Mixing oil, water and food in Saudi Arabia

Updated 20110922

Saudi Arabia wheat yield time series compared with some other countries. USA: steady increase due to improving technology (including varieties, machinery, inputs) with interannual variability brought about by weather. Egypt: steady increase (for the same reasons as in the USA), but litlle variability due to irrigation under constant climate; Romania and Kyrgyztan: stabilisation and drop of yields after the collapse of the Soviet block after 1989. According to a student from Kyrgyzstan who saw this graph in a lecture, the peak in 1986 in his country is due to an official visit by Brezhnev. It is thus a example of wishful political thinking rather than a sign of improved agronomy. The peak was removed from later statistics, together with many other data! Based on old FAO data (the new data dropped early Kyrgyz statistics)

In reaction to the first oil crisis of the mid seventies, the kingdom of Saudi Arabia decided to decrease its dependency on food imports by developing local food production using water from deep, non-renewable aquifers. This has now been going on for about thirty years now, and the country realized that, maybe, water is a more precious resource than oil, in the long run. The result is a decision to – literally – phase out this unsustainable form of agriculture by 2016, while massively “investing” in foreign – and developing –  countries, i.e. leasing or buying land (the details are rarely known) to grow food abroad for export to Saudi Arabia. The “investment” has also been termed “land grab” and it is seen by many as a form of neo-colonialism.

How sustainable this will be, agronomically, economically and politically,  is open to debate… and certainly worth watching closely.

Related sources: Spiegel, Aquastat, 20110922_oxfam report on “land and power”

1. Introduction

The time series of wheat yield (Note 1) of Saudi Arabia differs from that of any other country in the world. The figure shows that yields were stable at about 1.2 T/Ha until 1970, dropped to 0.6 or 0.7 T/Ha until 1980 after which they increased to 4.2 T/Ha in just a couple of years (between 1981 and 1987); thereafter, they remained stable until at least 1994. More information will be given below for the post-1994 period. I am not sure what the first drop is due to, but I guess it is just a “statistical adjustment”, i.e. someone realised that the values (guesses!) were unrealistically high and adjusted them dowm to a more realistic value of about 0.65 T/Ha.

What has happened in, or maybe to Saudi Arabia? The first oil crisis of 1973 (also known as  Arab oil embargo. Click here for graph of oil prices), itself a consequence of the Yom Kippur war (Wikipedia has all the details) showed that oil is definitely a weapon and that oil importers can be very vulnerable. This has been amply shown by more recent wars! Another consequence of the oil crisis was that Saudi Arabia understood, or probably was made to understand that food is a weapon too. While the west is vulnerable to irregular oil supply, the countries in the Arabian peninsula do not produce enough food for their domestic consumption, and this is a major source of vulnerability too.

As a consequence, Saudi Arabia decided to increase its food security by producing its own food or, at least, by dramatically reducing its dependence on imports. But how do you grow food in the desert? You irrigate! Where does the water come from: from deep aquifers where it has been accumulating thousands of years ago, probably during the time when glaciations affected most of the northern hemisphere up to 10000 or 15000 years ago. The problem is that the resource is not renewable. Water supply peaked around 1993-94 and has thus been decreasing since then: growing crops consumes a lot of water, especially in the desert. There is ample documentation on Saudi water issues, for instance here and especially on the site of the Encyclopedia of earth  and FAO.

 

2. Wheat imports and production in Saudi Arabia

Some wheat statistics in Saudi Arabia since 1961, based on data in FAOSTAT (http://faostat.fao.org). Note the logarithmic scale adopted for the ordinate. The uinits are given in the legend.

Wheat (i.e. bread) is the main staple of Saudi Arabia. The figure shows some recent patterns of production, imports, population and per capita supply. It is immediately apparent that the decision to produce food nationally has drastically reduced the dependence on imports: they dropped from 888 thousand tonnes (Ktons) to just 17 in 1997. The production has peaked at about 4 million tons (Mton)  in the early nineties, which coincided with the peak in fossil water use. From 1995, the production has varied between 2 and 3 Mtons, while imports increased from 1996 low to around 347 Ktons in 2008. In the same period, the population grew from 16 to 26 million people. It is projected to reach 32 million in 2020, which will entail an increase of food requirements of about 20%. The figure also shows that the recent ratio of wheat availability to population remained stable at about 100 Kg/person/year, which can be used to project future wheat requirements based on population patterns.

The Saudi population is made up by about 22% of non-nationals. While many are active in the oil industry, the majority is employed as household servants and the less qualified jobs. Many are from Asia, especially Bangladesh and Indonesia.  Source: wikipedia.

