New from GRAIN
October 2008
http://www.grain.org/nfg/?id=610
http://www.grain.org/go/landgrab

SEIZED: THE 2008 LAND GRAB FOR FOOD AND FINANCIAL SECURITY

A new report from GRAIN

Today's food and financial crises have, in tandem, triggered a new 
global land grab. "Food insecure" governments that rely on imports to 
feed their people are snapping up farms all over the world to 
outsource their own food production and escape high market prices. 
Private investors, hungry for profits in the midst of the deepening 
financial crisis, are eyeing overseas farms as an important new 
source of revenue. As a result of both trends, fertile agricultural 
land is being swiftly privatised and consolidated by foreign 
companies in some of the world's poorest and hungriest countries. A 
new report from GRAIN examines 100 cases of agricultural land 
grabbing -- whether for food or simply for profit -- that have 
exploded this year.

Saudi Arabia and China are just two nations out buying farms, from 
Sudan to Cambodia, to satisfy their own food needs. In these cases, 
governments, sometimes through sovereign wealth funds, are 
negotiating rights to foreign land -- whether by purchase, concession 
or lease -- so that their corporations can come in and produce food 
to export back home. In return, they are offering oil contracts, soft 
loans, infrastructure projects and development funds. The food-hungry 
land grabbers include China, India, Japan, Malaysia, Korea, Egypt, 
Libya, Bahrain, Jordan, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and United Arab 
Emirates. Those giving up their land, in exchange for the oil deals 
or investments, include the Philippines, Mozambique, Thailand, 
Cambodia, Burma, Laos, Indonesia, Pakistan, Sudan, Uganda, Brazil, 
Paraguay, Uruguay, Ukraine, Russia, Kazakhstan and Zimbabwe.

Investing in farms abroad to produce food for a tight world market is 
also, apparently, a hot way to make money these days. Throughout this 
year, an army of investment houses, private equity managers and hedge 
funds have been out purchasing farmland throughout the world. The 
plan is to capitalise on low land costs and high food prices wherever 
fertile farmland is available, such as in Ukraine, China, Russia, 
Nigeria, Argentina, Brazil and Kazakhstan. The money-hungry land 
grabbers include familiar names such as Goldman Sachs, Morgan 
Stanley, BlackRock and Louis Dreyfus, but there are plenty of others. 
And they are getting help from agencies like the World Bank, its 
International Finance Corporation and the European Bank for 
Reconstruction and Development, who are pressing target countries to 
change their laws and make stronger land ownership by foreigners 
possible.

While political leaders and UN bodies are trying to "manage" the 
potential backlash, farmers' organisations, opposition parties, human 
rights groups and others are challenging and resisting these deals. 
But much more needs to be done to stop this massive sell-out of the 
very basis of food sovereignty.

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GRAIN, "Seized: The 2008 land grab for food and financial security", 
GRAIN briefing, October 2008, (11 pp) + Annex (11 pp). Available at: 
http://www.grain.org/go/landgrab

THERE ARE FOUR MAIN PARTS TO THIS LAND GRAB BRIEFING:

1. A summary and announcement - this email, available online here: 
http://www.grain.org/nfg/?id=610

2. The full report is available here: http://www.grain.org/briefings/?id=212
Also available in PDF format: http://www.grain.org/briefings/?id=212&pdf

3. The Annex to this briefing is a table with over 100 cases of land 
grabbing for offshore food production as presented in this report. It 
is available in a separate PDF file: 
http://www.grain.org/briefings_files/landgrab-2008-en-annex.pdf

4. GRAIN has released a Google Notebook with full-text news clippings 
collected during the research for this briefing as a support to those 
who want to read more.
http://tinyurl.com/landgrab2008
The notebook is only available online, and the news clippings are not 
in any order, but it can easily be searched. We are doing this 
because this is not always an easy subject to research on the 
internet, if you want a broad picture. People may add further 
clippings to the notebook as they wish, to further build this 
collective resource - if you would like to participate, please send 
an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
(GRAIN will not be maintaining nor be responsible for it. Most of the 
articles are at present in English. A backup copy is available in PDF 
format from here: http://www.grain.org/m/?id=209)

===========================================================

MEDIA INTERESTED IN THIS REPORT MAY CONTACT:

Alexis Vaughan on +44 79 74 39 34 87 or [EMAIL PROTECTED]


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