Main Page

Afritic Open Water Infrastructure Standard (AOWIS)
AOWIS defines a trusted, production-grade architecture for autonomous water and agricultural control and management systems. It supports both irrigation and community water infrastructure, including wells, pumps, storage tanks, water towers, and distribution networks — critical for food production, public health, and rural development.
The standard ensures safety, scalability, energy efficiency, and reliable operation, particularly in off-grid, weak-grid, and climate-stressed regions. By combining local autonomy, automation, sensing, and digital supervision, AOWIS enables productive use of electricity (PUE) for sustainable agriculture and reliable water supply, while remaining offline-first and fail-safe.
Reliable access to water for both agriculture and human consumption is fundamental for food security, public health, and economic stability. AOWIS treats water infrastructure and agricultural systems as equal, first-class domains.
Key Principles
- Local Autonomy: Safety-critical operations occur independently of external connectivity.
- Fail-Safe Operation: Hardware and software safeguards prevent over- or under-irrigation, flooding, or equipment damage.
- Separation of Control and Supervision: Field controllers make operational decisions; higher-level controllers supervise and audit.
- Scalability & Replicability: Applicable from single wells to village-scale and regional systems.
- Shared Infrastructure Support: Community and agricultural use coexist safely on the same infrastructure.
- Human-in-the-Loop: Residents and farm personnel act as sensors and actuators, with all actions logged and auditable.
- Offline-First Resilience: Systems remain functional during power outages, low connectivity, or device failure.
- Modular & Extendable: Core framework supports additional modules (livestock, greenhouse, poultry, etc.) without compromising safety.
Documentation Structure
- Core Principles & Design Philosophy
- Research Partner Positioning
- System Robustness
- Real-World Mapping
- Terminology & Definitions
- Reference Implementations
- Certification, Compliance & Auditing
- Non-Profit Governance & Protection Strategy
- Crop Irrigation (Core Module)
- Poultry Farming Module
- Livestock / Animal Husbandry Module
- Greenhouse / Hydroponics Module
- Custom / Third-Party Modules
Databases
AOWIS supports a modular database system. Each database provides curated operational knowledge while maintaining offline-first, federated functionality:
- Agricultural Knowledge Base – crops, soils, climate zones, irrigation parameters.
- Hardware Database – pumps, valves, sensors, tanks.
- Certified Devices Database – supported controllers, sensors, and actuators.
Supporting Material
Summary
- AOWIS defines a robust, modular, and fail-safe architecture for water and farm infrastructure control.
- Supports both irrigation systems and community water supply infrastructure.
- Modular databases provide curated knowledge and operational defaults.
- Designed for resilient, efficient, and sustainable agriculture in low-infrastructure, climate-stressed regions.
Featured Article
Featured article
Today’s featured article is about Example Topic.
Read more: Example