Friday, 20 April 2012

New Zealand open to the highest (or other) bidder


We all know that the Chinese are buying up farmland whereever they can around the world – to feed themselves.

Crafar: NZ 'open' for foreign buyers
Government ministers have approved the purchase of the Crafar farms by the Chinese company Shanghai Pengxin, but the decision has been heavily criticised by a rival bidder.


19 April, 2012

In a statement, Land Information Minister Maurice Williamson said he and Associate Finance Minister Jonathan Coleman had approved the Overseas' Investment Office's (OIO) new recommendation to allow the purchase of the 16 farms.

He said the ministers were satisified that even on the most conservative approach, the application met the criteria set out in the Overseas Investment Act.

Mr Coleman said the approval was given with 27 conditions to ensure the investment by Milk New Zealand - Shanghai Penxin's subsidiary in New Zealand - would deliver substantial benefits to New Zealand.

The bid was initially approved in January but the High Court returned it to the OIO, saying there were matters it had not properly considered in its original recommendation.

The ministers have been considering the bid for several weeks since the OIO gave its revised recommendation to them.

The revised recommendation will require Milk NZ to spend $2m more than it would have under the January approval.

The new conditions require investment of at least $16 million for additional development by May 31, 2017.

Many of the other conditions are the same, including establishing an on-farm training facility and giving two annual scholarships of $5000 to trainee farmers. It must also provide walking access over Benneydale and Taharua stations, and protect sacred Maori sites, including returning the Te Ruaki pa site to the Crown for nothing if required in a Treaty settlement.

Sir Michael Fay - the leader of a rival bid by a consortium that had challenged the original consent - said the deal set a precedent that would "open the farmgates'' for a flood of other overseas investors.

He said the group was disappointed and its iwi members were "justifiably angry''.

"It is hard to comprehend that this sale can go ahead only because a Government-owned entity, Landcorp, has partnered with Shangahai Pengxin to provide the necessary business acumen and expertise required for OIO approval.

"It would mean any potential foreign owner would be approved if they could 'buy in' sufficient New Zealand expertise to effectively make a nullity of this key requirement in the OIO rules.''

See the Overseas Investment Office's new recommendation here.

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