. The company says the money will fund regional expansion and continued development of its artificial intelligence platform.
Founded in Sfax in 2020 by Imen Hbiri, RoboCare builds a precision agriculture platform. Precision agriculture means using data and software to make farming decisions more accurate, like using a dashboard instead of guesswork.
RoboCare combines satellite images, drone data, Internet of Things sensors, weather data, and field expertise to produce agronomic insights. Internet of Things sensors are small connected devices placed on farms to measure things like soil moisture, similar to a network of digital thermometers and gauges.
The startup says its tools have helped some users save up to 35% on water, cut agricultural inputs by up to 25%, and increase yields by up to 20%. It focuses on crops common in North Africa and the Middle East, including olive trees, cereals, and processing tomatoes.
RoboCare also says it trains its AI models on local data. That matters because models built on the wrong soil and climate conditions can give poor recommendations.
The company currently monitors several thousand hectares and has issued thousands of agronomic alerts. These alerts are early warnings that help farmers respond faster to disease risk, crop stress, or production issues.
This deal shows continued investor interest in farm productivity tools as climate change, water scarcity, and rising input costs squeeze growers across Africa and the Middle East.
For RoboCare, the next test is execution. Expansion means building sales and support teams, and proving its models can perform across more regions and farm types.
For 216 Capital, the investment fits a wider thesis in climate and resource efficiency. As more farms adopt connected monitoring and decision tools, agritech platforms that localise data and advice may find an advantage in regional markets.
Primary Source: Techinafrica
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