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Business Model

Sold via direct contracts and partnerships with
governments and NGOs.
Small AgriPod costs $250–$300 per unit, but it is
scalable to different sizes.
Revenue comes from unit sales and deployment
partnerships.
Pricing varies with size: depends on solar capacity,
battery size, and materials used.

Beyond initial sales, AgriPod’s business model focuses on long-term value creation through deployment ecosystems rather than standalone hardware. Units can be bundled into regional clusters managed by local partners, enabling shared maintenance, data monitoring, and workforce training to reduce operational costs over time. Governments and NGOs benefit from predictable food output metrics, allowing AgriPod deployments to be tied to nutrition targets, refugee camp capacity, or disaster-recovery timelines. The platform also generates anonymized agricultural performance data, which can be used to continuously optimize crop cycles and inform future deployments. This approach shifts AgriPod from a one-off product purchase to an infrastructure-level solution for resilient, decentralized food production.

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