Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

I see investment in Africa as great but The Guardian trashes it.

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • I see investment in Africa as great but The Guardian trashes it.

    Now obviously if a dictatorial government is taking land away from its legal owners without compensation then that is wrong but the truth is Africa badly, badly, badly needs this kind of foreign investment to create jobs, to boost agricultural output, to gain new tax revenue, and to boost exports to help pay for all of their imports. According to The Guardian international investors are investing heavily into creating world class mega-farms in Africa mostly for the export trade. Personally, I see this as a very good thing because it takes under performing farm land and turns it into state of the art highly productive farm land, it creates tens of thousands of new jobs in a place which badly needs jobs, and it boosts exports as well as the world food supply. To the Guardian though it is nothing but neo-colonialism which is the boneheaded thinking which keeps so much of Africa poor.
    How food and water are driving a 21st-century African land grab

    We turned off the main road to Awassa, talked our way past security guards and drove a mile across empty land before we found what will soon be Ethiopia's largest greenhouse. Nestling below an escarpment of the Rift Valley, the development is far from finished, but the plastic and steel structure already stretches over 20 hectares – the size of 20 football pitches.

    The farm manager shows us millions of tomatoes, peppers and other vegetables being grown in 500m rows in computer controlled conditions. Spanish engineers are building the steel structure, Dutch technology minimises water use from two bore-holes and 1,000 women pick and pack 50 tonnes of food a day. Within 24 hours, it has been driven 200 miles to Addis Ababa and flown 1,000 miles to the shops and restaurants of Dubai, Jeddah and elsewhere in the Middle East.

    Ethiopia is one of the hungriest countries in the world with more than 13 million people needing food aid, but paradoxically the government is offering at least 3m hectares of its most fertile land to rich countries and some of the world's most wealthy individuals to export food for their own populations.

    The 1,000 hectares of land which contain the Awassa greenhouses are leased for 99 years to a Saudi billionaire businessman, Ethiopian-born Sheikh Mohammed al-Amoudi, one of the 50 richest men in the world. His Saudi Star company plans to spend up to $2bn acquiring and developing 500,000 hectares of land in Ethiopia in the next few years. So far, it has bought four farms and is already growing wheat, rice, vegetables and flowers for the Saudi market. It expects eventually to employ more than 10,000 people.

    But Ethiopia is only one of 20 or more African countries where land is being bought or leased for intensive agriculture on an immense scale in what may be the greatest change of ownership since the colonial era.

    An Observer investigation estimates that up to 50m hectares of land – an area more than double the size of the UK – has been acquired in the last few years or is in the process of being negotiated by governments and wealthy investors working with state subsidies. The data used was collected by Grain, the International Institute for Environment and Development, the International Land Coalition, ActionAid and other non-governmental groups.

    The land rush, which is still accelerating, has been triggered by the worldwide food shortages which followed the sharp oil price rises in 2008, growing water shortages and the European Union's insistence that 10% of all transport fuel must come from plant-based biofuels by 2015.

    In many areas the deals have led to evictions, civil unrest and complaints of "land grabbing".

    The experience of Nyikaw Ochalla, an indigenous Anuak from the Gambella region of Ethiopia now living in Britain but who is in regular contact with farmers in his region, is typical. He said: "All of the land in the Gambella region is utilised. Each community has and looks after its own territory and the rivers and farmlands within it. It is a myth propagated by the government and investors to say that there is waste land or land that is not utilised in Gambella.

    "The foreign companies are arriving in large numbers, depriving people of land they have used for centuries. There is no consultation with the indigenous population. The deals are done secretly. The only thing the local people see is people coming with lots of tractors to invade their lands.

    "All the land round my family village of Illia has been taken over and is being cleared. People now have to work for an Indian company. Their land has been compulsorily taken and they have been given no compensation. People cannot believe what is happening. Thousands of people will be affected and people will go hungry."

    It is not known if the acquisitions will improve or worsen food security in Africa, or if they will stimulate separatist conflicts, but a major World Bank report due to be published this month is expected to warn of both the potential benefits and the immense dangers they represent to people and nature.

    Leading the rush are international agribusinesses, investment banks, hedge funds, commodity traders, sovereign wealth funds as well as UK pension funds, foundations and individuals attracted by some of the world's cheapest land.

    Together they are scouring Sudan, Kenya, Nigeria, Tanzania, Malawi, Ethiopia, Congo, Zambia, Uganda, Madagascar, Zimbabwe, Mali, Sierra Leone, Ghana and elsewhere. Ethiopia alone has approved 815 foreign-financed agricultural projects since 2007. Any land there, which investors have not been able to buy, is being leased for approximately $1 per year per hectare.

