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Global Land Grab
Governments and corporations looking to outsource food and energy more directly themselves are promoting a new wave of land acquisitions, also known as "land grabs." Persian Gulf states are working out land deals in Africa, Asia, and Eastern Europe. India has set up agricultural projects in Brazil. South Korea recently tried to buy up nearly half of the island of Madagascar.
"If food was ever a soft policy issue before," editorializes The Financial Times, "it now rivals oil as a basis of power and economic security." Control over the land that produces this power remains as critical today as it was in the past.
The Real Deal
Among the extraordinary number of new land deals, some have resulted in contracts while others have fallen through. Journalists have reported on the details of the deals, but so far there is little solid research from which to draw. Still, the deals are happening to such a degree that the World Bank and the UN are developing Codes of Conduct for Foreign Land Acquisition. The African Union will also publish investment guidelines in July, and Japan is pushing the G8 to get behind them. New websites tracking these land deals include the international land coalition and GRAIN.
Foreign investment deals in agriculture are nothing new. In colonial times, European countries established plantation economies in Africa, Asia, and Latin America to export food. Today there is large-scale investment in mining natural resources and contract farming as a means to source global supply chains. Yet these new land grabs are mammoth. The Economist reports that whereas land deals in Sudan used to be around 240,000 hectares, today's deals are three times as large. Before it fell apart, the proposed land deal between Madagascar and the South Korean company Daewoo would have included nearly half of the country's arable land. The lease would have lasted 99 years, with virtually no required taxes or other benefits flowing back to Madagascar or to the local community. Not surprisingly, the public in Madagascar rose up in protest, which contributed to the overthrow of the government.
During colonial times and in the recent past, developing countries exported cash crops such as cocoa and coffee. Now they are now exporting basic food staples. In many developing countries where land acquisition is taking place, the populations are already food insecure. So why are they exporting food crops instead of feeding their populations? For example, Ethiopia is the largest recipient of food aid from the World Food Program, but is also outsourcing food to Saudia Arabia. Cambodia, Niger, Tanzania, and Burma are other examples of countries receiving aid and also serving as host countries for foreign land acquisition.
Who's Behind the Grab?
Contrary to past trends, countries in the Global South are initiating much of the investment. The Persian Gulf States, including Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates, are investing in many parts of Africa, as well as Asia and Eastern and Central Europe. These countries are rich in energy but lack arable land and water. For example, Saudi Arabia has acquired land in Sudan to plant wheat, which is inefficient to grow at home. China is also buying up large tracks of land throughout Africa to produce biofuels and to produce food. India's companies have formed a consortium to invest in corporate farming of oilseeds in Latin America, most notably Uruguay and Paraguay.
Companies seeking more stable long-term profits are investing in agricultural land. In countries that already have shaky governments or civil war, foreign corporate investment may not end up being that stable or even profitable. Deals have already fallen through because of the risk. Others firms like UK Sunbiofuels are ignoring the risks and moving full-steam ahead with investment in crops such as sugarcane for ethanol in Tanzania.
From the land deals, developing countries hope to gain more investment in infrastructure such as roads, ports and other facilities. They hope to acquire more technology, research and science. Their farmers need jobs and a place in the global market. Over the past few decades, as part of structural adjustment requirements and other domestic measures to facilitate trade, many developing countries have disinvested from their agriculture. International investment flows into these countries have also declined.
The result is that today, many countries lack productive capacity to grow and provide food for their populations. For example, most Least Developed Countries are now dependent on food imports and lack capacity to be self-sufficient in food production. To countries starved of investment and with little except natural resources to offer the global market, land deals are deceptively attractive.
Struggle for Land
The operative word in all of this is "land." Countries are diverting high-quality land from production for local and national economies to create large-scale plantations focused on feeding other nations. What governments might deem as marginal or unused land to sell may very well be meeting an important share of rural people's household needs, especially in the poorest households. Uncultivated land has many uses such as for animal grazing, wild foods, medicinal plants, and even water.
