Paula Gioia, Author at Ileia https://www.ileia.org/author/paula/ Tue, 18 Apr 2017 14:00:03 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 Resisting land grabbing in Germany https://www.ileia.org/2017/04/18/resisting-land-grabbing-germany/ Tue, 18 Apr 2017 06:36:13 +0000 https://www.ileia.org/?p=7362 Land grabbing is no longer a phenomenon of the Global South only. In rural Germany, a highly undemocratic form of land control is accelerating the process of land concentration, contributing to the increase of land prices and creating barriers for young farmers to enter agriculture. With the Voluntary Guidelines on the Responsible Governance of Tenure of ... Read more

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Land grabbing is no longer a phenomenon of the Global South only. In rural Germany, a highly undemocratic form of land control is accelerating the process of land concentration, contributing to the increase of land prices and creating barriers for young farmers to enter agriculture. With the Voluntary Guidelines on the Responsible Governance of Tenure of Land, Fisheries and Forests at hand, young farmers in Germany are trying to reverse this situation and claim agricultural land.

Photo: Bündnis junge Landwirtschaft e.V

Until 2016, KTG-Agrar was the biggest agribusiness land owner in Germany, controlling over 38,000 ha in the country. When KTG-Agrar filed for bankruptcy, the young peasant association (Bündnis junge Landwirtschaft, BjL) together with young, mostly landless, members from La Via Campesina’s member organisation in Germany (Arbeitsgemeinschaft bäuerliche Landwirtschaft, AbL) gathered on the fields of KTG-Agrar. We peacefully expressed our desire to establish sustainable agriculture in the area, and we asked for support from the government for this. Nevertheless, the land was sold, via a dubious structure of shareholding companies, to a transnational insurance company from southern Germany and to a private foundation from Lichtenstein (Münchener Rück and Gustav-Zech-Stiftung).

This is an example of what we call land grabbing in our territory. In Germany, increasing land concentration is creating a situation of inequitable access to land. This is driving family farmers out of business and blocks the entrance of aspiring young farmers. In 2010, the largest 7% of the farms controlled 37% of the farm land. This trend is ongoing and is accompanied by an increase in agro-industrial agriculture; it is undermining peasant agriculture, ecological resilience and food sovereignty. Moreover, these changes are eroding culture and social life in rural Germany.

Land grabbing in Europe?

Land grabbing has been described by the European Coordination of La Via Campesina (ECVC) as: the legal or illegal control of ‘larger than locally-typical’ amounts of land by any persons or entities for purposes of speculation, extraction, resource control or commodification at the expense of peasant farmers, agroecology, land stewardship, food sovereignty and human rights. This challenges the notion that Europe is a showcase of good land governance with well-regulated land markets.

Land grabbing, as defined by the ECVC, exists in Europe and is exacerbated by the unequal distribution of subsidies from the European Union. For example, 28.4% of CAP (Common Agriculture Policy) payments in Germany are given to 1.2% of the beneficiaries. Furthermore, factors such as skyrocketing land prices help to explain why the remaining small and medium scale farms are being forced out of agriculture. These farmers, as well as aspiring young peas-ants, simply don’t have the capital to compete with investors – many of which are non-agricultural – to either keep, or access land.

Tenure Guidelines at home

Young peasants making their case for a fairer land governance system. Photo: Vanessa Ebenfeld

As young peasants, we are trying to turn the tide. Together with allies from civil society organisations, we are making use of the United Nation’s Voluntary Guidelines on the Responsible Governance of Tenure of Land, Fisheries and Forests (VGGT, see box). We are asking the government to implement the VGGTs in our country, and to bring coherence to local and national policy. Currently, the German government supports the implementation of the VGGTs in partner states in the south.

In September 2016, a coalition of German peasants and allied NGOs participated in the first national ex-ercise to monitor the implementation of the VGGTs not only abroad, but also at home. This event was organised by the German Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development and the Ministry of Food and Agriculture.

The event gathered around 60 participants from the government, development agencies, civil society organisations (CSOs), academia and the private sector. They aimed to highlight achievements, challenges and recommendations for the implementation of the VGGTs based on the past four years of experience with them. Through testimonies and working group discussions we jointly identified some key challenges and next steps.

In the German context, the event highlighted the urgent need to increase awareness about the VGGTs in Germany. CSOs and academics especially, ex-pressed the need for more transparency and higher public participation in land acquisition processes and land use decisions. We recommended the translation of the ‘People’s Manual’, a version of the guidelines in easy-to-understand language, into German, and the development of a legal assessment on the compliance of the German land law with the VGGTs. Jointly we agreed on the need of increased use, application and implementation of the VGGTs by Germany, also at home, and that for this, more policy coherence is needed. Therefore we recommended the creation of a multi-stakeholder process to accompany the implementation of the VGGTs in Germany. This marks the beginning of an important policy reform process.

