• Cargill warns on self-sufficiency
    • Financial Times
    • 10 November 2009

    Paul Conway, senior vice-president at Cargill, calls food self-sufficiency "a nonsense" and warns that overseas food production through land grabs will likely run into export bans by host countries

  • Ethiopia leases land for agriculture to earn foreign exchange
    • Bloomberg
    • 10 November 2009

    The Ethiopian government says concerns about foreign investors exporting food are outweighed by the plantations’ capacity to bring the country foreign exchange and technology, as well as creating employment.

  • Foreign direct investment – win-win or land grab? [EN, FR, ES, AR]
    • FAO
    • 10 November 2009

    Issue paper by FAO for the World Summit on Food Security, Rome, 16-18 November 2009

  • Argentine rains to boost Cresud, soybean harvests
    • Bloomberg
    • 09 November 2009

    Buenos Aires-based Cresud plans to acquire more land to add to the 484,000 hectares (1.2 million acres) it owns and the 90,410 hectares it leases in Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Bolivia

  • Eni's new energy projects threaten Congo Rainforest
    • BankTrack
    • 09 November 2009

    ENI plans to develop 70,000 ha of palm oil in Congo

  • China's latest Africa foray: altruism or hegemony?
    • IPS
    • 09 November 2009

    Earlier this year, delegates to the annual session of China’s parliament debated a proposal to seek employment for up to 100 million Chinese in various African countries to solve two of China’s greatest challenges—food security and unemployment.

  • Terres arables : Le Mali au coeur des convoitises
    • Le Monde
    • 09 November 2009

    IIs ont des mines inquiètes. « La politique du gouvemement est tournée vers les investisseurs etrangers. Mais, nous, qu'allons-nous devenir? »

  • Farmers sample what Libya offers
    • Business Day
    • 09 November 2009

    De Jager is worried about Libya’s record in enforcing contracts with foreign companies, and the lack of social support networks. “There’s a lot of money to be made for someone with balls,” he says.

  • Tea farmers struggle for survival in fields of gold
    • The Observer
    • 08 November 2009

    Commodity experts such as Goldman Sachs's Currie believe that land-grabbing is a good thing. He argues it will lead to more investment in agriculture. But others worry that the phenomenon will see farmers thrown off their land as more powerful forces move in.

  • Saudi to phase out water intensive crops
    • Al Arabiya
    • 07 November 2009

    Saudi Arabia plans to phase out production of water intensive crops such as wheat, soybeans and animal fodder. "It would be best to grow these kinds of crops outside Saudi Arabia," says the kingdom's water and electricity minister.

  • Sime Darby unit eyes more estates in Africa
    • Business Times
    • 07 November 2009

    Sime Darby Bhd, which owns 220,000ha of oil palm estates in Liberia, plans to strengthen its presence on the African continent and is eyeing more land in Cameroon, Congo and South Africa. The expansion is part of a long-term strategy to double planted areas to one million hectares and be nearer to the growing markets of Europe and the US.

  • Acaparamiento de tierras, un nuevo expolio africano
    • Rebelion
    • 07 November 2009

    Ama Biney escribe para Pambazuka News sobre la nueva avalancha de acaparamientos de tierras en África por parte de gobiernos extranjeros e inversores privados, movidos por el temor a una escasez mundial de alimentos provocada por el cambio climático y a una volatilidad en los precios de éstos en el mercado internacional

  • Answering the food security colonial conundrum?
    • The Gulf Blog
    • 07 November 2009

    One must ask if arrangements such as those promoted by Hassad Foods of Qatar are really that much better.

  • UN attempts to slow the new scramble for Africa
    • The Independent
    • 07 November 2009

    More than 50 heads of state will gather for a summit later this month to look at ways of policing the extraordinary "land grab" that has seen richer countries buy up at least 20m ha of farmland in Africa in the last 18 months.

  • The great global land grab
    • Red Pepper
    • 07 November 2009

    The global food crisis has prompted various rich countries to start buying up land in the poorer world to secure their food supplies. As well as affecting domestic food supplies in the countries affected, Sue Branford says it could be a time bomb for the world’s ability to cope with climate change

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Whos Involved?

Carbon land deals




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