Global Animal Passport Registration, a Pakistani agritech venture developing biometric identity infrastructure for livestock, signed a Memorandum of Understanding with Hoopo Canada at a two-day collaborative workshop hosted by Sindh Agriculture University Tandojam. The workshop, titled “From Research to Reality: Sustainable Agriculture and NetZero Livelihoods,” brought together international delegates, researchers, academic faculty, and students to examine how applied research and technological innovation can be channelled into practical solutions for agriculture and rural livelihoods. The signing marked a significant formal step in the relationship between the two organisations and placed Global Animal Passport Registration in front of an audience that included some of the more consequential voices in sustainable agriculture research and policy.
The Memorandum of Understanding was signed and exchanged between the founding team of Global Animal Passport Registration and Naseer Qureshi, Founder and President of Hoopo Canada, an organisation working on sustainable community frameworks designed to create economic pathways for rural and pastoral communities. The agreement centres on embedding Global Animal Passport Registration’s biometric identity infrastructure into Hoopo Canada’s existing programme architecture, which includes initiatives such as Graze-to-Own, Qurbani to Nutrition, and Plant for Prosperity. Each of these programmes operates at the intersection of livestock management, food security, and rural income generation, and the integration of a biometric animal identity system into their framework adds a layer of traceability and data integrity that has significant implications for how livestock value chains are documented, verified, and managed at scale.
The biometric technology at the heart of Global Animal Passport Registration’s platform uses muzzle biometrics, a method of identifying individual animals through the unique pattern of their nose print in a manner analogous to how fingerprint identification works for humans. Combined with artificial intelligence, this approach allows for the creation of a verifiable digital identity for each registered animal, which can then be used to track ownership, health records, movement history, and economic transactions across the livestock value chain. For programmes like those run by Hoopo Canada, where the economic empowerment of rural communities depends on the reliable documentation of livestock assets, this kind of identity infrastructure addresses a foundational gap that has historically made it difficult to formalise and scale community-based livestock programmes.
The workshop also served as a platform for broader conversations about the role academic institutions can play in accelerating the translation of research into real-world application. Vice Chancellor of Sindh Agriculture University Tandojam, Engr. Prof. Dr. Altaf Ali Siyal, who presented Global Animal Passport Registration’s founding team with a Shield of Appreciation at the close of the event, articulated a vision of universities as active hubs for applied research, innovation, and startup incubation rather than passive repositories of theoretical knowledge. That framing resonated with the trajectory of Global Animal Passport Registration itself, which has built its platform at the intersection of academic research in animal science and the practical demands of livestock management in a country where the sector represents a substantial portion of agricultural gross domestic product.
The workshop received coverage across a range of Pakistani media outlets including the Associated Press of Pakistan, Veterinary Digital Media, Daily Karachi Times, Daily Nawa-i-Waqt, Daily Kirdar, and Daily Talash, reflecting the degree to which the signing and the platform’s broader mission have begun to register within mainstream discourse around agricultural technology and rural development. The team behind Global Animal Passport Registration includes PhD Scholar Syed Umaid Ahmed, who leads the artificial intelligence development underpinning the animal passport system, and Dr Muhammad Farrukh Syed, who serves as Artificial Intelligence Technical Supervisor and is also a faculty member at the National University of Computer and Emerging Sciences. The formal partnership with Hoopo Canada positions the venture for a more accelerated phase of deployment across the community frameworks where its technology stands to generate the most immediate and measurable impact.
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