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Australian lawmakers
are demanding a review of foreign investment rules to stop
foreign mining companies, including those from China, buying
up prime farmland. Members of Parliament are worried about
food security as a Chinese corporation buys vast tracts of
coal-rich agricultural land in the state of New South
Wales.
Aerial view of Darwin, Northern Territory (Australia) on
22 April 1984.
Photo by MSgt. David N. Craft, U.S.
Air Force
Opposition conservative lawmakers have joined the Greens
Party and independent M.P.s to demand that prized
agricultural land be protected from foreign ownership.
They say they are concerned about food security and want the
Foreign Investment Review Board to have a greater role in
protecting key national assets.
The board examines overseas investment plans in Australia
worth more than $230 million but lawmakers believe it should
lower that bar to include projects valued at $5 million and
above.
The Chinese state-owned mining company Shenhua Watermark
Coal has purchased large areas of coal-rich farmland in New
South Wales, where deposits are reportedly significant
enough to sustain a 30-year mining operation. The deal has
been approved by the Foreign Investment Review Board but
critics believe Australia is wrong to lose control of such
important resources. The government in Canberra says it is
satisfied with current regulations.
Other agricultural areas in eastern Australia are also
attracting the interest of foreign companies eager to
exploit reserves of coal seam gas.
Opposition lawmaker Senator Barnaby Joyce says that some
parts of the country should be off-limits to foreigners.
“I think prime agricultural land and we have to remember
that we're talking about the very best land, should be off
limits because prime agricultural land is irreplaceable,"
Joyce said. "But once prime agricultural land is gone that's
it, you can't get it back. God hasn't been here for the last
few weeks so once it's gone, it's gone forever.”
Australia is the largest recipient of Chinese overseas
foreign investment after Hong Kong. A recent poll by the
independent Sydney-based Lowy Institute found that Chinese
investors felt discriminated against by Australian officials
and the media.
The Lowy Institute also said that 57 percent of Australians
thought the government in Canberra was allowing too much
investment from China in their country.
China is Australia’s biggest trading partner and Beijing’s
avid demand for natural resources is credited with saving
Australia from the worst of the global economic meltdown as
well as igniting a once-in-a-century mining boom.
The Greens believe that Australia is not capitalizing enough
from the roaring trade in minerals, most notably iron ore.
The party says 83 percent of Australia’s mining industry is
foreign-owned and that huge profits go overseas. Other
official estimates have said that foreigners own about 50
percent of the industry. But the Green Party warns that if
the natural resources wealth is not properly managed,
Australia's prosperity will be put at risk.
The mining sector has insisted the Greens’ argument was
“flawed” and said the industry had a good record of
reinvesting most of its revenue in Australia.
(Source:
VOA News)

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