Farmland grabbing in the EU - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 14
About This Presentation
Title:

Farmland grabbing in the EU

Description:

Farmland grabbing in the EU A call to reform European land governance Sylvia Kay and Jonathan Peuch Transnational Institute Presentation for the Committee on ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:86
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 15
Provided by: Marku204
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Farmland grabbing in the EU


1
Farmland grabbing in the EU A call to reform
European land governance Sylvia Kay and
Jonathan Peuch Transnational Institute
2
Structure of the Presentation
  1. Farmland grabbing in the EU
  2. Key drivers of farmland grabbing in the EU
  3. The state of the land in Europe today
  4. Reforming European land governance options for
    change

3
1. Farmland grabbing in the EU
  • A. Methodological challenges
  • Contested definitions of land grabbing
  • Lack of transparency and other data-gathering
    issues around land deals
  • An excessive focus on the foreignisation of
    land
  • An assumption that Europe is situated outside of
    the global land grab
  • B. In the context of the study, land grabbing is
    associated with land deals which
  • Are out of standard European proportions
  • Involve the capturing of decision-making power
    over land
  • Imply an extra-economic force
  • Represent a deep rupture with the European model
    of family farming and the structural goal of a
    diversified and multifunctional agricultural
    system.

4
  • C. Preliminary findings
  • The Land Matrix database has recorded large-scale
    land deals involving foreign capital in the EU
    totaling 166,359 ha as of March 2015. This is
    however likely to be a vast underestimation.
  • Supplementary evidence from the Factor Markets
    research series and the 13 country case studies
    collected in the book published by TNI for the
    Hands Off the Land alliance indicates that
    significant tracts of land, beyond those recorded
    in official databases, are controlled by foreign
    investors e.g. through pocket contracts in
    Hungary and dummy buyers in Poland.

5
  • C. Preliminary findings
  • Farmland grabbing in the EU is uneven and is
    particularly, though not exclusively,
    concentrated in Eastern European MS.
  • Many of these deals involve new sets of actors
    e.g. from the financial sector as well as a
    rising class of land deal brokers such as the
    arendatori in Bulgaria.
  • The new deals may involve the construction of
    large agro-holdings, some of them of an
    unprecedented scale.
  • In global terms, farmland grabbing in the EU is a
    limited but creeping phenomenon, particularly as
    it may interact with land grabs skirting the EUs
    borders.
  • There is also a danger that farmland grabbing
    will lock forces with ongoing process of land
    concentration in the EU. This suggests that the
    ongoing (generic) trend of farmland concentration
    is just as problematic and deserving of policy
    attention as farmland grabbing.

6
2. Key drivers of farmland grabbing in the EU
  • Common Agricultural Policy (CAP)

Member State The top x of beneficiaries Received x of the CAP direct payments in 2013  
France 1,2 9  
Spain 1,3 23,4  
Germany 1,2 28,4  
Italy 0,8 26,3  
UK 0,9 14,4  
Poland 2,0 28,5  
Romania 1,1 51,7  
Hungary 0,9 38,5  
Bulgaria 1,1 45,6  
Source EC (2015) Source EC (2015) Source EC (2015) Source EC (2015)
  • The CAP has an important effect on the EU land
    structure because land is one factor of
    production of the agricultural sector.
  • The distribution of direct payments, before the
    last reform, has encouraged the concentration of
    subsidies and of lands.

7
Variation between 2003-2005 and 2005-2010, in
of farm size class
Source Agrosynergie (2013)
  • The CAP has created a dualistic model of farming
    smaller farms exit the market whilst larger farms
    grow.
  • In general, it has encouraged an industrial model
    of farming which, in key aspects, weakens the
    socio-economic sustainability and bio-material
    foundations of EU agriculture and the rural
    sector as well as possible resistance to
    processes of farmland grabbing.

8
  • B. The commodification of lands through the
    internal market
  • The internal market is based on the principle of
    free movement of goods, services, persons and
    capital.
  • It aims at removing restrictions on economic
    transactions, including land transactions.
  • Land is considered by the ECJ as an immobile good
    which requires the free movement of capital to be
    bought and sold.
  • The allocation of resources is thus supposed to
    be optimal.

9
3. The state of the land in Europe today
10
  • A model which poses latent, if not direct,
    threats
  • Fragility of large, corporate agricultural
    enterprises
  • Increasing financialisation of European
    agriculture
  • Problems of entry denial loss of employment
    opportunities and economic vitality in rural
    areas soil erosion, land and resource
    degradation as well as loss of biodiversity.
  • Erosion of European food sovereignty
  • Europe without defences
  • No early warning system in place e.g. a European
    Land Observatory
  • Still limited and underdeveloped restrictions to
    the principle of the free movement of capital.

11
4. Reforming European land governance options
for change
  1. Using the Tenure Guidelines (TGs) in Europe
  • .
  • The Tenure Guidelines are the first international
    legal instrument to apply a human rights based
    approach to the governance of tenure.
  • The EU has approved the TGs, it must now
    implement them, also at home. This can be done
    e.g. through an EC Recommendation on Land, to be
    implemented by MS through a series of EU
    Directives based on the four horizontal
    frameworks through which the EC can act depending
    on how land is considered as farmland (CAP), as
    an economic asset (Internal Market), a living
    space (Territorial Cohesion) or an environmental
    public good (Land as a Resource).

12
  • B. CAP A best-case scenario

Element of CAP 2013 toolbox Recommendation
Redistributive payment adopt with the highest share of Pillar 1. The CAP post-2019 could include a compulsory redistributive payment (by hectare capping or in function of number of hectares
Capping of payments capping of the basic payment above EUR 150,000 by applying a 100 reduction setting up a lower capping at EUR 100,000.
Small farmer scheme Using to the fullest extent possible i.e. 2 of the national envelope
Young famer scheme adoption of this scheme at the maximum level of 1,250 p.a. consider adjustment of scheme to an exclusive top-up e.g. 5-10 of Pillar 1
Definition of active farmer EC and MS to adopt a definition of an active farmer which is clearly anchored in the notion of work on the farm.
13
  • C. Restrictions to the principle of the free
    movement of capital
  • A land market based only on the four freedoms is
    not comprehensive enough to tackle the risk of
    discrimination and marginalisation related to
    farmland grabbing.
  • We recommend allowing MS to regulate farmland
    investments, and call on the ECJ to show greater
    flexibility in its interpretation of national
    measures that can be undertaken to restrict the
    free movement of capital according to justifiable
    political objectives.
  • A number of MS have already adopted a number of
    positive measures in this direction e.g. SAFER
    system in France.
  • The EC has also recognised that (farm)land is
    much more than just a commodity/factor of
    production through its Territorial Cohesion
    policy and the ongoing Land as a Resource
    process.
  • All these elements should be further developed
    and strengthened to stop farmland grabbing in the
    EU and to realise the democratic, sustainable and
    smart land governance that European farmers and
    citizens deserve.

14
Thank you! Transnational Institute
(TNI) www.tni.org
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com