
By Javier  Blas in 
Published:  May 24 2009 22:05
African  countries are giving away vast tracts of farmland to other countries and  investors almost for free, with the only benefits consisting of vague promises  of jobs and infrastructure, according to a report published on Monday.
“Most of  the land deals documented by this study involved no or minimal land fees,” it  says. Although the deals promise jobs and infrastructure development, it warns  that “these commitments tend to lack teeth” on the contracts.
The  report – “Land Grab or development opportunity?” – is written jointly by two UN  bodies – the Food and Agriculture Organisation and the International Fund for  Agricultural Development – and the International Institute for Environment and  Development, a London-based  think-tank.
It is  the first major study of the so-called “farmland grab” trend, in which rich countries such as  
The  trend gained notoriety after an attempt by South Korea’s Daewoo Logistics to secure  a large chunk of land in 
Some  critics, including Jacques Diouf, head of the FAO, warn against “neo-colonialism” but others say the investments can  boost economic growth in 
The  report, seen by the Financial Times, concludes that “virtually all the  [farmland] contracts” were “strikingly short and simple compared to the  economic reality of the transaction”. Key concerns such as “strengthening the  mechanisms to monitor or enforce compliance with investor commitments” on jobs  or infrastructure, “maximising government revenues”, or “balancing food  security concerns . . . are dealt with by vague provisions if at all”, it says.
The  report, which studied cases in Ethiopia, Ghana, Mali, Madagascar and Sudan, uncovered  farmland investment in the past five years totalling about 2.5m hectares –  equal to about half the arable land of the UK.
Other  estimates, including one from Peter Brabeck, chairman of Nestlé,  put total farmland investments in Africa, Latin America and Asia above 15m  hectares, about half the size of 
Also  raised in the report was the risk that poor people will lose access to farmland  and water.
“Land  allocations on the scale documented in this study do have the potential to  result in loss of land for large numbers of people,” the report states. “Long-term  land leases – for 50 or even 99 years – are unsustainable,” it adds.
Lorenzo  Cotula, one of the report’s authors, says new research indicates that farmland  deals could be “structured much better”. In particular, it proposes giving host  countries more resources to negotiate the deals.
“As  pressure grows, the deals will start to be done in a different way,” he adds.
Source: http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/612aa510-488c-11de-8870-00144feabdc0.html
 
 

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