Foreign "land grabs" redraw
global map of farmland ownership
by CHRIS ARSENAULT
A handful of wealthy countries are
responsible for most international farmland acquisitions - what some
critics term "land grabs" - in a trend that is redrawing
the global map of land ownership, a new study has found. China, the
United States, Britain, Germany, Singapore and a small group of other
nations account for the majority of global land acquisitions,
although 126 states participate in the trade, according to research
by Sweden's Lund University.
The deals are "increasingly
becoming drivers of land change", the study said.
Some food
security experts say the large-scale acquisitions could undermine the
livelihoods of small farmers, contribute to environmentally damaging
mono crop cultivation, and allow rich countries to exploit poorer
nations. "Some ... see these kinds of investments as a way to
develop countries while others see them as a new wave of
colonisation," Emma Li Johansson, one of the study's authors,
told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. "It depends on your
worldview."
Between 32.7 and 82.2 million hectares were traded
through international deals from 2000 to 2012, and land sold in this
way accounts for roughly 1 percent of agricultural terrain, said the
study, published in the November issue of the journal Environmental
Research Letters. Rights groups consider large-scale land investments
"land grabs" if local farmers are displaced from their
fields by investors, or if the production from farms financed by
outside capital is exported away from countries where food is scarce.
The land buyers are concentrated in wealthy Western nations, the
emerging economies of Asia, and the Middle East, while countries
hosting large scale investments generally come from developing
nations, the researchers reported.
Despite their significant scale,
the pace of these deals has eased in recent years, according to one
analyst. Some high-profile investments announced between 2006 and
2009 have yet to produce food, due to factors such as local protests,
investors who lack agricultural expertise and falling commodity
prices, said Michael Kugelman, of the Woodrow Wilson International
Center for Scholars in Washington. "A lot of private investors
acquired land with no intention of ever farming it (as they wait for
the value to increase)," Kugelman told the Thomson Reuters
Foundation. "The idea of fencing off critically needed farmland
and just having it sit there is troubling."
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