• China slow to invest in expensive LatAm farmland
    • Reuters
    • 14 August 2009

    Resource-hungry China has so far passed over investing in high-priced farmlands of South America in favor of Africa, with its less developed commodities markets, greater need for financing and open labor laws.

  • El rapto de África
    • El País
    • 14 August 2009

    El crecimiento de la población provoca que la demanda de alimentos se esté disparando. La falta de títulos y de registros facilita que muchos afectados no sean tenidos en cuenta

  • Sugar Cane Invades the Brazilian Central Plateau
    • Grassroots International
    • 14 August 2009

    Suicide is becoming a common reality in Barreirinhas, as families are talked into “renting” their land to the sugar cane companies.

  • Hunger-ridden Ethiopia defends land grabs
    • Business Daily
    • 14 August 2009

    Ethiopia is on the defensive over a plan to offer 2.7 million hectares of land to foreign, mainly Asian, companies despite millions crying out for food aid from the international community.

  • Abu Dhabi firm grows in Egypt
    • The National
    • 13 August 2009

    A private agricultural investment firm in Abu Dhabi plans a Dh925 million (US$251.8m) farmland deal in Egypt to grow wheat for the African nation’s domestic market.

  • Ukraine's most undervalued resource, rich black soil, becomes focus of growing battle over land
    • Kyiv Post
    • 13 August 2009

    If the moratorium on agricultural land sale is lifted, rich multinational corporations will buy and it will be legislatively impossible to strip them of lands that could be used for feeding Ukrainians.

  • Foreign states in race to take up Ethiopia’s farmland
    • Daily Nation
    • 13 August 2009

    Ethiopian government has defended its plan to offer 2.7 million hectares of farmland to foreign companies despite millions of citizens who need food aid from the international community.

  • International agricultural land deals award Ethiopian virgin lands to foreign companies
    • Abugida Info
    • 13 August 2009

    The terms of farmland deals are hardly made public. Although a theoretical possibility exists in a few cases for some transfer of technology for agricultural development, risk also exists to peasant farmers who cannot compete with well-resourced commercial farms. Take, for instance, the case of barley and oilseeds producers in Ethiopia.

  • Development experts fear unchecked international land grabs in Africa
    • Deutsche Welle
    • 13 August 2009

    The consensus is that Africa is being out-gunned. While regulations & rules are debated, the amount of land being bought up by foreign investors is increasing at a rapacious speed.

  • Stop hunting for 'foreign' scapegoats
    • Bangkok Post
    • 13 August 2009

    Yes, we should be concerned about the farmers' rapid loss of land. But aren't we pointing the finger in the wrong direction?

  • PM supports ban on foreigners
    • Bangkok Post
    • 13 August 2009

    The Thai government has reiterated it will do everything in its power to keep the country's rice farming land out of the hands of foreign investors.

  • Gulf risks animosity with land grab deals
    • Reuters
    • 13 August 2009

    Gulf states buying farmland in developing nations for food security face the risk of damaging their reputation as international investors as the deals are seen as land grabs, a Rothschild executive said yesterday.

  • Rural poor petition Cambodian authorities over land grab
    • ABC
    • 13 August 2009

    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.

  • Food crisis: Fields of gold
    • Canadian Business
    • 12 August 2009

    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.

  • Cambodia: A land up for sale?
    • BBC
    • 12 August 2009

    Global Witness, an environmental pressure group, estimates Pheapimex now controls 7% of Cambodia's land area.

Who's involved?

Whos Involved?

Carbon land deals




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