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Koiliaris Living Lab, Crete, GREECE

Smart irrigation and agroecological transition in Crete

The Koiliaris Living Lab focuses on helping farmers reduce water use while improving soil health, resilience and long-term agricultural sustainability in western Crete.

Led by the Technical University of Crete, the Living Lab operates within the Koiliaris Critical Zone Observatory — part of the Greek Long-Term Ecosystem Research (LTER-GR) network. The Living Lab combines smart irrigation, agroecological practices and field-based monitoring to support more efficient and resilient farming systems under increasing climate pressure.

The region is characterised by orchards including olives, citrus, vineyards and avocado cultivation, where groundwater is used almost exclusively for irrigation. At the same time, the basin faces increasing pressure linked to water scarcity, drought conditions, rising irrigation demand and competition between agriculture, tourism and drinking water supply. Additional challenges include fragmented farming structures, lack of agricultural cooperatives and limited farmer training opportunities.

Turning field signals into practical irrigation decisions

The core objective of the Koiliaris Living Lab is simple but transformative: “Water the tree, not the field.”

To support this transition, the Living Lab is developing the Irrigation Connectivity Hub — an open smart irrigation infrastructure combining soil moisture sensors, flow meters, weather stations and advanced forecasting services.

The approach follows a “Listen – Think – Talk” model:

  • “Listen” collects real-time field data from sensors, climate observations and farmers themselves,
  • “Think” processes these data through continuously refined irrigation algorithms and scientific models,
  • while “Talk” returns practical and understandable irrigation guidance to farmers through user-friendly visualisation tools.

The system is designed not only to improve irrigation scheduling, but also to make digital irrigation support understandable, practical and scalable under real farming conditions.

The Living Lab aims to:

  • achieve a 30–50% reduction in water use,
  • reduce energy consumption linked to groundwater pumping,
  • increase soil water retention capacity,
  • strengthen resilience through higher soil organic carbon,
  • and expand participation in the regional irrigation monitoring network.

Importantly, the network is designed as an open infrastructure where additional farmers can progressively connect their own sensors and become part of the wider irrigation support system.

Alongside smart irrigation, the Koiliaris Living Lab demonstrates the role of soil regenerative practices, carbon farming and Nature-based Solutions (NbS) in improving long-term agricultural resilience.

Soil regeneration and Nature-based Solutions

Current activities include:

  • soil infiltration experiments,
  • soil organic carbon and nitrogen analysis,
  • assessment of water retention and soil porosity,
  • and evaluation of regenerative practices through field monitoring and cost-benefit analysis.

Results already show how improved soil organic matter can increase porosity and water retention, improve soil structure and fertility, activate beneficial soil microorganisms and strengthen the overall water-fertility-biodiversity balance of agricultural soils.

The Living Lab also explores how regenerative practices and improved irrigation management can support lower pumping requirements, reduced indirect CO₂ emissions and healthier aquifer systems.

Building farmer participation and practical adoption

The Koiliaris Living Lab places strong emphasis on long-term farmer engagement and practical usability.

The Living Lab combines:

  • field instrumentation and monitoring,
  • farmer meetings and irrigation training,
  • continuous data collection and feedback,
  • and practical guidance on irrigation scheduling and agroecological practices.

    Implementation began with a core group of pilot farms equipped with soil moisture sensors and flow meters, while the wider network remains open to additional farmers interested in joining the system.

Particular emphasis is placed on building trust around field data and translating scientific monitoring into practical recommendations that farmers can confidently use in everyday irrigation decisions.

Motto:  Only talk to farmers and stakeholders when you have something to say

From pilot farms to wider Mediterranean uptake

The Koiliaris Living Lab is designed not only as a research and demonstration site, but as a scalable model for smart irrigation and agroecological transition across Mediterranean agriculture.

By combining IoT infrastructure, advanced weather forecasting, soil regenerative practices and farmer-centred engagement, the Living Lab demonstrates how WEFE Nexus solutions can support both environmental sustainability and farm viability under increasing climate pressure.

As one of the NexusLabs Mediterranean Living Labs, Koiliaris contributes practical experience on how integrated irrigation monitoring, soil regeneration and participatory innovation can support more resilient groundwater-dependent agriculture across the Mediterranean.