 Today, in the Republic of Korea, numerous attempts are made in diverse fields to transform agriculture, from depending only on the experience and know-how of farmers into a high-tech industry based on technology and data. The cherry tomato farmer, Kim Tae-hoon, utilizes ICT-based environmental control equipment in a five-span, Venlo-type smart farming greenhouse to grow cherry tomatoes. Once the information on the optimal environment for tomato farming is entered into the ICT-based environment control computer, the system automatically runs the equipment to create preset environmental conditions. Depending upon the amounts of solar radiation and cumulative light, the nutrient solution feeder mixes different ratios of nutrients and groundwater and supplies them directly to the plants, and Kim can keep track of the conditions of his plants based on the weights of the substrate and the drain solution. Although it has been less than two years since Kim began operating the smart farm, its production volume has more than tripled to an average of 20 to 21 kilograms per square meters per year, from 6 kilograms square meters in 2020 prior to smart farm introduction. Pig farmer, Pei Hong-Yao, introduced ICT equipment to a new pig house that he built in 2021. A variety of equipment is used to regulate the environment inside the pig house. An automatic feeder controls the feeding process, while keeping track of the amounts of feed provided and the remaining, giving the pigs a uniform growth environment. As a result, the new pig house with ICT equipment has shown not only much better performance in terms of the numbers of pigs shipped to market, but also a piglet sow per year figure that is about one piglet higher than in the past, and a significant decline in the stillbirth rate. Since 2017, Agricultural Technology Center in Huasong City has been applying a range of ICT technologies to vineyards. The center is developing and trialing a mobile app that allows farmers to control their farms and check several data points using their smartphones, as well as programs enabling them to collect environmental data from their farms and control them in real time. Based on accurate weather observations, the center also predicts outbreaks of pests and occurrences of adverse weather conditions and sends the information to each farm. A recent survey on grape smart farms found that, in comparison with 2018, labor and pesticide use declined by more than 20% in 2019, while the sugar content of grapes rose by more than 2 degrees bricks and farm household incomes grew by more than 10%. Smart Farm Innovation Valley is a government-run institution that offers a vivid picture of the current state of the Republic of Korea's agri-food system transformation. Yang Su-hee, a Smart Farm Incubation Project trainee at the Kimche Smart Farm Innovation Valley, received professional education and hands-on training at the Innovation Valley. Currently growing cherry tomatoes with fellow team members on a 4,000-metre-squared rental smart farm. In addition to the education provided there, the Smart Farm Innovation Valley serves as a base for demonstrating technology and equipment, and collecting the data from smart farms to enable creative young farmers to realize their dreams as farmer entrepreneurs. The government of the Republic of Korea is implementing ODA projects in agriculture to share its agricultural technology to build a more sustainable agri-food system. FAO will also play a key role through Digital Village Initiative for the transformation of the agri-food system.