Food security in the Caribbean
    The Caribbean is still struggling to develop a new agricultural model. While small scale agriculture and land ownership continues to have a deep rooted and emotional appeal, large scale farming with its echo of servitude–in the Anglophone Caribbean at least–remains far from attractive.
    • Trinidad Express
    • 02 May 2009
    Saudi Arabia eyes agricultural investments in RP
    A delegation from Saudi Arabia is set to arrive in Manila next week to explore possible investments in the country's farm sector
    • abs-cbnNews.com
    • 01 May 2009
    Seminar on the global land grab and human rights
    The Global Land Grab: A Human Rights Approach seminar will analyze the global land grab through a human rights lens, assessing the trade and investment agreements that are enabling the trend, as well as its likely effects on small farmers, indigenous peoples and food sovereignty.
    • 3D Three
    • 01 May 2009
    Selling farms to foreigners: Question of profit or loss
    Rattled by last year's food price crisis, governments and corporations have signed a slew of deals to lease or buy arable land in cash-strapped nations, mainly in Africa and Southeast Asia.
    • The Straits Times
    • 01 May 2009
    We need our own stimulus package
    The Ernst & Young office in Addis is currently advising several investors from the Middle East, especially Saudi Arabia, who are investing tens of millions of dollars in the agro industry in Ethiopia.
    • Africa Investor
    • 01 May 2009
    Souveraineté alimentaire: Les futurs députés européens interpellés sur les questions agricoles
    Abandonner les agrocaburants, soutenir l’agriculture familiale plutôt que l’agro-business, empêcher des fonds spéculatifs de s’acaparer des terres, relocaliser la production alimentaire… Telles sont quelques-unes des doléances de la Confédération paysanne et d’associations de solidarité internationale auprès des futurs députés européens.
    • Basta !
    • 30 April 2009
    Bidwells to speak at Washington 'land grab' conference
    'Land Grab: The Race for the World's Farmland' is the title of the conference, focusing on the recent race to secure large areas of arable farmland around the world.
    • Land Gazette
    • 30 April 2009
    Food scare sparks Third World land rush
    The International Food Policy Research Institute said 15 million to 20 million hectares of farmland in poor nations were sold since 2006, or were under negotiation for sale to foreign entities.
    • Reuters
    • 30 April 2009
    Angola invests in agricultural revival
    The Angolan government plans to invest $1 billion in 2009 in the farming sector and welcome in U.S. Chiquita Brands International Inc to its banana industry. Other foreign companies and countries, including China have also said they plan to invest millions of dollars in the war-shattered nation’s coffee, sugar, cassava and palm oil industries.
    • Reuters
    • 30 April 2009
    Jarch doubles its Sudanese empire
    Although it slipped past the world’s media, in mid-April it emerged that Jarch Capital had doubled its landholdings in Southern Sudan. That takes the acreage owned by Phillippe Heilberg and chums to a massive 800,000 hectares, or 3,000 square miles, which the firm claims will become a gigantic agricultural plantation.
    • The Hidden Paw
    • 29 April 2009
    Giusti quiere limitar el derecho a extranjeros para adquirir tierras
    El diez por ciento del territorio argentino está en posesión de extranjeros, lo que constituye alrededor de 300 mil kilómetros cuadrados, según un estudio realizado por la Federación Agraria Argentina en el año 2007.
    • Diario de Madryn
    • 29 April 2009
    Food crisis triggers land grab in developing countries
    Von Braun says many details of the land deals are unknown because of a lack of transparency. But he estimates the amount of land and money involved. “It adds up to 15 to 20 million hectares currently under negotiation…. So it’s fairly large. How much money is involved? If we add up the deals negotiated and the investments planned, it adds up to $20 to $30 billion of investment,” he says.
    • VoA News
    • 29 April 2009
    “Land grabbing” by foreign investors in developing countries: risks and opportunities (IFPRI)
    These land acquisitions have the potential to inject much-needed investment into agriculture and rural areas in poor developing countries, but they also raise concerns about the impacts on poor local people, who risk losing access to and control over land on which they depend.
    • International Food Policy Research Institute
    • 29 April 2009
    Egypt plans to sell farmland in tenders
    Egypt may start selling farmland in tenders to foreign and local investors by June as part of a new agro-industrial zones project, the head of the country's Industrial Development Authority said.
    • Reuters
    • 29 April 2009
    Philippines offers farm products to Saudi
    The Philippines has offered to become a major source of agricultural products to Saudi Arabia ahead of a planned visit by the kingdom’s agricultural minister Fahd Balghunaim, Arab News reported on Wednesday.
    • Maktoob
    • 29 April 2009

Who's involved?

Whos Involved?

Carbon land deals




  • 07 Oct 2025 - Cape Town
    Land, life and society: International conference on the road to ICARRD+20
  • Languages



    Special content



    Archives


    Latest posts