From the outside, Tarımus can look like a report. But the report is only one way the engine is packaged. From a single data foundation — the combination of learned patterns with a transparent physical layer — many analyses that appear unrelated are derived. They group into four families.
History & Inventory
What was planted on the parcel before and what is growing now: crop-type classification, change detection on the land, and detection of abandoned/idle land. This layer is the foundation of supply visibility and crop verification: it closes the gap between what is declared and what is real.
Current State
The reading of the latest satellite passes: parcel health and anomaly, precise phenology (BBCH) classification, soil moisture and mineral mapping, soil organic carbon estimation. This is where the answer to “where does this parcel stand against normal today?” comes from.
Risk & Early Warning
Early drought and water-stress warning, frost and extreme-weather damage detection, disease and pest-pressure signals, flood exposure. These analyses do not stay at the single parcel; they aggregate into regional risk concentration and a portfolio risk matrix.
Forecast & Simulation
Parcel-level yield forecasting, production and credit scoring, crop-growth simulation, and regenerative-input impact simulation. This forward view, built on top of the past and the present, forms the data basis for credit, procurement, and insurance decisions.
From Parcel to Region
Each parcel’s result aggregates upward; without recomputing, it scales from a single parcel to village, district, province, and region. The analyses do not stay as tables — they are printed back onto the map: an actionable prescription at the parcel, a risk map across the portfolio.
Same Data, Different Customer
The same data foundation becomes a different decision for a different customer. For a food company, supply risk becomes visible; for an insurer, a portfolio risk calculation emerges; for a bank, a credit pre-assessment; for an exporter, traceability. TSRS reporting and the Agricultural Sustainability Analysis Report are only the first of these readings — and the fastest to sell.

