B4 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2021 Foreign investors are buying Western farmland Over 35 million acres in recent decades By SIERRA DAWN McCLAIN Capital Press In recent decades, foreign investors have bought more than 35 million acres of U.S. farmland worth $62 billion — about 2.7% of all privately held land nationwide, an area larger than New York state. And foreign investors continue to buy, according to U.S. Department of Agriculture . Some American farmers view foreign investment as benefi cial, expanding mar- kets and access to capital. Others view it as a threat to national security, food system resil- iency and land access. The issue surfaced as a hot topic in Con- gress this summer after U.S. Rep. Dan New- house, a Washington state Republican , proposed legislation to ban the Chinese gov- ernment from buying U.S. farmland. “Allowing this practice to continue would lead to the creation of a Chinese-owned agri- cultural monopoly and pose an immediate threat to U.S. national security and food secu- rity,” Newhouse said. The legislation is moving through Congress. Newhouse is right that China is a big player. According to 2018 USDA data, Chi- nese investment in the agricultural sector has grown tenfold in a decade. But most of China’s investments have been in the meat sector and the Midwest. Investment often takes a diff erent shape in the West. In four Western farm states — Califor- nia, Oregon, Washington and Idaho — China doesn’t even make it onto the list of top 10 investors. So, who is buying farmland in the West, and what are their intentions? Big players in the West are from Canada, Europe and Japan. Top investments include timber, tree fruit, winegrapes, manufacturing and processing, real estate development and renewable energy. Sierra Dawn McClain/Capital Press A historic barn in Wyoming. ‘WHILE FOREIGN INVESTMENT HAS CAUSED SOME CONCERN WITHIN THE OREGON WINE COMMUNITY, OVERALL, IT HAS BEEN VIEWED AS A POSITIVE. OUR WINES ARE NOW RECOGNIZED AS BEING WORLD-CLASS.’ Sarah Murdoch | spokeswoman for Oregon Wine Board Tracking buyers To uncover which countries are investing in American soil and why, the Capital Press requested a database of public records from USDA through the Freedom of Information Act. The database is called the Agricultural Foreign Investment Disclosure Act, cre- ated in response to a law Congress passed in 1978 requiring foreign buyers to report transactions. The database covers the years 1900 through 2019, although records are patchy prior to 1978. USDA is still compiling the 2020 list, said Amanda Heitkamp, a USDA spokeswoman. The database tracks investments in crop- land, pastureland, forestland and other farmland. According to USDA staff , outside invest- ments are on the rise. Filings show foreign holdings of American farmland increased by 141% between 2004 and 2019. This, experts say, is a conservative esti- mate. That’s because, although the 1978 law required foreigners to report land purchases, the requirement is not enforced. Joe Maxwell, the president and CEO of Family Farm Action, a group that advocates on behalf of small, family farmers against corporate behemoths, said he believes the database, though useful, “woefully underre- ports” the number of foreign investments. “It’s just the tip of the iceberg,” he said. “We believe what’s being reported is just a thimbleful of what’s actually out there.” The only way to accurately trace all for- eign holdings, land use experts say, would be to piece together records from every county assessor’s offi ce in the nation — a mammoth project. “It’s just really diffi cult to track,” said Jim Johnson, a land use and water planning coordinator at the Oregon Department of Agriculture. Changing hands Farmland, once in someone’s hands, doesn’t always stay there. Although USDA reports foreigners hold an interest in about 35 million acres, that’s assuming every foreigner who ever bought farmland held onto it. And that’s just not the case. The database, cross-referenced with pub- lic business fi lings and sales records, reveals that many foreign investors have sold farm- land they once held. Dozens of foreign own- ers have dissolved businesses, sold land to domestic or international buyers, gone bank- rupt or experienced foreclosure. Foreign investment comes in many fl a- vors: from individuals, corporations, insti- tutions, associations, estates, trusts and partnerships. Tracking names recorded in USDA’s data- base, the Capital Press called and emailed dozens of foreign buyers across the West, revealing a tapestry of people and stories. Some buyers have big names, like