Chinese firms and Gulf sheiks are snatching up farmland worldwide. Why?
    A slew of countries and investors — from Chinese state corporations to Gulf sheiks to Wall Street firms — have started buying up farmland overseas, in an apparent attempt to acquire as much precious soil and water as possible.
    • Washington Post
    • 26 January 2013
    A global hunt for water profit risks draining cities dry
    Bloomberg exposé on Frank Timis' plan to turn Les Fermes de la Teranga (ex-Senhuile) into a major source of animal feed for the Gulf States and the implications for Dakar's water supply
    • Bloomberg
    • 14 November 2023
    A new wave of land grabs strikes Tanzania
    Tanzania’s experience in the global land grab post-2008 led to shattered hopes, land conflicts & misery for small farmers. Yet, the current govt risks repeating history. A new report looks at this critical moment for Tanzania's small farmers & pastoralists.
    • GRAIN
    • 02 February 2024
    Much tilling without harvest
    Essentially, the Middle East is left with two choices. “The region has to import. The question is, invest abroad or rely on the free market?” said Dr Eckart Woertz, program manager in economics at the Gulf Research Center in Dubai.
    • Zawya
    • 16 April 2009
    Egypt’s takeover of Sudan’s Gezira scheme
    News of the deal has aroused very vehement protest from the Sudanese Farmer’s Union and the tenants in the Gezira Scheme.
    • Sudan Tribune
    • 19 December 2010
    The global farmland grab in 2016: how big, how bad?
    Eight years after releasing its first report on land grabbing, GRAIN publishes a new dataset documenting nearly 500 cases of land grabbing around the world.
    • GRAIN
    • 14 June 2016
    In Ethiopia, foreign investment is a fancy word for stealing land
    Land grabs in the developing world create a system so unequal that resource-rich countries become resource dependent.
    • Quartz
    • 17 October 2014
    CGIAR joins global farmland grab
    An internal document recently posted on IRRI's website reveals that the Institute has been advising Saudi Arabia in the context of its strategy to acquire farm land overseas for its own food production.
    • GRAIN
    • 08 September 2009
    Water scarcity, food security concerns prompt global land grab
    Area nearly the size of France purchased, leased for food production around the world Africa, South America, parts of Europe targeted by cash-rich, food-poor nations
    • Circle of Blue
    • 17 November 2009
    BRICS grab African land and sovereignty
    BRICS states, except Russia, are enhancing and facilitating land grabs abroad in a way that is inconsistent with their proclamations of sustainable development, cooperation solidarity, and respect of national sovereignty.
    • Pambazuka
    • 28 Mar 2013
    China and the great global landgrab
    Stephen Marks looks at the latest rush by China and countries in the middle east to sign lease agreements in poor countries for agricultural production, and what this trend means in terms of food security and access to arable land for local populations.
    • Pambazuka
    • 11 December 2008
    Land grabbing: exploring challenges and implications for water, energy and food security
    Conversation with Maria Antonelli about the main drivers and implications of land transactions around the world, with a particular focus both on the role of EU.
    • ClimateScience&Policy
    • 22 October 2014
    Wish you weren't here: The devastating effects of the new colonialists
    A new breed of colonialism is rampaging across the world, with rich nations buying up the natural resources of developing countries that can ill afford to sell. Some staggering deals have already been done, but angry locals are now trying to stop the landgrabs
    • The Independent
    • 09 August 2009
    The South Africa-Congo concession: Exploitation or salvation?
    The much-discussed Congo land-lease, granting 200,000 hectares to South African farmers with a further 10 million hectares in the balance, appears to mark a departure from the usual terms underpinning foreign acquisition of fertile land by multinationals
    • Pambazuka
    • 07 January 2010
    Grabbing Africa
    The global rush to acquire agricultural land in bountiful Africa evokes concern and protests.
    • Frontline
    • 20 April 2010
    Land grabs - Another scramble for Africa
    Civil society, including African farmers unions, need to educate local people that such land deals are not in their interests, however couched in 'win-win' terminology they appear to be.
    • Fahamu
    • 17 September 2009
    Africa-ME 'agricultural tie-up ideal'
    Africa's untapped agriculture potential make it an ideal partner for resource-constrained Middle Eastern countries that seek to improve their food security, a new report from Standard Chartered Bank said.
    • Trade Arabia
    • 22 July 2010
    The global land rush: Catalyst for resource-driven conflict?
    Given the power imbalances at play, it is folly to assume that land-seekers will suddenly embrace, en masse, a set of voluntary rules promoting sustainable and equitable investor practices, says Michael Kugelman
    • Sustainable Security
    • 02 August 2012
    Land grabbing in Latin America
    Right now communities in Latin America, as around the world, are suffering a new kind of invasion of their territories
    • GRAIN
    • 05 Mar 2010
    New wave of agricultural land-grabs reaches Canada
    Quietly, these modern-day land marauders are coming to Canada—undermining family farms, compromising local food sovereignty, and harming the environment.
    • Dominion
    • 27 September 2010
    A quarter of Northern Territory pastoral lease land held by foreign interests
    An ABC Rural investigation reveals the extent of the creep of foreign ownership in the Top End, particularly over the past three years.
    • ABC
    • 16 September 2015
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