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Will Australia be re-named ? (Read 672 times)
nichy
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Will Australia be re-named ?
Nov 15th, 2010 at 7:32am
 
After all there won't be anything left that we actually own !



FOREIGN investors have snapped up tens of billions of dollars of Australia's prime agricultural land and rural enterprises - and no one is keeping watch.

A Daily Telegraph investigation revealed that a swag of government-backed entrepreneurs - mainly from China, the Middle East and Singapore - are sizing up potential investments as global powers move to secure food supplies.Some of Australia's best known farm brands - including Golden Circle, SPC, Dairy Farmers, CSR Sugar, SunRice and AWB - have already fallen into foreign hands.

More than $9 billion of prized agricultural assets have been sold to offshore interests in the past two years alone.

And there is more to come - although no one can accurately say how much is for sale. A Chinese delegation, led by a senior provincial governor, will arrive early next month and is hoping to acquire farms and other agricultural assets.


Millions of dollars are being invested in water licences by American and British investors hoping to exploit a burgeoning $3 billion "market".

Tasmanian real estate executive Betty Kay said she had five Chinese investors hoping to acquire dairy assets, part of the superpower's plan to provide milk to its growing 1.3 billion population.

The splurge is good news for depressed local farmers who can no longer make a decent living. But the big sell-off has raised alarm bells, in the bush and in Canberra.

MPs across the political spectrum are worried about unchecked foreign investment and are demanding greater transparency to ensure Australia's own food supplies are not jeopardised.

Assistant Treasurer Bill Shorten has flagged plans to conduct an audit of farm sales and is keen to "further strengthen transparency" of foreign ownership in agriculture.

Independent Senator Nick Xenophon - who will introduce a private member's Bill - argues the present rules around foreign investment are a "joke".

"No one is even monitoring how much of our farmland we are selling," he said.

Australia, with its rich and fertile lands and sophisticated farming techniques, is a target for some of the world's biggest agricultural enterprises.

Spanish Ebro Foods is bidding $600 million to acquire SunRice while Singapore-based Wilmar International won a $1.75 billion bid for CSR's sugar and renewable energy business.

The global financial crisis triggered food shortages in many countries and is responsible for the big investment push by China, the Gulf States, South Korea and countries worried about food supplies.

Australian Zhejiang International Business Association (AZIBA) president Bill Liu said his organisation - representing Chinese entrepreneurs in the eastern coastal province - has billions of dollars to invest in property, mining and farming.

High on the acquisition "hit list" are dairy assets although Mr Liu said AZIBA was reluctant to actually buy the dairy farms outright.

"We just want to guarantee supply of milk powder," Mr Liu said.

United Dairy Farmers of Victoria ex-president Doug Chant said foreign interests were seeking to buy farms in western Victoria.

"There appears to be interest there and, at the least, Government should have a register of properties being sold to overseas interests," Mr Chant said.

Greens deputy leader Christine Milne is pushing for stricter controls. She said countries such as China, United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia "began a massive buy-up of agricultural land and water with a view to feeding their own people through the next crisis".

"It is now imperative that Australia protects its land and water as part of national sovereignty," she said.



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codswal
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Re: Will Australia be re-named ?
Reply #1 - Nov 15th, 2010 at 7:55am
 
Greens deputy leader Christine Milne is pushing for stricter controls. She said countries such as China, United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia "began a massive buy-up of agricultural land and water with a view to feeding their own people through the next crisis".




lol and the wharfies are going to load the ships whilst their families starve ... right!!!

nich there is always nationlisation if push comes to shove..we cant blame our farmers we have driven them to this... I remember years ago in Qld Joe was selling off the farm to the Japanese... it didnt change anything.
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nichy
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Re: Will Australia be re-named ?
Reply #2 - Nov 15th, 2010 at 8:01am
 
Cods, I am not blaming the farmers,  but increased foreign investment, both in agriculture, and in urban areas  will mean that we will become the foreigners in our own country.
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codswal
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Re: Will Australia be re-named ?
Reply #3 - Nov 15th, 2010 at 8:47am
 
nichy wrote on Nov 15th, 2010 at 8:01am:
Cods, I am not blaming the farmers,  but increased foreign investment, both in agriculture, and in urban areas  will mean that we will become the foreigners in our own country.  




nichy I know you are not blaming the farmers..when I said that I meant its the way the govt treats them and not just this govt either..

I dont think just because foreigners are buying the land they will actually come here and work it..can you see the C hinese running the sheep and cattle ranches...dodging the kangaroos..lol..most of this is investment after a couple of years they sell up and run somewhere else..where instant riches are lurking... the govt needs the money thats the thing..can we assume that overseas investers need to pay extra for the privilege
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