Land disputes for control of natural resources and food are inevitable. Land struggles have been and still are violent and destabilizing. Identity, culture, justice, and governments' legitimacy are closely tied to these power struggles. To superimpose foreign investment on areas that are already fraught with violent land disputes requires a great deal of sensitivity. This isn't a situation that can be captured in a simple cost-benefit analysis. Many of these deals reinforce the existing imbalances between haves and have-nots. Few of the deals acknowledge the poverty and power discrepancies that mar the context in which the deals are made.
A Better Deal
Foreign direct investment could provide all kinds of new opportunities for developing countries in need of resources. Such investment can help them achieve food sufficiency and food security within their borders, to restore the land with sustainable practices, and to promote long-term development. If the end goal is really to resolve the food and climate crises, all investment flows should be assessed based on their ability to achieve this.
Governments should articulate a national vision based on these goals. All investment measures should be transparent, participatory and accountable to those who will be most impacted, such as smallholder producers. A mandatory review of land use and land rights would be essential to understanding potential impacts and how to promote investment that makes sense for communities and their culture and environment. All national investment plans should be assessed based on international human rights obligations.
The convergence of the energy, land, and climate crises serves as a reminder of the limits to growth. The majority of these land deals could worsen the food crisis and the struggles associated with land use, human rights, and environmental degradation. To bring us back from the edge of resource depletion, governments need to increase aid for investment in small-scale producers and also regulate all investment so that it meets food security goals and promotes the realization of people's rights. This means promoting democratic consultation and transparent contracts. And it means promoting climate-friendly production methods based on smaller-scale, diversified planting systems rather than large plantations growing one commodity for export.
This article is based on a longer piece written by Alexandra Spieldoch and Sophia Murphy, to be published by the Woodrow Wilson International Center in summer 2009.
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14 Comments so far
Show AllI WONDER
I wonder at all the diverse comments, ideas, personalities that come out here on CD.
I wonder if it is from a particular segment of the population, old, young, school of hard knocks, college or just blasé’ ordinary people with a desire and a yen for a fair life for all and not just for themselves?
I wonder at the amount of times that we sign petitions, call our political representatives, write letters to them and to an editor of the MSM trying to get them to do what is right for the majority of people.
I wonder if it makes any difference? Don’t think so.
I wonder what would be critical mass for them to pay attention to the people instead of the money?
I wonder if there are enough CD’ers to start something, anything without money because we cannot compete in that race.
I wonder if the will is there as much as the intelligence that is shown here daily?
I wonder if it would be better to do just as Jesus said in Luke 21 that all these wars, rumors of wars, turmoil’s and all the ugly things that are going on these days; he said don’t sweat it because it is written in the big book of life and it will happen so don’t worry.
I wonder about the time and a half times and the Maya time of the end: 2012 and the Hopi prophecies and other Native American ones also.
I wonder if loving God with all your heart and soul and everyone else as much as yourself would be enough to do while on this planet as in the end each one of us will answer for ourselves.
Tony 6/20/2009
I hear you, Tony, especially the last, and an organized, committed variation on this could lead to a quiet revolution globally. miracleyes1sd@aol.com
+++++++++++++++++++++++
Have read and read and read through these many years and just finished a book about "The True Story of the BILDERBERG GROUP," by Daniel Estulin [the updated, revised, and expanded edition, including the plans for the North American Union].
The extensive lists provided in this book include, but are not limited to, all of those who belong[ed] to the Bilderberg Group from its inception in 1954 and the memberships in the newer and related organizations, i.e., the CFR/Council on Foreign Relations and the Trilateral Commission, all three of which have members drawn from royalty, heads of state, high-ranking government positions, the financial community, industrialists, diplomats, etcetera.
Our fate in the U.S. of A. and the fates of those around the world have been under these wealthy, very powerful people's influence for years, and we're almost there now in terms of who are the decisive winners in the game of MONOPOLY. All the usual suspects, plus many I didn't know are members of one or more of these groups. Every appointee in the Obama administration belongs to the CFR - Council on Foreign Relations.