    Saudi Arabia, along with other Middle Eastern emirate states such as Qatar, Kuwait and Abu Dhabi, is thought to be the biggest buyer. In 2008 the Saudi government, which was one of the Middle East's largest wheat-growers, announced it was to reduce its domestic cereal production by 12% a year to conserve its water. It earmarked $5bn to provide loans at preferential rates to Saudi companies which wanted to invest in countries with strong agricultural potential .

    Meanwhile, the Saudi investment company Foras, backed by the Islamic Development Bank and wealthy Saudi investors, plans to spend $1bn buying land and growing 7m tonnes of rice for the Saudi market within seven years. The company says it is investigating buying land in Mali, Senegal, Sudan and Uganda. By turning to Africa to grow its staple crops, Saudi Arabia is not just acquiring Africa's land but is securing itself the equivalent of hundreds of millions of gallons of scarce water a year. Water, says the UN, will be the defining resource of the next 100 years.

    Since 2008 Saudi investors have bought heavily in Sudan, Egypt, Ethiopia and Kenya. Last year the first sacks of wheat grown in Ethiopia for the Saudi market were presented by al-Amoudi to King Abdullah.

    Some of the African deals lined up are eye-wateringly large: China has signed a contract with the Democratic Republic of Congo to grow 2.8m hectares of palm oil for biofuels. Before it fell apart after riots, a proposed 1.2m hectares deal between Madagascar and the South Korean company Daewoo would have included nearly half of the country's arable land.

    Land to grow biofuel crops is also in demand. "European biofuel companies have acquired or requested about 3.9m hectares in Africa. This has led to displacement of people, lack of consultation and compensation, broken promises about wages and job opportunities," said Tim Rice, author of an ActionAid report which estimates that the EU needs to grow crops on 17.5m hectares, well over half the size of Italy, if it is to meet its 10% biofuel target by 2015.

    "The biofuel land grab in Africa is already displacing farmers and food production. The number of people going hungry will increase," he said. British firms have secured tracts of land in Angola, Ethiopia, Mozambique, Nigeria and Tanzania to grow flowers and vegetables.

    Indian companies, backed by government loans, have bought or leased hundreds of thousands of hectares in Ethiopia, Kenya, Madagascar, Senegal and Mozambique, where they are growing rice, sugar cane, maize and lentils to feed their domestic market.

    Nowhere is now out of bounds. Sudan, emerging from civil war and mostly bereft of development for a generation, is one of the new hot spots. South Korean companies last year bought 700,000 hectares of northern Sudan for wheat cultivation; the United Arab Emirates have acquired 750,000 hectares and Saudi Arabia last month concluded a 42,000-hectare deal in Nile province.

    The government of southern Sudan says many companies are now trying to acquire land. "We have had many requests from many developers. Negotiations are going on," said Peter Chooli, director of water resources and irrigation, in Juba last week. "A Danish group is in discussions with the state and another wants to use land near the Nile."

    In one of the most extraordinary deals, buccaneering New York investment firm Jarch Capital, run by a former commodities trader, Philip Heilberg, has leased 800,000 hectares in southern Sudan near Darfur. Heilberg has promised not only to create jobs but also to put 10% or more of his profits back into the local community. But he has been accused by Sudanese of "grabbing" communal land and leading an American attempt to fragment Sudan and exploit its resources.

    Devlin Kuyek, a Montreal-based researcher with Grain, said investing in Africa was now seen as a new food supply strategy by many governments. "Rich countries are eyeing Africa not just for a healthy return on capital, but also as an insurance policy. Food shortages and riots in 28 countries in 2008, declining water supplies, climate change and huge population growth have together made land attractive. Africa has the most land and, compared with other continents, is cheap," he said.

    "Farmland in sub-Saharan Africa is giving 25% returns a year and new technology can treble crop yields in short time frames," said Susan Payne, chief executive of Emergent Asset Management, a UK investment fund seeking to spend $50m on African land, which, she said, was attracting governments, corporations, multinationals and other investors. "Agricultural development is not only sustainable, it is our future. If we do not pay great care and attention now to increase food production by over 50% before 2050, we will face serious food shortages globally," she said.

    But many of the deals are widely condemned by both western non-government groups and nationals as "new colonialism", driving people off the land and taking scarce resources away from people.

    We met Tegenu Morku, a land agent, in a roadside cafe on his way to the region of Oromia in Ethiopia to find 500 hectares of land for a group of Egyptian investors. They planned to fatten cattle, grow cereals and spices and export as much as possible to Egypt. There had to be water available and he expected the price to be about 15 birr (75p) per hectare per year – less than a quarter of the cost of land in Egypt and a tenth of the price of land in Asia.

    "The land and labour is cheap and the climate is good here. Everyone – Saudis, Turks, Chinese, Egyptians – is looking. The farmers do not like it because they get displaced, but they can find land elsewhere and, besides, they get compensation, equivalent to about 10 years' crop yield," he said.

