NAGPUR: Ravindra Metkar once earned Rs 150 a month working in a pharmacy. That was in 1984, when he was still a teenager. The 57-year-old farmer from Masla village in Maharashtra’s Amravati district will be travelling to an international conference on AI at Oxford University in the UK next month to share the story of how he built a Rs 15-crore agricultural enterprise from an acre of land, powered by a resolve not to pay for the fertiliser he could make himself.Metkar has been invited to speak on sustainable farming, cost optimisation, climate-resilient practices and poultry entrepreneurship at the Global Research Conference centred on the theme “AI For Every Mind”, scheduled from May 1 to 5 at Said College, Oxford.”My father was a Grade 4 state govt employee. Life was tough,” he said.After doing his master’s in commerce at Amravati University, Metkar’s first break came in 1994 when relatives gave his family four acres of land. Israel Iran WarUS-Israel-Iran War News Live Updates: US pounds Iranian missile sites near key Strait of Hormuz; Iran rains down cluster bombs on Tel AvivIran confirms death of national security chief Ali Larijani, president Pezeshkian offers condolencesLarijani Killing Escalates Conflict: Israel admits strike on Iran chief; Hormuz oil fears growThey sold it and bought an acre in Bhandara district. “I realised early on that a farmer cannot control market prices, but can reduce input costs and improve yield. That’s when I started making my own fertilisers,” he said.Metkar turned that principle into a model. Today, he farms nearly 50 acres in his native village, growing mangoes, mosambi, amla, bananas, betel nut and grains. He also runs a poultry farm where locally produced feed has replaced commercial products and farm waste cycles back as fertiliser.”I have guided over 50 lakh farmers across the country and shared my techniques with them,” he said. “They feel inspired by my agricultural enterprise. If I can achieve a turnover of Rs 15 crore, so can they.”End of ArticleFollow Us On Social MediaVideos’Pak Missiles Could Hit US’: Intel Chief Tulsi Gabbard Flags Nuclear Threat, India Left Off ListIran’s National Security Chief Ali Larijani Killed, Foreign Minister Says ‘Won’t Destabilise Tehran’Russia Confirms Jaishankar-Lavrov Phone Call On BRICS Differences Amid Iran War, Middle East Crisis’Just A Pause, I Shall Be Back’: Priyanka Chaturvedi’s Viral Farewell Speech In Rajya Sabha’Hormuz Remains Our Foremost Priority’: PM Modi Speaks To Kuwait’s Crown Prince Amid West Asia WarRussian Oil Tanker Bound for China Makes U-Turn to India as Delhi Steps Up Imports Amid Iran War’Esteemed, Kind People’: Iran Thanks India As It Receives First Medical Aid Shipment From New DelhiIndia Secures Oil Supply As Jag Laadki Ship Survives War Threat At Hormuz, Reaches Gujarat SafelyIndia On Target? Taj Mahal In Controversial US Deportation Ad Sparks Debate Over Migrant Exit Policy’Married Modi-ji’: PM Modi Laughs As Mallikarjun Kharge Cracks Joke On Deve Gowda In Rajya Sabha123PhotostoriesSay goodbye to lizards: 8 plants that keep your home pest-freeGudi Padwa 2026: Why do Marathi people eat Neem Leaves on the first day of the Hindu New YearTamil Nadu Elections 2026: The main faces to watch out for in the high-stakes contestYour blood test may look normal, but these hidden markers can reveal early metabolic risk (and what you can do about it)Chaitra Navratri 2026: Traditional bhog offered to 9 avatars of Goddess Durga during the 9-day festivalNot sure what to do with old pillows? Here are smart ways to reuse them5 superbikes that offer the ultimate riding experienceHow to dry clean clothes at home: A step-by-step guideUgadi 2026: 8 traditional dishes prepared on the day of festival“Bollywood fashion ka mustaqbil Hamza–Yalina ke naam”: What Ranveer Singh and Sara Arjun wore at ‘Dhurandhar 2’s’ music launch will leave you talking123Hot PicksChina oil tankersMPsfarewellIran war newsGold rate todayIncome Tax CalculatorPublic holidays March 2026Bank Holidays MarchTop TrendingFortnite chapter 7Jessica PegulaGreen Card HoldersPeter ThielQatar missile fireNSA Doval US envoy talksDeve GowdaRajya Sabha MP farewellChina oil tankersCM Devendra Fadnavis
NAGPUR: Ravindra Metkar once earned Rs 150 a month working in a pharmacy. That was in 1984, when he was still a teenager. The 57-year-old farmer from Masla village in Maharashtra’s Amravati district will be travelling to an international conference on AI at Oxford University in the UK next month to share the story of how he built a Rs 15-crore agricultural enterprise from an acre of land, powered by a resolve not to pay for the fertiliser he could make himself.Metkar has been invited to speak on sustainable farming, cost optimisation, climate-resilient practices and poultry entrepreneurship at the Global Research Conference centred on the theme “AI For Every Mind”, scheduled from May 1 to 5 at Said College, Oxford.“My father was a Grade 4 state govt employee. Life was tough,” he said.After doing his master’s in commerce at Amravati University, Metkar’s first break came in 1994 when relatives gave his family four acres of land. They sold it and bought an acre in Bhandara district. “I realised early on that a farmer cannot control market prices, but can reduce input costs and improve yield. That’s when I started making my own fertilisers,” he said.Metkar turned that principle into a model. Today, he farms nearly 50 acres in his native village, growing mangoes, mosambi, amla, bananas, betel nut and grains. He also runs a poultry farm where locally produced feed has replaced commercial products and farm waste cycles back as fertiliser.“I have guided over 50 lakh farmers across the country and shared my techniques with them,” he said. “They feel inspired by my agricultural enterprise. If I can achieve a turnover of Rs 15 crore, so can they.”