
AFTER YEARS of competing
for overseas oil and mines
to fuel their still-growing
economies, India and China
are silently scouring the world
for their next great need: farmland to grow food.
The destination: Africa,
where economies are poor and
land is cheap.
Buying farmland abroad is
not new, but it has gained
urgency after a worldwide
spike in food prices through
2007 and 2008.
So, more than a dozen companies from India, backed by
the government, invested
about $2 billion (Rs 10,000
crore) in leasing land and
installing plants in Ethiopia
last year to produce sugar, tea
and several other crops. That
number is expected to double
to $4 billion this year, said
Gurjit Singh, India’s ambassador to Ethiopia.
While India is just warming
up, China and rich Gulf states
that face graver land and
water shortages have been
aggressively acquiring land
across Africa and some parts
of Asia, said a report prepared
by the Washington-based International Food Policy Research
Institute (IFPRI).
There are others. Last May, South Korea
joined the race, buying 690,000
hectares — about five times the
size of Delhi — in Sudan to
grow wheat.
Land worth between $20 billion and $30 billion (Rs 100,000
crore and 150,000 crore) was
bought in Africa and Asia over
the past three years, said
Joachim von Braun, director
general of IFPRI, who
authored the report.
How much land has been
sold? Between 15 million and
20 million hectares, which is
more than all of Germany’s
farmland, said Braun.
“Many governments, either
directly or through stateowned entities and public-private partnerships, are in negotiations for, or have already
closed deals on, arable land
leases, concessions, or purchases abroad,” said the IFPRI
report titled ‘Land Grabbing
by Foreign Investors in
Developing Countries: Risks
and Opportunities’.
Unlike earlier, when companies from the developed world
bought land for profit, the new
deals are driven by spiralling
shortages in emerging
economies such as India or
China, where rising incomes
are pushing up demand for
food so fast that governments
fear domestic production could
eventually fall short.
Currently, India’s annual
food grain production of 230
million tonnes is just about
what the country needs. By
2020, the Planning
Commission estimates the
demand to grow to 240 million
tonnes. There are also forecasts that put the figure as
high as 250 million tons.
But economists say, unlike
China, India need not look to
farmland elsewhere to meet
that demand, because it can fill
the gap by increasing farm productivity said Mahendra Dev,
,
chairman of the Commission
for Agricultural Costs and
Prices, a government organisation that recommends procurement prices for major
farm produce.
Still, the Indian government
and several companies have
intensified the chase for farmland abroad. “Even farmers
from Andhra Pradesh have
gone and invested in land in
Kenya,” said Dev.
arnab.hazra@hindustantimes.com
AFTER YEARS of competing
for overseas oil and mines
to fuel their still-growing
economies, India and China
are silently scouring the world
for their next great need: farm-
land to grow food.
The destination: Africa,
where economies are poor and
land is cheap.
Buying farmland abroad is
not new, but it has gained
urgency after a worldwide
spike in food prices through
2007 and 2008.
So, more than a dozen com-
panies from India, backed by
the government, invested
about $2 billion (Rs 10,000
crore) in leasing land and
installing plants in Ethiopia
last year to produce sugar, tea
and several other crops. That
number is expected to double
to $4 billion this year, said
Gurjit Singh, India’s ambas-
sador to Ethiopia.
While India is just warming
up, China and rich Gulf states
that face graver land and
water shortages have been
aggressively acquiring land
across Africa and some parts
of Asia, said a report prepared
by the Washington-based Inter-
national Food Policy Research
Institute (IFPRI).
There are others. Last May, South Korea
joined the race, buying 690,000
hectares — about five times the
size of Delhi — in Sudan to
grow wheat.
Land worth between $20 bil-
lion and $30 billion (Rs 100,000
crore and 150,000 crore) was
bought in Africa and Asia over
the past three years, said
Joachim von Braun, director
general of IFPRI, who
authored the report.
How much land has been
sold? Between 15 million and
20 million hectares, which is
more than all of Germany’s
farmland, said Braun.
“Many governments, either
directly or through state-
owned entities and public-pri-
vate partnerships, are in nego-
tiations for, or have already
closed deals on, arable land
leases, concessions, or pur-
chases abroad,” said the IFPRI
report titled ‘Land Grabbing
by Foreign Investors in
Developing Countries: Risks
and Opportunities’.
Unlike earlier, when compa-
nies from the developed world
bought land for profit, the new
deals are driven by spiralling
shortages in emerging
economies such as India or
China, where rising incomes
are pushing up demand for
food so fast that governments
fear domestic production could
eventually fall short.
Currently, India’s annual
food grain production of 230
million tonnes is just about
what the country needs. By
2020, the Planning
Commission estimates the
demand to grow to 240 million
tonnes. There are also fore-
casts that put the figure as
high as 250 million tons.
But economists say, unlike
China, India need not look to
farmland elsewhere to meet
that demand, because it can fill
the gap by increasing farm pro-
ductivity said Mahendra Dev,
,
chairman of the Commission
for Agricultural Costs and
Prices, a government organi-
sation that recommends pro-
curement prices for major
farm produce.
Still, the Indian government
and several companies have
intensified the chase for farm-
land abroad. “Even farmers
from Andhra Pradesh have
gone and invested in land in
Kenya,” said Dev.
arnab.hazra@hindustantimes.com