2. Crop production and climate; solar radiation absorption and water use by crops

If you look at the yield time series above, you will  notice that Egyptian yields are rather stable, and higher than US yields, for instance. This is because all of Egypt’s food production is irrigated with water from the Nile (i.e. water supply is not very variable from year to year, contrary to rain in the US Midwest) and solar energy is in ample supply  because the Nile flows through the desert: the climate is dry, i.e. it doesn’t favour diseases (unlike wet climate: see the post on the Irish famine of 1845), and it does not undergo marked variability from year to year.

Solar energy is the main driver of plant photosynthesis and production. But the extent to which the energy can be used depends on the availability of water. In other words: solar energy use by crops must be paid for with water. There are several methods to assess the agricultural production potential, but all need to (1) evaluate solar energy availability at the ground, then (2) the extent to which this energy can be used by crops (which depends on crop type and climate) and (3) how much water is available to use the energy…

Saudi Arabia is a dry to very dry (hyper-arid) place, but it does rain, especially in the SW and in the centre, for instance in the province of Hai!

 

Elevations in Saudi Arabia, in meters above sea level. Note the terrain generally slopes down from the west to the east.

Average monthly rainfall, in mm. Tortal annual rainfall is obtained by multiplying the values by 12.

Elevation and rainfall map in Saudi Arabia. Click on the maps to enlarge them. The maps were prepared with J. Grieser’s New_locClim software downloadable from the website of FAO.

Based on the climate data, it is possible to estimate the production potential for a given crop in a given place.

 

Monthly contribution to potential wheat yield, rainfall and wheat water requirements for “high” and “low” water use efficiency. The data were obtained from New_locClim for the decimal coordinates 44.442 N and 26.603 E representative for a major wheat producing area in Hail province.

The next figure shows the contribution of various months to the yield of wheat. In order to benefit from some rainfall and to take advantage of the relatively low temperatures of the Saudi winter, wheat and similar crops (barley) are grown between November and May, with average temperatures between 13 and 20 degrees, but with a high evapotranspiration potential that exceeds rainfall by a factor between 3 (November) and 8 (March). For barley, the production potential from November to March amounts to the sum of the values shown in the potential wheat production graph, i.e., from November to March 5.20 T/Ha (0.66 T/Ha + 0.51 T/Ha + 0.60 T/Ha + 0.68 T/Ha + 0.82 T/Ha +0.90 T/Ha +1.04 T/Ha) while for the period March to June the yield expectation would be 3.88 T/Ha. The methodology followed to derive these numbers is explained in note 2

The value of  of 5.20 T/Ha, which corresponds to the actual crop calendar also corresponds to the yields achieved in the country (see figure in note 2), which indicates that the available solar energy is used very efficiently.

What about water use and use efficiency? It has been know from the 1950s and the work of de Wit and the Wageningen school of agronomists (de Wit et al., 1978; FAO, 1978) that there is a relatively constant ratio between cereal amounts produced and the amount of water needed. The “constant” can be expressed in various ways, and the water can be supplied by rainfall or irrigation, or a combination. It is known as “water use effiiency” or WUE and corresponds approximately to 500 litres of water for every Kg of wheat produced in very efficient systems, but usually the value is closer to 1000 litres under average conditions. See note 3 for details.

3. The deep roots of realpolitik

 

Source: International Business, http://internationalbusiness.wikia.com/wiki/File:GR_PR_SaudiHarvest.png

It is difficult to estimate exactly how much non-renewable water is used by crop agriculture in Saudi Arabia, because of large inter-annual variability of rainfall, and because the water use efficiency is not know precisely. If we adopt the “average” value of 750 litres per Kg of grain, half-way between “average” and “very efficient” water use, the production of 2008 (1986 KT, rounded to 2000) corresponds to 1.5 billion m³ of water, which is 1.5 km³.  Accumulated over the period from 1981 to 2009 (inclusive), the water consumption for wheat production amounts to 49 km³.  Other crops (sorghum > maize > barley) add another 400 KT of production per year. Therefore, the total water use since 1981, assuming the same water use efficiency, must have been around 65 km³. This is equivalent to about 220 days of average nile flow at a rate of 0.3 km³ per day. According to FAO, useable water reserves amount to about 340 km³, but they are replenished at a very slow rate of 2.2 km³ per year. If we further consider that only 8% of water used in the kingdom comes from desalination and that 80% of water use goes to agriculture, the abrupt end of the food self sufficiency dogma becomes obvious: if the current policy continues, deep water reserves will have been reduced to less than 190 km³ by 2050… and this takes into account only population food requirements and agricultural uses!

