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In debt and in despair: Tanzanian farmers feel impact of ‘investment’

A new report exposes a dire British-backed aid programme which favours multinationals over the locals, explains CHRIS WALKER

Kilombero Plantations Ltd (KPL) is no ordinary rice farm. Based in Kilombero Valley, Tanzania, the company owns a 5,800-hectare plantation and buys rice from local farmers.

Not only is it now the largest rice producer in East Africa, it’s become a flagship for international backers hoping to prove that corporations can deliver economic development for communities.

A subsidiary of Britain-based multinational Agrica, KPL is at the forefront of a series of initiatives backed by African and G8 governments to attract corporate investment to Africa’s food system.

Bought by KPL in 2008, the plantation lies within the controversial Southern Agricultural Corridor of Tanzania (SAGCOT), a government initiative to help agribusiness access 350,000 hectares of prime farming land and establish industrial farming projects.

KPL’s project forms part of Tanzania’s deal with the G8’s New Alliance for Food Security and Nutrition, a multibillion-dollar initiative that is using aid and corporate investment to leverage policy reforms that will help big business access land, seeds, and markets in 10 African countries.

Farmer groups in Tanzania and beyond fear that SAGCOT and the New Alliance could be a death blow for small-scale farmers struggling to keep control of their livelihoods, and have branded the projects “a new wave of colonialism.”

Undeterred, the British government has announced it will directly co-finance KPL with £6.7 million. Global fertiliser and seed giants Yara and Syngenta are partners in the project.

Hailed as a responsible investor, and with backers keen to prove that what’s good for corporate profit is good for poor communities, KPL is under pressure to deliver.

Yet a new report published by Global Justice Now, Oakland Institute and Greenpeace Africa today suggests all is not going so well for KPL. Not only do farmers displaced by the project complain of receiving inadequate compensation, but KPL’s “outgrower” scheme has left many in despair.

KPL’s outgrower farmers, who were required to buy seeds and fertilisers from the company and sell their produce back, reported falling into dangerous levels of debt. This was made worse when KPL offered lower prices than expected. Locals reported low wages for casual labour with KPL, and that many of the promised jobs for farmers have not materialised.

“Life now is very bad as compared to before,” said one farmer. “Previously I was able to earn money from my own farm, but now I have to earn money by doing various small jobs for cash. Before, I was able to cultivate my own food. Now I need to buy the food with the small income I have.”

With multinationals receiving negative publicity for displacing communities with their land investments, many are now choosing to buy directly from farmers who own or lease their own land through outgrower schemes.

Such schemes are also becoming the preferred options for governments and backers in the development sector. Yet KPL’s is just one of a number of schemes on which farmers have reported getting a bad deal. In March, Action Aid reported that a similar outgrower scheme by Eco Energy in Tanzania, also backed by the New Alliance, saw farmers falling into debt.

Since the G8’s New Alliance was launched in 2012, governments and corporations are struggling to prove their positive impacts on communities. With farmers being displaced and livelihoods hanging in the balance, the evidence is demanding that governments take a whole new approach to building better food systems in Africa.

Across the continent, small-scale farmers are using their own solutions to sustainably increase yields and feed their communities, free from corporate control. With support from governments, these farmers could transform their food systems for the better.

  • Chris Walker is a campaigns and policy officer working on Global Justice Now’s food and climate campaigns. He previously worked for the Quakers faith group in Britain on their Sustainability and Peace programme.

 (KPL) is no ordinary rice farm. Based in Kilombero Valley, Tanzania, the company owns a 5,800-hectare plantation and buys rice from local farmers.
Not only is it now the largest rice producer in East Africa, it’s become a flagship for international backers hoping to prove that corporations can deliver economic development for communities.
A subsidiary of Britain-based multinational Agrica, KPL is at the forefront of a series of initiatives backed by African and G8 governments to attract corporate investment to Africa’s food system.
Bought by KPL in 2008, the plantation lies within the controversial Southern Agricultural Corridor of Tanzania (SAGCOT), a government initiative to help agribusiness access 350,000 hectares of prime farming land and establish industrial farming projects.
KPL’s project forms part of Tanzania’s deal with the G8’s New Alliance for Food Security and Nutrition, a multibillion-dollar initiative that is using aid and corporate investment to leverage policy reforms that will help big business access land, seeds, and markets in 10 African countries.
Farmer groups in Tanzania and beyond fear that SAGCOT and the New Alliance could be a death blow for small-scale farmers struggling to keep control of their livelihoods, and have branded the projects “a new wave of colonialism.”
Undeterred, the British government has announced it will directly co-finance KPL with £6.7 million. Global fertiliser and seed giants Yara and Syngenta are partners in the project.
Hailed as a responsible investor, and with backers keen to prove that what’s good for corporate profit is good for poor communities, KPL is under pressure to deliver.
Yet a new report published by Global Justice Now, Oakland Institute and Greenpeace Africa today suggests all is not going so well for KPL. Not only do farmers displaced by the project complain of receiving inadequate compensation, but KPL’s “outgrower” scheme has left many in despair.
KPL’s outgrower farmers, who were required to buy seeds and fertilisers from the company and sell their produce back, reported falling into dangerous levels of debt. This was made worse when KPL offered lower prices than expected. Locals reported low wages for casual labour with KPL, and that many of the promised jobs for farmers have not materialised.
“Life now is very bad as compared to before,” said one farmer. “Previously I was able to earn money from my own farm, but now I have to earn money by doing various small jobs for cash. Before, I was able to cultivate my own food. Now I need to buy the food with the small income I have.”
With multinationals receiving negative publicity for displacing communities with their land investments, many are now choosing to buy directly from farmers who own or lease their own land through outgrower schemes.
Such schemes are also becoming the preferred options for governments and backers in the development sector. Yet KPL’s is just one of a number of schemes on which farmers have reported getting a bad deal. In March, Action Aid reported that a similar outgrower scheme by Eco Energy in Tanzania, also backed by the New Alliance, saw farmers falling into debt.
Since the G8’s New Alliance was launched in 2012, governments and corporations are struggling to prove their positive impacts on communities. With farmers being displaced and livelihoods hanging in the balance, the evidence is demanding that governments take a whole new approach to building better food systems in Africa.
Across the continent, small-scale farmers are using their own solutions to sustainably increase yields and feed their communities, free from corporate control. With support from governments, these farmers could transform their food systems for the better.

nChris Walker is a campaigns and policy officer working on Global Justice Now’s food and climate campaigns. He previously worked for the Quakers faith group in Britain on their Sustainability and Peace programme.

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