Are you aware that foreign nations, including adversaries such as North Korea, Iran, or China, own “more than 43 million acres of agricultural land” in the United States? According to an article posted by Amy Joi O’Donoghue in The Deseret News, this is the assertion of Sen. Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) who is co-sponsoring the Protecting American Agriculture from Foreign Adversaries Act (CIFUS). The purpose of this bill is “to add the U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Thomas Vilsack to the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States.”
The U.S. Department of Agricultural says
that 43.4 million acres of U.S. agricultural land is foreign owned, some near
key military installations….
Sens. Mike Braun, R-Ind., Tommy
Tuberville, R-Ala., Joe Manchin, I-W. Va., Tom Cotton, R-Ark., John Tester,
D-Mont., Roger Marshall, R-Kansas, John Fetterman, D-Pa., Chuck Grassley,
R-Iowa, Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., Pete Ricketts, R-Neb., John Barrasso,
R-Wyo., Katie Britt, R-Ala., Tammy Baldwin, D-Wisc., Todd Young, R-Ind., Deb
Fischer, R-Neb., Joni Ernst, R-Iowa, and Cynthia Lummis, R-Wyo., also
co-sponsored the legislation.
The House passed companion legislation
introduced by Rep. Dan Newhouse, R-Wash., last week, too.
Numerous states have grappled with the issue of foreign nations buying agricultural land. Kyla S. Kaplan authored an article outlining what happened in Arkansas less than a year ago.
On October 17, 2023, Arkansas became the
first state to enforce a state law banning certain foreign entities from owning
agricultural land (doing so under Act 636, which blocks “prohibited
foreign-party-controlled business” from owning public or private land directly
or through affiliation).
Arkansas Attorney General, Tim Griffin
ordered Syngenta Seeds LLC. To sell 160 acres (65 hectares) of farmland because
the business is owned by Sinochem Holdings Corporation, a Chinese “state-owned
enterprise.” Additionally, the company’s subsidiary was fined $280,000 in civil
penalties because Syngenta failed to register as a foreign agricultural
landowner under Arkansas Act 1046, Arkansas’ state analog to the federal
Agricultural Foreign Investment Disclosure Act (AFIDA).
The enactment of state laws to restrict
foreign ownership of agricultural land is on the rise – potentially due to
concerns over national security. Currently, there are approximately twenty-five
(25) states, like Arkansas, that, in at least some circumstances, forbid or
limit nonresident aliens, foreign business entities, and/or foreign governments
from acquiring or owning an interest in private agricultural land within their state.
This year alone, twelve (12) states have either enacted or amended laws restricting
foreign investments in state land.
Enforcement also varies between state
laws. While some state laws contain provisions that assign enforcement
authority to the state’s attorney general or “a district attorney of the county
where the foreign-owned land is located,” other states provide private
enforcement or prescribe civil (monetary) penalties for noncompliance with its
foreign ownership law. Arkansas will likely not be the last state to enforce
such regulations – Based on recent trends, political tensions, and what is
happening in Arkansas, it appears most enforcement concerns may come with a
connection to Chinese ownership.
O’Donoghue’s
article described how Utah is affected by foreign ownership of agricultural
land. Utah “is in the top five in the country for the amount of land acreage at
risk, due to the number of key military installations it hosts, including Hill Air
Force Base, the Utah Test and Training Range and Dugway.” O’Donoghue also
described what North Dakota is doing about the issue.
In 2023, according to the Kiowa County
Press, the North Dakota state Legislature passed a pair of bills aimed at
stopping the threat.
The media outlet reported that one law
prohibits land ownership by nations or businesses in those countries deemed
foreign adversaries under certain federal rules. The other law deals specifically
with farmland, blocking foreign governments from acquiring it.
China’s agricultural investment outside
its borders has grown more than tenfold in less than a decade, according to the
reporting by the North Dakota outlet. For the law dealing with agriculture,
there are exceptions, including Canadians who want to buy North Dakota
farmland. The state’s agriculture commissioner cited some concerns about these
restrictions, including the potential impact on agribusiness opportunities.
According
to O’Donoghue, Utah is implementing similar restrictions. HB516, sponsored by
Rep. Candice Pierucci (R-Herriman) and passed earlier this year, “prevents
countries – North Korea, China, Iran and Russia – from buying land in Utah.”
The law goes even further. “If those countries, or foreign controlled companies
with a 51% ownership in land holdings, already own parcels, that land has to be
relinquished within a year.”
Pierucci
gave two reasons for why these laws are important: (1) “this is a major
national security concern and (2) “China is purchasing land and in proximity to
military installations.” The new law “requires coordination with the Utah
Department of Public Safety to document those land holdings. The agency is
compiling a database on land holdings in Utah and sets in motion a way to
reverse that course.”
O’Donoghue
gave several interesting statistics – given by the American Farm Bureau
Federation – in her article that emphasizes the need for states to take legislative
action:
·
A
little over 20% of Maine’s privately held agricultural land is held by foreign
investors, which makes up 9% of total foreign-held land.
·
Hawaii
has the second-largest percentage of foreign-held U.S. agricultural land, which
is 9.2% of the privately held agricultural land in the state.
·
The
number of U.S. farm acres owned by foreign entities grew more than 8% in 2022,
although it represents just a little more than 3% of farmland.
·
In
Utah, less than 40,000 acres are under foreign ownership, but lawmakers want to
stop the trend.
·
According
to Smithfield’s website, it says it has 75 company owned farms, 28 contract
farms and one feed mill in Utah.
I
am grateful that numerous states are taking legislative action to protect their
farmlands and companies from foreign ownership. Americans do not want to eat
foods that are grown and produced by adversary countries. However, there is another
important reason to stop foreign adversaries from purchasing farmlands around
military installations: national security.
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