Artificial Intelligence (AI) is on everyone’s lips – and chatbots are a prevalent shape and form of the technology that many people turn to in their everyday lives. This has left GIZ staff in Ecuador and Guatemala asking: Can AI chatbots be employed for all things EUDR? And how can smallholder farmers and cooperatives benefit from the surge of AI?
Leveraging AI technology to boost EUDR literacy, GIZ developed a EUDR chatbot prototype for farmers and cooperatives. The chatbot refers to a validated corpus of national legislation and EUDR stipulations to offer non-binding advice. It furthermore can be used to carry out deforestation risk analysis of agricultural plots through an integration of the WHISP (What is in my plot?) tool.
Building on open-source technology, the EUDR chatbot can be modified to fit different country contexts. The prototype of the EUDR Chatbot is available here.
The EUDR chatbot is explained in this video:
The EUDR chatbot was developed by the project REDD+ Landscape III, co-financed by the European Union (EU) and the German Federal Ministry for the Environment (BMUKN), the project Zero Deforestation and Digital Traceability in Guatemala – daBio TraDe, commissioned by the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ) and co-financed by the EU in Guatemala, and the Digital Transformation Initiative in Ecuador (DTC), commissioned by the BMZ.
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