Two interesting graphics, one new and one old. First, the old, via the Christian Science Monitor:
Land grabbing is a term that describes the acquisition of farmland by companies, governments and individuals. In the last years the term has been used to refer to the large-scale acquisition of farmland by foreign investors, a trend that has increased since the 2007-2008 world food price crisis, which prompted a renewed interest in foreign lands as a means to achieve food security and as a financial investment. The governments, agribusinesses and investors that have bought or leased these lands are using them for the cultivation of food crops that are then exported and for the production of cash crops and biofuels.
It has been argued that land-grabbing displaces local communities and small-farmers to replace them with large scale agriculture and that this will ultimately increase, instead of diminishing, food insecurity in the ‘global south’, deteriorate the environment and cause livelihood and biodiversity loss (Source).
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