Bitter harvest: Aussie families warn of foreign giants buying up the farm

Canberra Times | 25 September 2013
Medium_australia-stockinbingal
Family business: Gregory Morton, 27, and Brad, 19, look out over this season's canola crop. Brad doesn't want a farm because of the financial risk of trading with multinationals. (Photo: Jay Cronan)

by John Thistleton, Brian Robins
 
A premier grain district where flowering canola rises up to a man's shoulder, Stockinbingal, in the state's west, is becoming the land of the giants.

US, Canadian, Arabian and Swiss interests are buying up multiple properties in the area, and the handful of Australian family farms that remain want the federal government to intervene.

Farmer Peter Morton and his sons Gregory and Brad are the forgotten voice in the debate about foreign ownership, which is becoming louder since US company Archer Daniels Midland has made a $3.4 billion bid for Australia's biggest agribusiness, GrainCorp.

The Nationals oppose the sale but Prime Minister Tony Abbott has made it clear he wants more foreign investment. Whether to allow the takeover will be one of the first decisions for the new Treasurer, Joe Hockey.

Even if control goes overseas, the Coalition is expected to introduce a national register of foreign farmland, and reduce the threshold so that deals worth $15 million or more need government approval.

Peter Morton said foreigners were buying farms and dictating terms of trade. Their quest for land had forced up the price around Stockinbingal to a point where many family farmers could not afford to buy out neighbours when they retired.

''It is going to ruin small farms. Between here, Barmedman, Quandialla, you are talking 150,000 acres - 10 years ago it was owned by families. Today it isn't. It is owned by two or three companies,'' Mr Morton said.

Gregory Morton, 27, wants to lease land to start on his own but Brad, 19, doesn't want a farm because of the financial risk of grain trading with multi-nationals.

Mr Morton recalls a buyer last year who said he had $15 million to spend if anyone was interested.

A neighbour, John Harper, is bewildered that foreigners see more value in GrainCorp than Australians do. ''That's why we have all this angst. There's all the great characteristics of being an Aussie farmer in rural Australia but there is no incentive, no security.''

Peter O'Connor, a broadacre farmer at Harden, does not think the government should block ADM's takeover.

''The horse bolted many years ago when farmers sold GrainCorp and floated it on the sharemarket,'' he said.

Who's involved?

Whos Involved?


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