Rural poor petition Cambodian authorities over land grab
    A group of 300 Cambodian people affected by land grabs and evictions - and representing thousands more - gathered in Phnom Penh yesterday to tell the government of their concerns, and to call with a single voice on the government and donor nations to act to protect their land.
    • ABC
    • 13 August 2009
    Food crisis: Fields of gold
    According to Steve Yuzpe, the CFO of Sprott Resource, ongoing population growth, dwindling arable land, water issues, even the falling yield productivity delivered by genetically modified seeds will be the big drivers for continued record demand—pushing food prices ever higher.
    • Canadian Business
    • 12 August 2009
    Cambodia: A land up for sale?
    Global Witness, an environmental pressure group, estimates Pheapimex now controls 7% of Cambodia's land area.
    • BBC
    • 12 August 2009
    Interview: Stephen Johnston, Agcapita Partners
    Direct investment in farmland has outperformed stock and bond returns over various timescales with substantially lower volatility than the US equity market, according to Stephen Johnston of Calgary-based Agcapita Partners
    • HedgeWeek
    • 11 August 2009
    GCC vulnerable to price rises
    The Gulf countries remain 'highly vulnerable' to commodity price volatility on international markets, as the recent surge in sugar prices shows.
    • Gulf News
    • 11 August 2009
    Interview: Qatar's Hassad Food eyes firms instead of farmland
    Hassad Food, owned by Qatar's sovereign wealth fund, will buck the Gulf Arab trend of buying farmland abroad to secure food supplies and consider taking stakes in agricultural companies instead, its chairman said.
    • Reuters
    • 11 August 2009
    Foras rice project in Mauritania
    Foras Investment Company conducted a pre-feasibility study on rice plantation in Mauritania in 2008. The aim of the study is to sieze the opportunity of setting up a rice farm on 2000 hectares in Rosso area.
    • YouTube
    • 11 August 2009
    Why corporations, emerging powers and petro-states are snapping up huge chunks of farmland in the developing world
    To be brutally honest, mutual interest is the opposite of what investor countries are looking for
    • AlterNet
    • 11 August 2009
    No nominees found buying farmland
    Thailand's Agriculture and Cooperatives Ministry has not found evidence to confirm claims that foreigners are using Thai nominees to buy farmland in Thailand.
    • Bangkok Post
    • 11 August 2009
    Ethiopia says Indian firms invest $85 mln in biofuel, paper works
    Emami Biotech's project has already begun at Awash Sebat Kilo some 250 km east of the capital Addis Ababa growing Jatropha, sunflower, castor, pulses and various herbs at a cost of $24 million.
    • Reuters
    • 10 August 2009
    South Korea Agribusiness Report
    Despite the risks and the Madagascan setback, Korea's scramble for agricultural land abroad will continue.
    • Bharat Book Bureau
    • 10 August 2009
    Egypt: Southern farming
    The wheat farms in Sudan & Uganda are not Egypt’s first foray into overseas farming — the government operates a corn farm in Zambia, a rice farm in Niger, a vegetable farm in Tanzania and plans 14 more farms across Africa — but they are significant because they are among the first efforts to address wheat scarcity after the instability of 2008.
    • Business Today
    • 10 August 2009
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