the Haub Brothers Enterprise Trust, which is associated with Erivan Haub, a German gro- cery store magnate whose trust bought thou- sands of acres of Washington state farmland. Other buyers have straddled continents, like a young British farmer running a bio- gas business and operating farm properties in both Oregon and the United Kingdom. Still others have been immigrants headed West to build a dream, like a Dutch fl ower grower who, with his wife and baby in tow, took out loans to build a bulb business. Foreign buyers have purchased 1.2 million acres of Oregon farmland — roughly 7.5% of the state’s farm acreage, according to the 2017 U.S. Census of Agriculture. Top investors are from Canada, Lux- embourg, Sweden, Portugal and the U.K. Investors from the fi rst three countries have invested mainly in timber, investors from the latter two in wind and solar power. Refl ecting microclimates and the character of the land, investments vary from county to county. Gilliam and Umatilla counties, where foreigners have bought the largest number of parcels, have mainly seen renewable energy developments. Polk County has seen timber and wine investments. Whether foreign investment is good or bad is a matter of disagreement among Ore- gon farmers. Solar power on farmland is especially con- troversial, and groups including the Oregon Farm Bureau and 1 000 Friends of Oregon have raised alarms. “We’re constantly fi ghting the miscon- ception that agricultural land is vacant land. It’s not,” Kathryn Jernstedt, the president of Friends of Yamhill County, told the Capital Press this summer. Farmers view other investments more favorably. Before the 1970s, Oregon’s wine indus- try was virtually nonexistent. But as pioneers started making high-quality wine, it grabbed the attention of international investors. The fi rst French family to buy an Ore- gon vineyard was the Drouhin family, which has been making wine since 1880 in the Bur- gundy region of France. After visiting Oregon, Robert Drouhin and his daughter, Veronique, decided to buy land in 1987. “The Oregon wine community was so welcoming to the family,” said David Mill- man, the company’s CEO and president. “This wonderful, respected family investing in Oregon of all places was this huge, huge boost — a sort of validation.” Today, more than a dozen European com- panies own Oregon vineyards. Critics, including Maxwell, of Family Farm Action, said there should be a distinction between control and investment. Investment is good, he said — a foreign entity investing dollars and receiving a percentage of profi ts. But Maxwell said foreigners should not hold land or management positions. Most leaders in Oregon’s wine industry disagree. “While foreign investment has caused some concern within the Oregon wine com- munity, overall, it has been viewed as a pos- itive,” said Sarah Murdoch, a spokeswoman for Oregon Wine Board. “Our wines are now recognized as being world-class.” “These newcomers,” she said, treat Ore- gon growers with respect and have brought “new energy, new ideas and greater national and international marketing capacity.” Oregon’s L egislature has made no laws restricting foreign ownership of private farmland. The future Foreign investment in the West takes a dif- ferent shape than in the Midwest. China’s investment strategy in the Mid- west and the East is clear, said Maxwell, of Family Farm Action. A Chinese company, WH Group, fi rst purchased meat processing infrastructure such as Smithfi eld Foods, the world’s largest pork producer. Then it bought cropland — Midwestern wheat, corn and soybean acres — to feed those hogs. In the West, diff erent themes emerge, including an interest in renewable energy, high-value perennial crops, real estate — and more recently, land purchased for its water rights. So, what’s next? Though farmers in the West diff er in their opinions on whether for- eign investment is bad, good or a mix, most with whom the Capital Press spoke said something should be done. Watch Congress, Maxwell said, where debates about China have opened the much broader conversation about foreign invest- ment as a whole. Change, he said, may be on the way. Join CRMM for “THE RIVERS THAT CONNECT US: EXPLORING AMERICA’S GREAT RIVERS” Virtual Lecture Series Featuring the Mississippi, Columbia, Ohio and Connecticut Rivers, starting September 16 Register for the series at www.crmm.org/lecture-series.html C R M M OPEN DAILY 9:30 TO 5:00 • 1792 Marine Drive, Astoria • 503.325.2323 • www.crmm.org Coastal Living Proudly serving the Oregon North Coast from Tillamook to the WA. 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