    Oromia is one of the centres of the African land rush. Haile Hirpa, president of the Oromia studies' association, said last week in a letter of protest to UN secretary-general Ban Ki-moon that India had acquired 1m hectares, Djibouti 10,000 hectares, Saudi Arabia 100,000 hectares, and that Egyptian, South Korean, Chinese, Nigerian and other Arab investors were all active in the state.

    "This is the new, 21st-century colonisation. The Saudis are enjoying the rice harvest, while the Oromos are dying from man-made famine as we speak," he said.

    The Ethiopian government denied the deals were causing hunger and said that the land deals were attracting hundreds of millions of dollars of foreign investments and tens of thousands of jobs. A spokesman said: "Ethiopia has 74m hectares of fertile land, of which only 15% is currently in use – mainly by subsistence farmers. Of the remaining land, only a small percentage – 3 to 4% – is offered to foreign investors. Investors are never given land that belongs to Ethiopian farmers. The government also encourages Ethiopians in the diaspora to invest in their homeland. They bring badly needed technology, they offer jobs and training to Ethiopians, they operate in areas where there is suitable land and access to water."

    The reality on the ground is different, according to Michael Taylor, a policy specialist at the International Land Coalition. "If land in Africa hasn't been planted, it's probably for a reason. Maybe it's used to graze livestock or deliberately left fallow to prevent nutrient depletion and erosion. Anybody who has seen these areas identified as unused understands that there is no land in Ethiopia that has no owners and users."

    Development experts are divided on the benefits of large-scale, intensive farming. Indian ecologist Vandana Shiva said in London last week that large-scale industrial agriculture not only threw people off the land but also required chemicals, pesticides, herbicides, fertilisers, intensive water use, and large-scale transport, storage and distribution which together turned landscapes into enormous mono-cultural plantations.

    "We are seeing dispossession on a massive scale. It means less food is available and local people will have less. There will be more conflict and political instability and cultures will be uprooted. The small farmers of Africa are the basis of food security. The food availability of the planet will decline," she says. But Rodney Cooke, director at the UN's International Fund for Agricultural Development, sees potential benefits. "I would avoid the blanket term 'land-grabbing'. Done the right way, these deals can bring benefits for all parties and be a tool for development."

    Lorenzo Cotula, senior researcher with the International Institute for Environment and Development, who co-authored a report on African land exchanges with the UN fund last year, found that well-structured deals could guarantee employment, better infrastructures and better crop yields. But badly handled they could cause great harm, especially if local people were excluded from decisions about allocating land and if their land rights were not protected.

    Water is also controversial. Local government officers in Ethiopia told the Observer that foreign companies that set up flower farms and other large intensive farms were not being charged for water. "We would like to, but the deal is made by central government," said one. In Awassa, the al-Amouni farm uses as much water a year as 100,000 Ethiopians.
    An Observer investigation reveals how rich countries faced by a global food shortage now farm an area double the size of the UK to guarantee supplies for their citizens
    Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

  • #2
    If the land is being put to use more efficiently, then the local people will benefit, even if those benefits aren't immediately apparent. Tomatoes exported pay for potatoes imported. If this is not using the land more efficiently, then it could certainly be a problem.
    John Brown did nothing wrong.

    Comment


    • #3
      The main complaint that I see leftists dumbly making is that since Ethiopia has wide spread hunger it shouldn't export any food items because, wrongly, they think this will raise the local price of food. Exporting relatively high priced agricultural goods like tomatoes and gourmet coffee beans helps pay for, as you said, cheap imported potatoes or grain. Plus I doubt the reason so many Ethiopians don't get enough food is because there isn't enough food in the markets to buy but instead since Ethiopia is one of the poorest countries in the world the people don't have the money to buy enough food so creating jobs is key to lowering hunger levels.

      The way to create jobs is to get investment especially foreign investment since individual Ethiopians don't have a lot of excess capital to invest. These investments improve the output of farm land so that there is more food produced, they create jobs, they create new tax revenue, they create export revenue which can be used to purchase needed imports, plus it helps create better infrastructure as you need the roads, trains, ports, and airports to transport these goods to world markets. I see this as a total win-win just as virtually all increases in trade are win-win but for some reason leftists like the folks at the Guardian think it is neo-colonial and bad. It's retarded.
      Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

      Comment


      • #4
        Don't see a problem with this. I would like to see our government here reduce public land ownership to 25 percent down from 95 percent.
        Scouse Git (2) La Fayette Adam Smith Solomwi and Loinburger will not be forgotten.
        "Remember the night we broke the windows in this old house? This is what I wished for..."
        2015 APOLYTON FANTASY FOOTBALL CHAMPION!

        Comment


        • #5
          The biggest problem with investing in Africa is corruption. The only thing being argued here is what type of corruption do we want.
          Monkey!!!

