Institutional investors, large corporates and big family operators are expected to dominate demand for prime farmland this financial year as smaller farmers’ buying power takes a hit from higher interest rates, lower profits.
The Farmland for Farmers Act, in banning corporations from purchasing farmland, improves the chances for beginning, small-scale producers to access land and produce food for themselves and their communities.
Pension funds, Wall Street investors, and other well-funded entities and individuals looking for good investments have been buying up domestic farmland. Their goal is profit, not food production or stewardship of natural resources.
With Pakistan’s parliament's approval of the Special Investment Facilitation Council on August 1, all is now set for offering investors to procure huge lands for agriculture farming.
President Kissan Ittehad Khalid Mehmood Khokhar dismissed misconceptions created by some elements claiming that corporate farming would deprive the small farmers of their cultivable lands.
- Daily Times
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04 August 2023
Réponse des organisations de la société civile malgache à l'entreprise LGA OSO Farming
- Collectif TANY
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03 August 2023
La industria del aceite de palma repite el patrón de las élites bananeras del siglo pasado: acaparar tierras, explotarlas con monocultivos y conspirar con el Estado hondureño. Pero una empresa del norte del país muestra cómo las cooperativas de aceite de palma pueden empoderar a las comunidades mientras obtienen beneficios.
- Dialogo Chino
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02 August 2023
Le prêt a été accordé suite à la certification RSPO des plantations de l'entreprise singapourienne au Gabon
- Infos Gabon
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01 August 2023
On this episode of Going Underground, we speak to Anuradha Mittal, Founder and Executive Director of The Oakland Institute, which has reported on the IMF and World Bank’s carving up of Ukrainian farmland and the myths about the Black Sea Grain Deal
- Going Underground
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01 August 2023
The increased use of land as a commodity and the increasing demand for land has resulted in more forced land evictions.
- Witness Radio
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01 August 2023
The land being grabbed is aimed for growing large-scale sugar by Somdiam Company, owned by ‘investors’ from India.
- Witness Radio
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31 July 2023
Pakistan has in principle approved 28 projects worth billions of dollars that would be offered to Gulf countries, including an 85,000 acre corporate farming project in the Cholistan desert.