(originally posted March 2013, updated October 2013)
I’ve put together a table with what I think are the main Swedish land
investments in Russia and Ukraine. In doing this, I ran into some of the known
difficulties associated with monitoring the phenomenon of large-scale
land-acquisition (as well discussed in Visser and Spoor, 2011, “Land-grabbing
in post-Soviet Eurasia,” Journal of
Peasant Studies). For example what can we call Swedish when shareholders
come from the whole world? To make things more difficult, these companies
appear to restructure and change shareholders faster than you can say
“large-scale land acquisition.” Another question is how can we keep track of
how large land areas the individual companies have when public promises to
scale up aren’t always implemented or reported on by the company or the
media?
Take for example Redland Farming, which is listed in Grain’s recent overview as a Swedish company with up to 180 000 hectares in Russia. Concerning
the size of the operation, the Redland farming web-site states the following:
“Today, Redland Farming is mainly a grain producer, but is developing
quickly within the vegetable- and animal segments. The company is controlling
and financing agricultural operations harvesting on around 3 000
hectares and storing 200 cows (100 milk cows), divided into two production
clusters.”
Of course Redland Farming could have more land and they just have not
gotten around to updating their web-site or perhaps they ran into difficulties
in scaling-up. As for the ownership, Planeta Holding is listed as a majority
share-holder in the operation with 64% of the shares. According to their
web-site Planeta Holding is based in Singapore, but the Planeta Holding
web-site states that it is copyright Lupus Holding, and Lupus is an investment
company owned by a Swede (Gunnar Nilsson). Both the Lupus Holding site and the
Planeta Holding site link to Redland Farming, so for the time being I will consider
this “Swedish.”
Another example is Trigon Agri, which
is listed on the Nasdaq OMX Nordic Stock exchange. Grain calls Trigon Agri a
Danish company because it is based in Denmark. However shareholders from the US
and Sweden appear to have a plurality, with the Swedish shareholders slightly
edging out the Americans (I’m including Nordea Finland as Swedish, since the
Nordea Finland web-site states that it is wholly owned by Nordea which is, of
course, the largest bank in Sweden). Swedish entities similarly appear to own a
plurality of shares in Swedish-based Alpcot Agro (Agrokultura). Black Earth Farming does not list its shareholders on its web-site, but Swedish Kinnevik is
one of the major shareholders. Grain Alliance AB with 40
000 hectares in Ukraine, is listed as an American investment in the Grain
report, but the company was bought out by Swedish Claesson Anderzen, a private Swedish property company based in Kalmar. Raw Agro was
listed in the Grain report as being 30% owned by Swedish Kinnevik, but the Raw
Agro web-site states that the Swedish investors were bought out in 2011.
The point of all this is not to argue that Grain has got it all wrong. I
rather want to illustrate how difficult the task is to monitor these investments,
and make an argument that scholars in source countries can make a contribution
by keeping track of locally available details. Plus, I wanted to highlight the
difficulty of talking about national origins of land investments in a
globalized economy. What makes something Swedish? Being listed on the Swedish
stock exchange, majority or a plurality Swedish ownership, being based in
Sweden, Swedish management?
Anyway, if you add up the total hectarage of the seven companies with links to Sweden that are investing in
land in the former Soviet Union, you get a total of 924300 ha. Sweden itself,
according to the Statistics Sweden, possesses 3431336 million ha of agricultural land, so these four
companies alone have a land bank that is 27% of the Swedish cultivated area.
This, I think, puts into perspective how this type of farming is really a
fundamentally different business model compared to farming in Sweden.
Am I missing something? Let me know.
Company
|
country of investment
|
year of start up or Swedish
involvement
|
Specialization
|
size of land holding ha
|
||||
Black Earth Farming
|
Russia
|
2005
|
grains, oilseeds
|
318000
|
||||
Alpcot Agro / Agrokulura
|
Russia
and Ukraine
|
2006
|
grains, oilseeds, and dairy
|
281300
|
||||
Trigon Agri / Trigon Dairy
|
Russia
and Ukraine
|
2006
|
grains and dairy
|
180000
|
||||
Claesson & Anderzen AB / Grain
Alliance AB
|
Ukraine
|
2008
|
grains, oilseeds
|
40000
|
||||
Volga Farming
|
Russia
|
2007
|
grains, oilseeds
|
67000
|
||||
Redland Farming
|
Russia
|
2010
|
grains, vegetables, milk
|
3000
|
||||
Ukraine
|
2007
|
grains, milk, pork
|
35000
|
|||||
Total:
|
924300
|
|||||||
Brian, thanks for an interesting analysis. You can probably add AgroRegion in Ukraine (www.agro-region.com) to your list of Swedish-led investments in primary agriculture in the CIS. The company is controlled by East Capital. By the way, we estimate the total area of foreign-led investments in primary agriculture in Russia and Ukraine to be approximately 3.2 million hectares (over 98% of these investments made since 2005/6). Regards, Ian
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