4. The land grab phase

There are many sources about the current quest for land abroad by Saudi Arabia. The two paragraphs that follow (both from farmlandgrab.org) provide some history and indicate which way the country is looking: In January 2009, King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz proclaimed a “food security initiative,” backed by an investment fund of 3 billion Saudi riyals (about $800 million), to support investment by private sector Saudi companies in agricultural projects abroad. According to the government, “The King Abdullah Initiative for Saudi Agricultural Investment Abroad aims at contribution to realizing national and international food security, building integrative partnerships with countries all over the world that have high agricultural potential to develop and manage agricultural investments in several strategic crops at sufficient quantities and stable prices in addition to ensuring their sustainability.” In plain English, that means the Saudis intend to use their capital to develop farm projects in countries that have agricultural potential but lack the money to acquire the irrigation pumps, tractors and harvesters, fertilizer, farm-to-market roads and refrigerated warehouses needed for major increases in output.

Who will be the “beneficiaries”? Among the targeted countries are Sudan, Ethiopia, Vietnam, the Philippines, Mozambique and Ukraine.

The situation is very dynamic. Recent news mention a major deal with Ethiopia: 2.5 billion US$. Will Saudi businessmen pay much attention to environmental issues? Unlikely! Will they pay much attention to human rights, women’s rights, equity and the food security of the “partners” ? That’s unlikely too! In spite of the text above, will they pay attention to international food security, and if they do, what will happen in times of crisis in the developing partners countries?

According to the database of the International Land Coalition consulted on 20110922, Saudi Arabia has made deals with the Philippines (290 kHa) and Ethiopia (310 kHa). In Ethiopia, the largest area (300 kHa) is apparently to be used for agrofuel production under joint Saudi/Ethiopian investment.

There are thus many uncertainties. What is certain is that food seems to have become the strongest currency! I suspect that those who will pay, in the end, are those who are short of the strongest currency today.

Notes and references

Note 1 : yield is the intensity of crop production over a given area. It measures how well a crop performs and is usually expressed in tonnes of grain produced per hectare. For wheat, the order of magnitude varies, according to countries and environmental conditions (including climate) from 1 to 10 tonnes per hectare (T/Ha). Yields have a lower limit (0 T/Ha) when nothing is harvested, for instance because of drought, to an upper limited that depends essentially of available solar energy, water and soil fertility. The maximum achievable yield in a given location is the potential yield, given sufficient supply of inputs (including water). The potential yield is climatically determined. The potential yield for a given crop cannot be exceeded. Genetic improvements can raise it a bit, but wheat remains wheat. There is usually a direct link between accumulated crop mass (roots, straw, grain, i.e. biomass/Ha) and water use, expressed as “actual evapotranspiration”. See Gommes, 2010 for details. Since yield is production divided by area, the total production of a country is obtained from the cultivated area multiplied  by the average yield over that area.

Note 2: In the late 1970s, John Monteith has developed a well know equation to estimate potential biomass accumulation based on climate (e.g. Kumar and Monteith, 1981): the climatic potential of dry matter accumulation (DM, g m-2 year-1) is given, in absence of limiting factors (for instance water stress or pest attacks), by

where H is the global net radiation and EffH, Effa and Effc are conversion efficiencies. Refer also to GCEP, 2005 and Zhu et al., 2008. For the generic subject of Radiation use efficiency (RUE) the following were also consulted, starting with the classic Sinclair and Muchow (1999), then Miranzadeh et al., 2011, Li et al., 2011 and Zhu et al, 2010.

Time series of wheat production, area and yield in Saudi Arabia. Based on FAO data

Values of H were computed for the 15th of each month based on extra-terrestrial radiation and Angstoems formula using average coefficients a=0.307 and b=0.412 (computed from the table of Saudi Arabian stations in Rehman, 1999; see also Xu et al., 2009). The 15th was assumed to be representative for the days of the month. EffH (known as climatic efficiency, i.e. the fraction of the net radiation that is photosynthetically active)  is usually in the range from 0.33 to 0.5 according to location and season, although 0.5 seems to be adopted by most authors for practical applications (Lauciani and Ponticiello, 1993). Effa, the absorption efficiency depends on leaf area index [LAI: m2 (leaf) m-2 (ground surface)] and canopy geometry; it was also taken as 0.5. Effc is the conversion efficiency of absorbed PAR (PARa) to biomass produced. Effc is very plant dependent and varies over the life cycle. Based on the literature, the value adopted for wheat was 1.47 g of above ground dry matter per MJ (megajoule) The value agrees with Sinclair and Muchow (1999) and Zwart et al., 2010. Additional assumptions were a harvest index of 0.35 (i.e. 35 grammes of dry grain for straw for 65 g of dry straw) and, finally, 13.5  % moisture contents of grain. For wheat harvest index data, consult Siddique et al., 1990; Ehsanullah et al., 1999; Grewal et al, 2004; Yin and Schapendonk, 2004; Amanullah & Maimoona, 2007; Zwart et al., 2001 and Li et al., 2011,