One objective was and is to take over and control the government and create presidents who do the will of the elite; and that follows for just about every other country under the influence of these same people. And that's been a successful pattern from the time Nixon resigned. Interestingly, whatever Nixon did or did not do to warrant The Watergate Investigations, he also was bucking the "The System," as above, by trying to set price and wage controls to help the economy and the ordinary person. That evidently was a big NO-NO [I couldn't help but feel a speck of affection for him for trying to do that], and Henry Kissinger and Alexander Haig were right beside him to keep him confused and hasten the demise of his presidency.
It's over, folks. Five corporations control the media; five corporations control all the food and its production and distribution, and that's just for starts.
I have never been a paranoid person, but truth is truth, and after all the volumes of books and lengthy, detailed articles I've read, I just feel very sad for the world because these truly powerful groups of people do not relate to the ordinary person. Even if they came from poverty or hard times and worked their way up, there is a breed of person with parts missing. Henry Kissinger, a regular at California's "Bohemian Grove" gathering, said: "POWER is the best aphrodesiac there is." Whatever turns you on, Henry, even if it's getting away with murder. Right?
But perhaps this says it best:
******************************************************
Humans are members
of the same body,
all created from
the same essence.
If one limb is in pain,
others cannot be at ease.
If you are indifferent
to other people's pain,
you cannot be called
a human.
-Saadi-
(13th century Persian poet)
/cm
Here again the fat cats make deals with leaders behind closed doors and the people loose out!
"Not surprisingly, the public in Madagascar rose up in protest, which contributed to the overthrow of the government."
So who needs an atomic bomb? A fat cheque book works better.
when China forecloses on the US' IOU, will they want land?
one more striking example of a globalized economy making the nation-state irrelevant. not totally of course, but what does it mean to say i'm a madagascarianite when china (or whoever) owns half the country?
Look closely, and you'll find that the countries mentioned in this article need the extra land because of an increase in meat consumption. And due to an increase in extravagant indulgences such as building golf courses in deserts. Golf courses are a bad idea anywhere since they require lots and lots of water, fuel (for the lawn mowers), fertilizers and pesticides to maintain - and they represent an extreme form of appropriation of common resources for use by the elite. The power of the state and the states' policies to drive out peasants from their land, or the diversion of water for elite extravagance (YES - water is NOT in limitless supply in many countries) all contribute to these land grabs. Until now, the land grab was limited to within their own countries - but now it is becoming global. But the west has absolutely no moral authority to lecture these countries against land grab. For one thing, these countries are investing their hard-earned capital, legally, as opposed to just taking them over from the natives by brute force like the European colonial powers did in North & South America, Australia and parts of Africa, and secondly, consumption levels are still far too high in the western nations for them to lecture anyone else.
Sioux Rose
CEE MIRACLES: I was drawn to someone in the CD forum (who seldom posts these days) in part because we both encountered the same trance medium years ago. I have not had a session since 2004, but given the craziness of events, I have scheduled one. He is not always able to go into a mediumistic state, but presuming my session gets underway I plan to ask about the one world government and the status of the U.S. dollar. I'll share my findings with the forum.
In a previous session I was told that our planet was colonized by persons not from this earth and that is what set a different, more intelligent strain of human being into motion many moons ago. I was also told that those who affected this cross-pollination of genetic material still keep watch. Incidents like Roswell, NM and others, added to the fact it's rather arrogant to presume WE are the only form of intelligent life given the historical record, the defining word intelligent should be up for grabs; and I happen to believe there are higher life forms than ours. I say this because it is not outside of the realm of possibility that if things get too hideous on this planet, these OTHERS will do something.
Then, too, there is climate change. It sunk the Atlanteans for all their high technology. And there is the possibility that a global movement that crosses borders will arise to protect everyday people, workers, farmers, and all the disenfranchised. We see protests taking place all over the earth as persons see their futures sold away as corporate negotiators trade was it not theirs to trade.
