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Tractored
out by "land grabs"?
IRIN
News
May 11, 2009
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=84320
Rich countries and firms
are leasing or buying massive tracts of land in developing nations
for the production of food or biofuel.
An area equivalent to
Germany's farmed land is at stake, and tens of billions of
dollars on offer.
On the plus side, agro-industrial
production could develop underused land, and broaden the world's
food production base while providing much needed resources for poor
countries.
But is the land really
idle and currently unused? Are small-scale farmers going to be "tractored
out" in a murky neo-colonial "land grab"?
Farmers and experts in
several African countries know all too well the need for higher
food production, but the scale and structure of the deals gives
rise to concern on many fronts, according to multiple interviews.
The food and fuel prices
hikes of 2007 and 2008 and a steadily growing world population raised
the immediate and strategic value of food production.
Food-importing countries
that lack land and water but are rich in capital, such as the Gulf
States, are initiating deals to produce food in developing countries,
where land and water are more abundant and production costs much
lower.
Vast tracts
of land and huge amounts of money are involved: 15 million to 20
million hectares, almost equivalent to the total area under cultivation
in Germany, according to
analysts at the US-based International Food Policy Research
Institute (IFPRI). Investment so far adds up to $20 billion to $30
billion, dwarfing foreign aid budgets for agriculture.
Murky?
Joachim von Braun and
Ruth Meinzen-Dick of IFPRI point out in a new policy brief that
developing countries with large populations, like China, South Korea
and India, are seeking similar deals, including growing biofuel
crops.
The institute warned
that there was a "lack of transparency" in many deals,
with the amounts involved "often still murky".
Land is an "emotional
issue", said Theo de Jager, deputy president of Agri SA, the
South African farmers' association. Some of the deals have already
begun to ruffle feathers in developing countries, most of which
are highly food insecure, and at least one has led to the overthrow
of a government.
An April 2009 policy
paper from the German NGO Welt Hunger Hilfe says: "States
that are dependent on food imports, in particular, are surrendering
more and more land to foreign investors while failing to ensure
that conditions improve income and food security for their own population.
Agricultural investments are rarely made in such a way that they
offer the local population a genuine share of the benefits."
The paper also points out the risks of high-level corruption.
The president of the
International Federation of Agricultural Producers (IFAP), Ajay
Vashee, told IRIN "Faced with a growing population, if we do
not increase our global food production I can foresee another crisis,
maybe in another two years." IFAP, formed in 1946, claims to
represent 600 million mostly small-scale farmers, a third of the
world's food-growers.
"We are not against
the deals, as they will bring in huge amounts of money for agricultural
infrastructure development, besides boosting food production globally,
but we must also realise that in most developing countries, such
as those in Africa, most small-scale farmers have customary rights
and face the threat of being forced off their land," said Vashee,
who farms in Zambia.
IFPRI has called for
a code of conduct to be drawn up, modelled on international business
laws to prevent corrupt practices in the context of foreign direct
investment.
So what's
the deal?
According to von Braun,
the arrangements usually involve governments, either directly or
through state-owned entities and public-private partnerships, and
the land was usually leased or made available through concessions,
but was sometimes bought.
"The size and terms
of the contract differ widely - some deals do not involve direct
land acquisition, but seek to secure food supplies through contract
farming [[and investing in]] rural and agricultural infrastructure,
including irrigation systems and roads - these are the better deals."
The concept is not new.
Von Braun pointed out that China started leasing land for food production
in Cuba and Mexico 10 years ago.
However, in its 2008
report on "land grabbing", GRAIN, a Spain-based NGO that
promotes the sustainable management and use of agricultural biodiversity,
warned that the "very basis on which to build food sovereignty
is simply being bartered away" in the deals.
"These lands will
be transformed from smallholdings or forests, or whatever they may
be, into large industrial estates connected to far-off markets.
Farmers will never be real farmers again, job or no job," GRAIN
cautioned.
Various Gulf States have
struck most of the deals in East Africa, which is facing some of
the biggest food shortages globally. IFPRI's von Braun and David
Hallam of the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) told IRIN
it was "too early" to assess the impact of the deals on
food security and farmers in the lessor countries.
