CEA Crop Mix: North American Indoor Farming
The Landscape of Controlled Environment Agriculture
Most North American indoor and CEA (Controlled Environment Agriculture) capacity is concentrated in a handful of high-value crops: tomatoes, cucumbers, lettuce/leafy greens, herbs, peppers, berries, and mushrooms.
USDA and industry analyses show that in U.S. CEA systems, tomatoes, lettuce, and cucumbers account for roughly 60–70% of total CEA output by volume, making them the dominant indoor/greenhouse crops.
Across North America, the indoor farming market is overwhelmingly focused on fruits, vegetables, and herbs, which represent over 95% of indoor-farming market value; grains and staples are essentially absent from CEA operations.
CEA Output by Crop Type
Approximate breakdown of North American CEA production by volume. Ranges synthesize USDA, CRS, and market research data.
Primary CEA Crops in North America
Tomatoes
Lettuce & Leafy Greens
Cucumbers
Peppers (Bell & Chili)
Culinary Herbs & Microgreens
Strawberries & Berries
Why This Matters for Dark Recipe
A CDC or USDA character can credibly say that most indoor/CEA capacity is clustered in salad greens, tomatoes, cucumbers, and herbs—meaning a targeted contamination of just those lines hits salads, sandwiches, ready-to-eat meals, and school/hospital food all at once.
"Tomatoes, lettuce, and cucumbers make up nearly two-thirds of everything grown under glass and LEDs in North America. If those streams go bad, every salad bar from Detroit to Denver is in play."
Market Context: Indoor Farming Growth
Key Market Trends
- Vertical Integration: Major CEA operators increasingly control seed-to-retail supply chains
- Urban Proximity: Facilities clustered near population centers for "harvest to table in under 24 hours"
- Technology Dependency: FarmCore/FarmLytics-style platforms manage lighting, nutrients, and climate
- Consolidated Networks: What one facility learns, the entire network gains—a feature that becomes a vulnerability
Geographic Concentration
Major CEA clusters in the U.S. include:
- Michigan (Detroit corridor)
- California (Central Valley greenhouse operations)
- Texas (Austin, Dallas metro areas)
- Northeast corridor (New York, New Jersey vertical farms)
Canada's greenhouse industry, particularly in Ontario and British Columbia, represents significant cross-border supply chain integration.
Attack Surface Analysis
Why CEA Is Vulnerable
The concentration of production in a few crop types creates systemic risk:
| Factor | Implication |
|---|---|
| Crop Homogeneity | Same varieties across multiple facilities respond identically to stress algorithms |
| Networked Control | Cloud-based recipe distribution enables simultaneous compromise |
| Supply Chain Integration | Contaminated product reaches consumers within 24–48 hours |
| Testing Gaps | Standard food safety tests don't screen for stress-induced plant toxins |
| Short Cycle Times | Leafy greens (18–28 days) offer rapid iteration for escalating toxicity |
As documented in the Plant Biology section, the biochemical cascade can be triggered within a single growing cycle.
Data Sources & References
These ranges are not precise census percentages but are directionally accurate for thriller-grade realism, synthesized from:
- USDA Economic Research Service: Controlled environment agriculture production, operations on the rise
- Congressional Research Service: Controlled Environment Agriculture (CEA) Production (IF12485)
- Knowledge Sourcing: North America Indoor Farming Market Report 2029
- CEAg World: CEA Basics: Top Controlled Environment Crops in North America
- IMARC Group: Indoor Farming Market Size, Growth & Industry Report 2033
- Grand View Research: U.S. Indoor Farming Market Size | Industry Report, 2030
- NREL: Controlled Environment Agriculture technical report
- Cornell University CEA Center: Program documentation
Related Sections
Plant Biology: Biochemical Mechanism — How stress pathways are weaponized
Systems & Control — FarmCore/FarmLytics architecture
Threats Overview — Attack vectors and mitigations