Even if these covert groups have amassed the powers you say (and I will read the book reference you offer), does not mean there are not more POWERFUL factors that exist to eventually topple these transitory human pyramids. And then, too, there is the "coincidence" of so much prophecy about the these next few years as the world as we currently know it will be ultimately transformed. We already (as a humanity) did the king thing, the fuhrer thing, the pharaoh thing... what the new age hopes to enact is power truly delivered to "the people."
Yet it's worth noting that since a lot of those people in America have like herded cattle been fed a diet of shit, and by that I mean what's been delivered as FOOD for THOUGHT via the MSM, this power can be a negative if taken en masse by UNCONSCIOUS persons who have been taught to hate "other." Currently many are armed with weapons to involve added vicious power. Enlightened persons who work towards the greater good is another matter entirely, the one I pray will come into effect.
Sioux Rose, we're pretty much on the same page, and focused, positive actions are happening all over the planet.
"Homo Noeticus" is the evolving species of more than five senses [Dr. Caroline Myss's term], but we likely will need a little help from our "friends" to avert total catastrophe.
Even still, it's going to be quite a ride.
peace, cm
Alcyon said: "these countries are investing their hard-earned capital, legally, as opposed to just taking them over from the natives by brute force like the European colonial powers did in North & South America, Australia and parts of Africa"
The European colonial powers were replaced by Food Inc., were they not? Monsanto, ADM, Cargill, etc. of the west, all part of the great financial game making consumers out of their citizens?
That's right. These are the new empires now. BTW, I was only pointing out how the west doesn't have any moral authority to criticize the growing consumption in other countries.
MONEY IS THE ROOT OF ALL EVIL AND MOST EVIL THAT WE DO! if we lived in a world wide system that we would still be able to obtain the things we needed without a monetary
transaction it would straighten out most our problems. greed would be abated as well as
the class system we currently live in. we would as a species then be able to get down
to the real concern facing us as a species- survival of us and our planet. if ads didn't
tell you you needed to drive a lexus you would drive a prius etc. etc. etc.
In all of the investing countries mentioned, small elites hold large amounts of US dollars.
The US has moved strongly to control the hydrocarbon economy.
Anyone who wishes to contest this control has a strong motive to go off the dollar standard.
If the price of petrol rises to the point that Venezuelan oil, to give just one example, becomes safely salable in Euros or some international currency, international commerce may move off the dollar standard.
The dollar would probably fall through the floor. Investors that have banked on a security backed by American violence would be in trouble.
The acquisition of third world land is probably driven largely by the will to get rid of dollars for something basic and stable as the international economy lurches towards a more substantial crash.
"A problem can never be solved on the same level of thinking that identefied it"- Einstein
So let us begin to asking ourself some simple questions:
? Who Build the Fence around Paradise ?
Somewhere in the transition from hunter/gatherer societies to food producing agricultural societies we also replaced spirituality with the Laws of monotheistic religions.
The "Garden Eden" was created, the First Properties established by 'Divine Law'.
Since then, and blessed by these laws, Growth & Expansion, the Conquest of new territories and the Exploitation of people & resources is the favorite occupation
of the powerful and ruthless around the globe.
One of the biggest problems humanity has to solve is its view
on Ownership, Possession & Demarcation including
all the Believe Systems & Paradigms we have build around it.
With all our possessions we have locked ourselves in & out !
Walls, fences and property-lines are maintained and guarded
by Laws & Paranoia, controlling the doors & windows is our Obsession.
The Paradigm of Possessions is an outdated Belief System of our Linear Culture.
This belief had its relevance in time, but in view of the enormous economic & ecological problems human kind is facing today, we have to adopt new thinking systems and transform our Beliefs.
Our linear culture has successfully reached its ultimate goal set by its own definition of Beginning & End. We have outrun our own timeframe and got more than we deserve.
But fare from happy with this success, our 'experts & leaders' are clueless and their actions are more than silly !
We need a paradigm shift!
http://www.quest4belonging.com/who-build-the-fence-around-paradise/