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AOWIS is built around a three‑layer control model:
AOWIS is built around a three‑layer control model:


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Revision as of 05:19, 18 March 2026

AOWIS – Afritic Open Standard for Water & Agricultural Infrastructure

AOWIS is an open technical standard for safe, reliable, offline‑capable water and agricultural systems in low‑resource environments.

AOWIS defines how infrastructure can be operated by sensors, humans, or both — even with unstable power, limited connectivity, and minimal technical support.

What AOWIS Is

AOWIS provides a unified framework...

  • power is unreliable
  • connectivity is intermittent
  • equipment is diverse or aging
  • trained staff may be limited
  • safety and autonomy are essential

AOWIS enables systems that continue working safely — even when everything else fails.

Why AOWIS Exists

Many communities rely on infrastructure that is fragile, manually operated, or dependent on unstable networks. AOWIS addresses this by defining:

  • offline‑first operation
  • human‑in‑the‑loop control
  • safe fallback behavior
  • modular, extensible logic
  • shared infrastructure models
  • transparent governance

The goal is to make essential systems **robust, maintainable, and locally operable**.

How AOWIS Works

AOWIS is built around a three‑layer control model:

  • Field Controller – Local, autonomous, safety‑critical
  • Farm Controller – Coordination, scheduling, logic
  • HQ Controller – Oversight, reporting, governance

Core principles include:

  • Offline‑first
  • Measurement‑driven
  • Fail‑safe by design
  • Human‑operable at all times
  • Modular and extensible
  • Transparent and auditable
Access the Standard

The AOWIS standard is organized into dedicated namespaces. These sections form the technical backbone of the project.

  • [[Standard:|Standard]] – Normative requirements and definitions
  • [[Concepts:|Concepts]] – Philosophy, rationale, and real‑world context
  • [[Architecture:|Architecture]] – System structure and controller design
  • [[Infrastructure:|Infrastructure]] – Physical systems and components
  • [[Measurement:|Measurement]] – Sensors, manual readings, derived values
  • [[Data:|Data]] – Data models, logs, sync formats
  • [[Operations:|Operations]] – Runtime logic and decision hierarchy
  • [[Modules:|Modules]] – Domain‑specific extensions
  • [[Databases:|Databases]] – Federated knowledge bases
  • [[Governance:|Governance]] – Certification, compliance, licensing
  • [[Training:|Training]] – Human capacity building
  • [[Reference:|Reference]] – Examples, glossary, FAQ

For a full overview, see the Table of Contents.


Start Here

If you are new to AOWIS, begin with:

These pages explain how to read, use, and contribute to the standard.


Governance & Legitimacy

AOWIS includes a transparent governance model to ensure:

  • open participation
  • clear certification processes
  • stable versioning
  • long‑term protection of the standard

See: [[Governance:|Governance]].


Real‑World Impact

AOWIS is designed for practical use in:

  • rural water systems
  • smallholder agriculture
  • community irrigation
  • livestock and poultry systems
  • greenhouses and controlled environments

Case studies and implementation examples can be found in the [[Reference:|Reference]] namespace.



AOWIS is an open, evolving standard. Contributions are welcome.