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Court Halts Sale Of New Zealand Farms To Chinese

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    Court Halts Sale Of New Zealand Farms To Chinese

    Court Halts Sale Of New Zealand Farms To
    Chinese. Read this in Calgary Today just
    had to post. Someone has finally woke
    up.
    A New Zealand court Wednesday halted the
    first ever sale of dairy farms to
    Chinese investors, the latest twist in a
    saga that's dividing a country reliant
    on agriculture for much of its export
    earnings.

    High Court Judge Forrest Miller ruled
    the New Zealand government overstated
    the economic benefits that the Chinese
    investors would bring when the
    government approved the sale of the 16
    farms last month. Miller said the
    government needs to review the sale
    again using stricter evaluation
    criteria.

    Supporters of the sale — which would
    have been the first to Chinese investors
    — say it would encourage international
    trade, while others say farmland needs
    to stay in the hands of New Zealanders
    if the country is to remain prosperous.

    The potential buyer is Shanghai Pengxin,
    run by wealthy property developer Jiang
    Zhaobai. The company says it wants to
    spend more than 200 million New Zealand
    dollars ($164 million) buying and
    improving the farms.

    A consortium of local farmers and
    businessmen led by merchant banker Sir
    Michael Fay filed the court action
    seeking to block the sale. The group
    earlier offered to pay 171 million New
    Zealand dollars ($140 million) to buy
    the land itself.

    "We're very pleased with the decision
    from Justice Miller," said consortium
    spokesman Alan McDonald. "Our view is
    that Shanghai Pengxin never brought any
    real economic benefits to New Zealand."

    The judge essentially ruled that the New
    Zealand government used a false
    comparison when evaluating the benefits
    the Chinese would bring to the farms,
    which are currently in bankruptcy and
    poor repair. The judge said the benefits
    from the Chinese needed to be measured
    not against the farms' current state,
    but against the benefits a New Zealand
    buyer would bring.

    Cedric Allan, a spokesman for Pengxin,
    said he believes the Chinese investment
    will benefit New Zealand under either
    measure, and he said he expects the sale
    will still go ahead after a second
    government review.

    "Personally, for me, the ruling is a big
    surprise, I hadn't read the Overseas
    Investment Act in that way," he said.
    "We're still pressing ahead as fast as
    we can, and we're still confident we are
    going to get the final signoff."

    The case has been watched closely by
    Chinese officials, who earlier expressed
    concern at delays in the sale.

    New Zealand relies on China to buy much
    of its farming exports, including its
    dairy products. In 2008, the two
    countries signed a free-trade agreement,
    the first such agreement between China
    and a developed nation.
    Maybe some day our politicians will
    figure it out. No Communist nation will
    every just purchase land from you.
    NEVER!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    #2
    But remember you are just a landowner at the pleasure of the crown still in Canada. One stroke of the pen and you could be landless.

    Comment


      #3
      thats the great mistake nz made, selling the freehold. they should never have let crafar get so big.

      Comment


        #4
        What the hell is wrong with our govs here. Nobody with half ounce of brain sells their land to foreigners! But we are begging them to come here for the oil jobs, in time they will run the place anyhow. Frickin stubid. There is more to this than what we see. JMO but there is a shit load of undertable money going somewhere to allow this bullshit.

        Comment


          #5
          Interesting that the Chinese need this New Zealand milk but Crafar goes broke supplying this market and the Chinese company then buys him out. There is more here than we see, I would like to see the New Zealand Gov't stand up and say to the Chinese if you want this milk you just have to pay for it or there is no production. Perhaps this is an example of being too big as there is always someone bigger. Americans are such angels. The Chinese are using their free trade agreements to purchase assets around the world. The Vancouver bubble is Chinese money.

          Comment


            #6
            Hopper, well said those are my thoughts exactly.
            How is it that the NZ dairy farm goes bankrupt
            selling to China, yet, somehow China will step in
            and but the decrepit dairy farm?
            Definitely more to this story. Money talks more
            than farm/food production and it has for decades,
            if not centuries. These are things we have to be
            aware of , SF3 has touched on this in a previous
            post. I Am of the opinion that if I don't like BTO's
            or out of country investors then I have to compete
            and write the bigger cheque to keep control of the
            property I want. Then again, if i have overpaid,
            who buys it when I go bankrupt?
            I am surprised another NZ dairy company did not
            buy that farm to utilize the economies of scale and
            gain efficiency.

            Comment


              #7
              same is happening here alot of prime land is selling to chinese.

              Comment

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