          Comment


          • #6
            Exactly. If the investment is getting to your average joe, great. If it's being hoarded by fat cats who own vast mechanised farms that employ minimal staff, not so good.
            Jon Miller: MikeH speaks the truth
            Jon Miller: MikeH is a shockingly revolting dolt and a masturbatory urine-reeking sideshow freak whose word is as valuable as an aging cow paddy.
            We've got both kinds

            Comment


            • #7
              Here's the good old-fashioned capitalist perspective-

              Let's talk supply and demand. If the price being offered for the land is so wonderful, why are they having to seize it?
              The genesis of the "evil Finn" concept- Evil, evil Finland

              Comment


              • #8
                Now some more awkward questions-

                1- Why can't foreign aid be used to provide wells, equipment, extra livestock, training and improved crops to the people already on the land?

                2- If the aim is to feed Africa, how will turning over its land to produce biofuels and coffee help?

                3- "The farmers do not like it because they get displaced, but they can find land elsewhere and, besides, they get compensation, equivalent to about 10 years' crop yield"

                Is that compensation enough, given that the farmers have to relocate, re-plant and feed themselves for up to a year afterwards- meaning that it's only from the remaining funds that they can buy land?
                The genesis of the "evil Finn" concept- Evil, evil Finland

                Comment


                • #9
                  Supposedly it is only certain governments, dictatorial ones, which are seizing land. That's wrong and obviously corrupt. There is also likely the issue of people living on land which they have no legal title to and so, legally speaking, they don't actually own it.
                  Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Bugs ****ing Bunny View Post
                    Now some more awkward questions-

                    1- Why can't foreign aid be used to provide wells, equipment, extra livestock, training and improved crops to the people already on the land?

                    2- If the aim is to feed Africa, how will turning over its land to produce biofuels and coffee help?

                    3- "The farmers do not like it because they get displaced, but they can find land elsewhere and, besides, they get compensation, equivalent to about 10 years' crop yield"

                    Is that compensation enough, given that the farmers have to relocate, re-plant and feed themselves for up to a year afterwards- meaning that it's only from the remaining funds that they can buy land?
                    1. The reality is tiny subsistence plot farms are not economically viable and won't result in new jobs and likely aren't productive enough to support even one family.

                    2. The goal here is to grow what makes the most value added and thus the most profit. If that's coffee and biofuels then great as the profits can then be used to buy other things off the world market. Or do you think Japan shouldn't convert farm land to car factories because it should be 100% food self sufficient? The truth is using the land for what ever purpose makes the most money is economically speaking the best move.

                    3. That was a quote from the Ethiopian government which supposedly does pay fair compensation though I don't see how this is different from any other use of imminent domain by governments.
                    Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by Oerdin View Post
                      Supposedly it is only certain governments, dictatorial ones, which are seizing land.

                      Talk us through the list of African governments which aren't dictatorial and/or highly corrupt.
                      The genesis of the "evil Finn" concept- Evil, evil Finland

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        True, though one would hope that economic development would lead to better governance. It has in Asia and Latin America.
                        Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Part of the problem is that they have to want to learn. Didn't they have to kick people off the land in England in order to get things going there?
                          Scouse Git (2) La Fayette Adam Smith Solomwi and Loinburger will not be forgotten.
                          "Remember the night we broke the windows in this old house? This is what I wished for..."
                          2015 APOLYTON FANTASY FOOTBALL CHAMPION!

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by Oerdin View Post
                            1. The reality is tiny subsistence plot farms are not economically viable and won't result in new jobs and likely aren't productive enough to support even one family.
                            We're talking about communities who managed to sustain themselves for centuries before international aid came along. People who will have to survive even after the land is sold.

                            2. The goal here is to grow what makes the most value added and thus the most profit. If that's coffee and biofuels then great as the profits can then be used to buy other things off the world market. Or do you think Japan shouldn't convert farm land to car factories because it should be 100% food self sufficient? The truth is using the land for what ever purpose makes the most money is economically speaking the best move.
                            Japan isn't Africa. The modern Japanese government isn't noted for its willingness to watch ethnic minorities starve- unlike Ethiopia and Sudan, who feature in the article you criticise.

                            What's good for the governments of these nations isn't necessarily good for the people.

                            3. That was a quote from the Ethiopian government which supposedly does pay fair compensation though I don't see how this is different from any other use of imminent domain by governments.

                            If it really was a good price, why opt for neo-Marxist land grabs? Let the market work.
                            The genesis of the "evil Finn" concept- Evil, evil Finland

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              I believe Ethiopia is different in that it used to be a communist state and land is all owned by the government so this would be a peculiarity of local politics. I notice that the foreigners only get to lease the land from the government and not officially own it so this would appear to be a case of the owner, the government, attempting to find the tenets who give them the highest rate of return on an asset they own.
                              Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

                              Comment

                              Working...
                              X