Chinese investor plans to spend $100m on beef
- Australian Financial Review
- 04 May 2015
One of China’s largest beef producers, Honda Agriculture, is looking to buy up to $100 million worth of cattle property in Australia over the next 12 months.
One of China’s largest beef producers, Honda Agriculture, is looking to buy up to $100 million worth of cattle property in Australia over the next 12 months.
Because of plantations or infrastructure projects, people are displaced from the land that their livelihood depends on. To improve matters, the UN voluntary guidelines on the tenure of land, forests and water must be implemented.
Comboniano, encarregado do sector “Justiça e Paz”, o P. Arlindo Pinto escreveu uma carta aberta ao Governo de Moçambique, pedindo a revisão do ProSAVANA que visa o desenvolvimento agráriono país, mas que corre o risco de aumentar a pobreza.
Os países do G-8 querem assumir a terra do continente africano, exportando suas tecnologias e ignorando qualquer conhecimento agroecológico.
English translation of the joint request by 6 Japanese NGOs to the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Japan, and the President of JICA
平素から、国際協力におけるNGOの活動と役割にご理解とご協力をお示し下さり、誠にありがとうご ざいます。先般、4月18日付で、緊急声明「プロサバンナ事業でのマスタープラン初稿の開示と対話プロセスに関する 抗議と要請」をお送りいたしましたが、本状はその後の現地における公聴会の状況を踏まえ、要請するものです。
Mais de 50 pessoas dos quais camponeses e camponesas, associações de camponeses e os seus respectivos fóruns, do posto administrativo de Mutuale, Distrito de Malema, na província de Nampula, disseram NÃO ao ProSAVANA.
Land-based investments in Africa supported by the G8's New Alliance follow similar patterns to unrealised ambitions of biofuels investments.
A comprehensive investigation into the oil palm industry in West Papua, by awasMIFEE and Pusaka and local Papuan organisations Belantara Papua, Bin Madag Hom, Jasoil, SKP KAME and Jerat. Papua, and Sawit Watch.
Cette mobilisation n’est que le dernier acte d’un interminable bras de fer entre le groupe Bolloré et le groupement d’association de paysans et de villageois.
Irrigated farmland near the Niger River should be the breadbasket of Mali. But a lack of infrastructure, political instability, climate change and botched foreign investment deals mean the region isn't living up to its potential.
It’s right to hold destructive palm oil companies to account, but until we look to the organisations funding their activities we’re missing an important part of the puzzle.