Unease,
resistance and protests
Farming and pastoralist
communities in the delta of Kenya's Tana River have reacted strongly
to reports of government's intention to lease a chunk of this rich
coastal land to Qatar. Kenya is facing huge food shortages and high
prices after a third consecutive year of drought.
Mohammed Mbwana, who
farms in the area and is an official of the Shungwaya Welfare Association,
a local NGO, said the agreement would displace thousands of locals.
At least 150,000 families in farming and pastoralist communities
depend on the land in question, said to be part of Kenya's biggest
wetland.
Tana River County councillors
have threatened to go to court and block government's plans to lease
the land. The council's vice-chairman, Gure Golo, told IRIN they
were opposed to the project because local communities used the delta
for produce and livestock farming.
During drought periods,
pastoralists from as far as Garissa, the capital of neighbouring
North-Eastern Province, and other arid regions, came to the delta
in search of pasture and water, he said.
According to media reports,
Mozambicans have resisted the settlement of thousands of Chinese
agricultural workers on leased land.
In Madagascar, negotiations
with the South Korean Daewoo Logistics Corporation to lease 1.3
million hectares to grow maize and oil palms played a role in the
political conflict that led to the overthrow of the government earlier
this year, the IFPRI brief said.
In Malawi, Chinese investors
were allocated land, used by locals for agriculture in the southern
town of Balaka, to construct a cotton processing plant. When protests
followed, local traditional leaders were taken to neighbouring Zambia
to see what the Chinese might deliver in terms of development. When
they came back they relented and opted to move to another area "because
the Chinese would create jobs for their subjects", a government
official told IRIN.
Victor Mhone of the Civil
Society Agriculture Network (CISANET), a grouping of individuals
and NGOS in Malawi, said: "What we need as a country is to
improve on food production, and that can be done if we empower local
farmers by giving them the best land for cultivation. Foreign companies
are here to make profits and there is little that we can benefit
from, whatever they will be growing here."
Sudan, which has received
some of the biggest foreign investments in agriculture in Africa,
dismissed notions of the emergence of a new form of colonialism.
Abdeldafi Fadlalla Ali,
the Federal Agriculture Commissioner at the Sudanese Ministry of
Investment, told IRIN that they always ensured local interests were
taken care of in the deals - the produce was sold locally and local
people "become the highest beneficiaries".
Sudan, Ali said, has
84 million hectares of arable land, of which only 20 percent is
under cultivation, and had registered 75 deals worth $3.5 billion
in eight years. Almost $930 million of this was already invested.
Eight countries, including Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Kuwait,
Egypt, Jordan, China and India are involved.
Ali reasoned that in
the face of limited domestic capital, foreign investment seemed
to be a "better strategy" to achieve agricultural targets,
and expected that produce from the deals would be exported in future.
Millions of Sudanese
require food aid, according to the UN. However, Ali claimed food
insecurity was more related to transport and marketing than absolute
production shortfalls.
Safeguards
IFPRI recommends transparency,
respect for existing land rights, sharing of benefits, environmental
sustainability and adherence to national trade policies as key elements
to be incorporated in a proposed code of conduct. This could include
foreign investors being denied the right to export during an acute
national food crisis.
Farmers and think-tanks
talk about turning this "opportunity" into a "win-win"
situation. While the agriculture sector in most poor countries grapples
with the impact of the economic slowdown, deals for arable land
continue to prove attractive.
Rwanda recently announced
a new programme to identify "unexploited" arable land
for foreign investors. On the other hand, the Republic of Congo
announced it would lease 10 million hectares of farmland to individual
foreign farmers to boost its food security.
"This is a better
option - leasing out land to farmers who will transfer skills to
local farmers, boost the country's production, and care about the
land," said Agri SA's de Jager. South African farmers have
helped improve production in Zambia, Botswana, Mozambique and Nigeria,
among other countries he said.
But IFAP's Vashee pointed
out that farmers cannot bring in the huge investment needed to build
or rebuild infrastructure.
IFPRI is working with
the African Union to develop guidelines on how to negotiate with
foreign investors, which will be presented to African leaders for
ratification at a summit in July.
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