Ethanol's African Landgrab

Mozambique has survived colonialism and civil war. But can it survive the ethanol industry?

ProCana is just the first in a long line of massive biofuel projects backed by investors ranging from local speculators to multinational corporations like BP. Some have asked the government—which legally owns all land here—for entire districts (the equivalent of US counties). Government officials told me that as of 2007, biofuel investors had applied for rights to use about 12 million acres, nearly one-seventh the country's 89 million acres of arable ... Full Story »

Posted by Dwight Rousu
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Posted by: Posted by Dwight Rousu - Mar 17, 2009 - 5:03 PM PDT
Content Type: Article
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Edited by: Dwight Rousu - Mar 17, 2009 - 5:03 PM PDT
Dwight Rousu
4.7
by Dwight Rousu - Mar. 17, 2009

The article includes much investigative journalism in the complex setting of Mozambique. The story is well written and very important for the environment of the planet and the wellbeing of the local people.

Global multinational agribusiness corporations are more powerful than the nascent states of Africa and threaten to destroy the land and the planet for short term profits.

There’s been too much in the media about the company’s allegedly corrupt mining deals in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and its connections with two ... More »

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