| Literature DB >> 23840465 |
Deepak K Ray1, Nathaniel D Mueller, Paul C West, Jonathan A Foley.
Abstract
Several studies have shown that global crop production needs to double by 2050 to meet the projected demands from rising population, diet shifts, and increasing biofuels consumption. Boosting crop yields to meet these rising demands, rather than clearing more land for agriculture has been highlighted as a preferred solution to meet this goal. However, we first need to understand how crop yields are changing globally, and whether we are on track to double production by 2050. Using ∼2.5 million agricultural statistics, collected for ∼13,500 political units across the world, we track four key global crops-maize, rice, wheat, and soybean-that currently produce nearly two-thirds of global agricultural calories. We find that yields in these top four crops are increasing at 1.6%, 1.0%, 0.9%, and 1.3% per year, non-compounding rates, respectively, which is less than the 2.4% per year rate required to double global production by 2050. At these rates global production in these crops would increase by ∼67%, ∼42%, ∼38%, and ∼55%, respectively, which is far below what is needed to meet projected demands in 2050. We present detailed maps to identify where rates must be increased to boost crop production and meet rising demands.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23840465 PMCID: PMC3686737 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0066428
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Global summary for maize, rice, wheat, and soybean.
| MAIZE | RICE | WHEAT | SOYBEAN | |
| Mean yield change per year (% per year) | 1.6 | 1.0 | 0.9 | 1.3 |
| Mean yield change per year (kg/ha/year/year) | 84 | 40 | 27 | 31 |
| Projected average yield in 2025 (tons/ha/year) | 6.5 | 4.9 | 3.4 | 3.0 |
| Projected average yield in 2050 (tons/ha/year) | 8.6 | 5.9 | 4.1 | 3.8 |
| Projected production in 2025 (million tons/year) at fixed crop harvested areas of 2008 | 1016 | 760 | 741 | 275 |
| Projected production in 2050 (million tons/year) at fixed crop harvested areas of 2008 | 1343 | 915 | 891 | 347 |
| Projected production shortfall in 2025, as compared to the rate that doubles production by 2050 (million tons/year) | 100 | 160 | 157 | 43 |
| Projected production shortfall in 2050, as compared to the rate that doubles production by 2050 (million tons/year) | 247 | 394 | 388 | 107 |
| Required extra land (million hectares) to produce the shortfall at 2025 projected yields | 15 | 33 | 46 | 14 |
| Required extra land (million hectares) to produce the shortfall at 2050 projected yields | 29 | 67 | 95 | 28 |
| Yield in the year 2008 (tons/ha/year) | 5.2 | 4.4 | 3.1 | 2.4 |
| 90 percent confidence limit in yield change (%/year) | 0.8–2.4 | 0.5–1.4 | 0.1–1.8 | 0.3–2.0 |
| 90 percent confidence limit in yield change (kg/ha/year/year) | 41–124 | 21–58 | 4–52 | 6–50 |
| 90 percent confidence limit in production in 2025 (million tons/year) at fixed crop harvested areas of 2008 | 848–1203 | 687–846 | 599–898 | 214–328 |
| 90 percent confidence limit in production in 2050 (million tons/year) at fixed crop harvested areas of 2008 | 1009–1686 | 769–1072 | 618–1182 | 228–442 |
As an example consider yields and production in 2025 – the short term – and numbers by 2050 due to current rates of yield change. See Supplementary Data file for yield change rates per country.
Figure 1Global projections.
Observed area-weighted global yield 1961–2008 shown using closed circles and projections to 2050 using solid lines for maize, rice, wheat, and soybean. Shading shows the 90% confidence region derived from 99 bootstrapped samples. The dashed line shows the trend of the ∼2.4% yield improvement required each year to double production in these crops by 2050 without bringing additional land under cultivation starting in the base year of 2008.
Figure 2Maps of observed rates of percent yield changes per year.
Global map of current percentage rates of changes in (a) maize, (b) rice, (c) wheat, and (d) soybean yields. Red areas show where yields are declining whereas the fluorescent green areas show where rates of yield increase – if sustained – would double production by 2050.