Australia tightens rules over foreign buying of farmland

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Published: February 12, 2015

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Australian countryside near Bendigo, northwest of Melbourne. (CIA.gov)

Sydney | Reuters –– Australia tightened rules on Wednesday over foreign ownership of its agricultural land amid concerns that it is losing control of its own food security, slashing the amount beyond which land purchases would require regulatory approval.

From March 1, foreign purchases of agricultural land over A$15 million (C$14.51 million) will be subject to regulatory approval from the country’s Foreign Investment Review Board, Prime Minister Tony Abbott said.

Previously, Australia had only required regulatory approval on foreign purchases of agricultural land of more than A$240 million (C$232 million).

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“This is not saying that we don’t want foreign investment,” he told reporters.

“We do want foreign investment but it’s got to be the right investment, the right investment that serves our purposes. It needs to be transparent.”

The tighter rules will also prevent multiple purchases below the threshold, with regulatory approval being required as soon as total transactions by one purchaser pass $15 million.

Australia’s Bureau of Statistics said last June 90 per cent of agricultural land is fully owned by Australians, although Abbott promised greater scrutiny after the rural sector expressed scepticism about those findings.

Abbott said the Australian Taxation Office will conduct a review in June of all land ownership to provide a more detailed “stocktake,” with a registry of foreign ownership to come at an unspecified date.

Foreign ownership of Australian land has been a controversial issue. By announcing the tighter rules, the embattled Abbott will win favour from some. He is looking to tighten his grip on power after narrowly surviving an internal party challenge to his leadership on Monday.

— Colin Packham reports for Reuters from Sydney, Australia.

 

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