Why should you care?
Water comes on a schedule. Fields don't get thirsty on one.
Shavat canal, Urgench · Carpodacus · CC BY-SA 4.0
Water travels by canal, in turns
In Uzbekistan, water reaches each village through canals like this one. Every field gets its turn a few fixed days a week — dates written in planning tables half a century ago.
Cotton harvest · w0zny · CC BY-SA 3.0
But the calendar can't see the field
A hot week dries the soil early — and the canal gate is already closed. A cool week means the water was wasted. The plan stays the same either way, and the harvest pays the difference.
Uzbekistan's fields from space · Copernicus Sentinel-2 / ESA · CC BY-SA 3.0 IGO
AmuFlow looks ahead
This is how our program sees Uzbekistan: every field, from space. It reads satellite weather and soil data, knows every gate's calendar in advance, and tells the dispatcher the best day for each field's water — inside the same canals and the same limit. Nothing new to build. Nothing to break.

