Smallholder Views on Chinese Agricultural Investments in Mozambique and Tanzania in the Context of VGGTs
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. Land Laws and Investment Models in Tanzania
2.1.1. Current Land Laws in Tanzania
2.1.2. Investment Models in Tanzania
2.2. Land Laws and Investment Models in Mozambique
2.2.1. Current Land Laws in Mozambique
2.2.2. Investment Models in Mozambique
2.3. Impact of COVID-19 on African Agriculture
3. Methods
3.1. Data Collection
3.2. Analysis
4. Results
4.1. Mozambican Case Study: China Africa Development Company
The Chinese approached us wanting land for investment. Our association has a huge amount of land, more than 150 ha, and we were only exploring 20 ha because part of it was salinised, and therefore, unproductive.
We don’t share seeds or even receive training from CAD. We have requested this several times, but it seems that we need government to talk with them; they don’t hear us.
4.2. Tanzanian Case Study: China State Farm Agribusiness Corporation (Tanzania) Ltd.
We used the said company’s land due to scarcity of village land planned for farming, we wished the company could release land which is not suitable for sisal production to the village to be used for farming, especially the wetland, but the company and authorities do not seem to hear us.
This Chinese company gives priority to our villagers when they hire casual labour, they usually bring employment opportunity notices to our village office when they need casual labourers, and those [village members] who are interested in working for the Chinese company are given the first priority.
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Limitations of Study
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
APEIX | Agencia de Promoção de Exportações e Importações |
BRELA | Business Registration and Licensing Authority |
CAD | China Africa Development Company (Mozambique) |
CFS-RAI | Committee on World Food Security Principles for Responsible Investment in Agriculture and Food Systems |
DNT | National Directorate of Land |
DUAT | Direito de Uso e Aproveitamento da Terra |
ESIA | Environmental and Social Impact Assessment |
GRO | Granted Right of Occupancy |
MOU | Memorandum of Understanding |
NEMC | National Environment Management Council |
OSHA | Occupational, Safety and Health Authority |
PEDSA | Strategic Plan of Development of Agriculture Sector |
PNISA | National Agriculture Investment Plan |
PROAGRI | National Development Programme |
SPGC | Provincial Service of Geography and Cadastre |
TANESCO | Tanzania Electric Supply Company Limited |
TBS | Tanzania Bureau of Standards |
TCP | Technical Cooperation Programme |
TFDA | Tanzania Food and Drugs Authority |
TIC | Tanzanian Investment Centre |
TRA | Tanzania Revenue Authority |
VGGTs | Voluntary Guidelines for the Responsible Governance of Tenure of Land, Forests and Fisheries in the Context of National Food Security |
Appendix A
- What do you know about how the land investment came about?
- Who participated in negotiations for the investor to acquire land?
- Was the negotiation process satisfactory?
- How did the investment affect your land tenure?
- Now that the investor is working in the area, what are the key benefits you can identify? How has the company been supportive?
- Now that the investor is working in the area, what are the key problems you can identify? How could the investor be more supportive?
- Did the investor meet your expectations and/or the terms of the agreement?
- How did COVID-19 impact your farming activities?
- How did COVID-19 impact your access to food?
- Did they give additional support during COVID-19?
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Criteria | China Africa Development Company (Mozambique) | China State Farm Agribusiness (Tanzania) |
---|---|---|
Large estate | Yes | Yes |
Negotiation with communities to acquire land | Some | No |
Environmental and social impact assessment | No | No |
Legally binding agreement | Agreement not legally binding | No |
Created local employment | Yes, but only low-paid, poorly educated works | Yes |
Corporate social responsibility | No | Yes |
Impact on food security | Some benefitted (cheaper food), some were negatively impacted (unable to sell at a good price at the market) | Unclear |
Conflict |
| Land shortage in the area, compounded by the investment, leads to conflict |
Issue | China Africa Development Company (Mozambique) | China State Farm Agri-business (Tanzania) |
---|---|---|
Disruption in access to inputs | Yes | Yes |
Disruption in access to markets | Yes | No |
Difficulty accessing food | Yes | No |
Support from investors during the crisis | No | No |
Protective measures taken by government/development partners | Yes | No |
Loss of land tenure | No | No |
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Pointer, R.; Sulle, E.; Ntauazi, C. Smallholder Views on Chinese Agricultural Investments in Mozambique and Tanzania in the Context of VGGTs. Sustainability 2023, 15, 1220. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15021220
Pointer R, Sulle E, Ntauazi C. Smallholder Views on Chinese Agricultural Investments in Mozambique and Tanzania in the Context of VGGTs. Sustainability. 2023; 15(2):1220. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15021220
Chicago/Turabian StylePointer, Rebecca, Emmanuel Sulle, and Clemente Ntauazi. 2023. "Smallholder Views on Chinese Agricultural Investments in Mozambique and Tanzania in the Context of VGGTs" Sustainability 15, no. 2: 1220. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15021220