With this event and the related process, Germany, together with France, were the first European countries to start a monitoring of the implementation of the VGGTs. Besides the fact that an important process has been triggered in Germany, our experience can be useful for actors in other countries dealing with similar land struggles.

Paula Gioia (paula.gioia@eurovia.org) is a beekeeper and small-scale farmer in Eastern Germany. She is a founding member of the Bündnis junge Landwirtschaft, member of the Arbeitsgemeinschaft bäuerliche Landwirtschaft and member of the coordination committee of the European Coordination Via Campesina.

More information on land issues in Europe:

Infographics: The state of land concentration in Europe

Land grabbing, land concentration and people’s struggles in Europe (PDF)

Land grabbing and land concentration in Europe – A research brief (PDF)

People’s Manual on the Guidelines on Governance of Land, Fisheries and Forests (PDF)


The VGGTs
 
The VGGTs (Voluntary Guidelines on the Responsible Governance of Tenure of Land, Fisheries and Forests) are the first international governance instrument to apply a human rights framework to land tenure and the governance of natural resource. They represent a valuable tool for peasants – worldwide. They were developed by the UN Committee on World Food Security through an inclusive and legitimate consultative process involving those most affected by tenure insecurity and a lack of access to land. The VGGTs were endorsed in 2012 by 130 countries, including Germany. The document contains a number of important provisions for tackling land grabbing and associated problems that peasant communities face regarding access to, and control of land, territory, and natural resources.

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Youth and agriculture: German youth struggle for land https://www.ileia.org/2014/06/20/youth-agriculture-german-youth-struggle-land/ Fri, 20 Jun 2014 05:10:16 +0000 https://www.ileia.org/?p=5227 ‘Land grabbing’ has grabbed people’s attention in recent years, but this phenomenon is not restricted to developing countries. In the heart of Europe, young German farmers like Paula Giola are also struggling to retain and regain access to farmland. To make a stand and demand our rights as young people who want to go into ... Read more

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‘Land grabbing’ has grabbed people’s attention in recent years, but this phenomenon is not restricted to developing countries. In the heart of Europe, young German farmers like Paula Giola are also struggling to retain and regain access to farmland.

To make a stand and demand our rights as young people who want to go into farming, in 2012 we launched the ‘Stop land grabbing in eastern Germany’ campaign. We are a group of young farmers, college graduates, apprentices and activists united in the Confederation of Young Farmers’ (BjL). We have been working to safeguard smallholder agriculture and food sovereignty since 2012. Our collective farm in Bienenwerder is a young peasants collective, 10 years old now. However, we are struggling against investors and agribusinesses that are trying to grab the land from under our feet. This is not an isolated case, with many other farmers also threatened.

Access to land is an increasing problem globally. In the South, transferring access rights away from local farmers has been called ‘land grabbing’. But this phenomenon is not restricted to other continents. It has also been taking place in eastern Germany, here in Europe. Because of our socialist history, large tracts of land belong to the state. However, current neo-liberal policies are leading to a total sell-off to the highest bidder within the next decade. At the same time, in the wake of the financial crisis, agricultural land has become an object of speculation, with a price increase of 230% between 2006 and 2010.

Large farms dominate the landscape and are highly subsidised by the EU Common Agricultural Policy. Since 2007, the land market has been opened to financial investors and businesses without any agricultural background. These include joint ventures registered in the stock market, furniture manufacturers and dealers, opticians, real state and elder care companies, energy companies and so on… As a result, young farmers and others with farming aspirations are denied access to land as they cannot compete with such large corporations and cannot afford the price of land.

Our confederation, together with the local youth wing of La Via Campesina (jAbL), produced a position paper with our demands that was presented to the German government. We call for a moratorium on any further sale of government land. We also demand support for young farmers in order to create jobs, sustain livelihoods and contribute to food sovereignty. We believe access to land must be ensured to support small scale farming, rather than sold to investors who have no local connections or ideals regarding sustainable agriculture.

Our land is being put up ‘for sale’. But as young German farmers, we keep fighting against this sell-out. Food sovereignty for here and now!

Paula Gioia

Paula Gioia is a bio-dynamic farm apprentice and member of the Bienenwerder collective farm (45 km from Berlin), Bündnis junge Landwirtschaft, and Arbeitsgemeinschaft bäuerliche Landwirtschaft.
Campaign: www.stopp-landgrabbing.de
Email: landgrabbing-presse@riseup.net

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