As of 2004, of the estimated 50,000 edible plant species, only about 300 had been domesticated as crop plants, and 90 percent of cropland was made up of just fifteen plant species, with rice, wheat, soybeans, cotton, and maize being the top five. Just four crops accounted for half the global primary crop production in 2023:
sugar cane (20%),
maize (13%),
wheat (8%) and
rice (8%). Between 2000 and 2023, there was an increase in global production of primary crops by 61% to 9.9 billion tonnes (3.7 billion tonnes more than in 2000). Cereals represented the main group of crops produced in 2023 (32%), followed by sugar crops (23%), vegetables (12%), oil crops (12%), fruit (10%), and roots and tubers (9%). This production increase is mainly due to a combination of factors, including an increased use of irrigation, pesticides and fertilizers, more cultivated area, better farming practices, and use of high-yield crops. During the same period, the
value of primary crops production increased at a slightly higher pace than the quantities produced (52%), from USD 2.0 trillion in 2000 to USD 3.0 trillion in 2023. Cereals accounted for the largest share of the total production value in 2023 (29%), vegetables (19%), fruit (17%), oil crops (12%), roots and tubers (9%), and sugar crops (3%). In 2023, the global average
dietary energy supply exceeded 3,000
kilocalories per person per day. Cereals provided 42% of the global dietary energy supply, followed by 13% of oil crops, and 8% of sugar crops. Human consumption accounted for 45% of cereals, 42% of oils, 88% of vegetables, and 83% of fruits. Animal feed accounted for 35% of cereals and 24% of legumes. Non-food uses of crops have been increasing, comprising 45% of oils in 2023. International trade also plays a major role, with 46% of oil crops, 34% of sugars, 20% of cereals, and 26% of legumes exported. As of 2019, 13% of global farmland was planted with
genetically modified crops. Countries with the largest percentage of global GM crop production were the USA (38%), Brazil (28%), Argentina (13%), Canada (7%), and India (6%). The production of primary crops was 9.9 billion tonnes in 2023, 61% more than in 2000. Four crops account for about half of global primary crop production in 2023: sugar cane, maize, wheat and rice. While a multitude of crops are cultivated and harvested around the world, just four individual crops accounted for half the global production of primary crops in 2023: sugar cane (20% of the total, with 2.0 billion tonnes), maize (13%, with 1.2 billion tonnes), wheat (8%, with 0.8 billion tonnes) and rice (8%t, with 0.8 billion tonnes) Oil palm fruit and potatoes each accounted for an additional 4% (0.4 billion tonnes) of world crop production. The Americas were the leading region in the production of sugar cane and maize (50% of the world total) in 2023, while Asia led in the production of rice (90%), oil palm fruit (87%), potatoes (53%) and wheat (44%). ==See also==