Note 3:  The order of magnitude of wheat WUE is about 1100 litres of water for every kg of wheat grain produced in semi-arid conditions (Morgan, 2003; Taley et al., 2003; Bastiaanssen, 2004; Zwart et al., 2004; Angus, 2006; Alghariani, 2007; Lamaddalena et al., 2007; Abd El-Rahman, 2009; Zwart et al., 2010). The best WUEs obviously correspond to lower amounts of water: they are close to 450 litres for 1 Kg of grain (Sadras & Angus, 2006; Botwright-Acuña, 2010). We can round the two values to 1000 litres to produce 1 Kg of wheat for farming systems of average efficiency and to 500 litres for highly efficient systems. These concepts are described with some detail in the downloadable files listed in the references under Gommes (1999), Steduto (2006) Gommes et al. (2009), Gommes (2010), Zhu et al (2010) and the crop physiology lectures by E. Earl (not dated, but available on the internet).

References

Abd El-Rahman, G. 2009. Water Use Efficiency of Wheat under Drip Irrigation Systems at Al-Maghara Area, North Sinai, Egypt. American-Eurasian J. Agric. & Environ. Sci., 5 (5): 664-670. http://idosi.org/aejaes/jaes5%285%29/12.pdf.
Alghariani, S.A. 2007. Reducing agricultural water demand in Libya through the improvement of water use efficiency and crop water productivity. Pp. 99-107 in: Lamaddalena et al., 2007.

Amanullah, J. & N.Maimoona. 2007. Response of wheat to farm yard manure and nitrogen under rainfed conditions. African crop science proceedings, 8:37-40.

Botwright-Acuña, T. S.Lisson & G.Dean. 2010. Benchmarking wheat water-use efficiency in Tasmania, In: HDove and RA Culvenor (Eds). “Food Security from Sustainable Agriculture”. Proceedings of the 15th Australian Agronomy Conference, 15-18 November 2010, Lincoln, New Zealand. Australian Society of Agronomy. http://www.regional.org.au/au/asa/2010/crop-production/soil-water/7035_acunat.htm

de Wit, C.T., J. Goudriaan, H.H. van Laar, F.W.T. Penning de Vries, R. Rabbinge, H. van Keulen, W. Louwerse, L. Sibma & C. de Jonge. 1978. Simulation of assimilation, respiration and transpiration of crops. Pudoc, Wageningen, 141 pp.

E. Earl crop physiology lectures (http://www.uoguelph.ca/plant/courses/pbio-3110/)

Ehsanullah, A.A.C., A. Ghaffar, M.A. Randhawa. 1999. Dry matter partitioning into root and shoot of wheat genotypes sown at different depths and dates under rainfed conditions. Int. J. Agric. Biol. 1(4):250-253.

FAO, 1978. Report on the agroecological zones project. Vol.1: Results for Africa. World Soil Resources Report 48/1. FAO, Rome, 15pp. and 8 tables.

GCEP, 2005. An Assessment of Biomass Feedstock and Conversion Research Opportunities, Technical assessmenr report. Global Climate and Energy Project (GCEP), Energy Assessment Analysis Spring, 2005. Stanford University. 22p. http://gcep.stanford.edu/pdfs/assessments/biomass_assessment.pdf

Gommes, R. 1999. Roving Seminar on crop-yield weather modelling; lecture notes and exercises. WMO. Geneva, 153 pp. ftp://ext-ftp.fao.org/SD/Reserved/Agromet/Documents/agro003a.pdf.

Gommes, R., H. Das, L. Mariani, A. Challinor, B. Tychon, R. Balaghi and M.A.A. Dawod. 2010. Agrometeorological Forecasting. WMO Guide to Agrometeorological Practices (GAMP), Chapter 5. 70 pp. http://www.agrometeorology.org/files-folder/repository/gamp_chapt5.pdf

Gommes, R., T. El Hairech, D. Rosillon, R. Balaghi and H. Kanamaru. 2009. Impact of Climate Change on agricultural yields in Morocco. World Bank-Morocco study on the impact of climate change on the agricultural sector. 105 pp. Downloadable from ftp://ext-ftp.fao.org/SD/Reserved/Agromet/WB_FAO_morocco_CC_yield_impact/report/

Grewal, H.S., S. Norrish & P. Cornish, 2004. Subsoil salts affect root function, shoot growth and ionic balance of wheat plants: Proceedings for the 4th International Crop Science Congress, Brisbane, Australia, 26 September – 1 October 2004. Internet source only: http://www.cropscience.org.au/icsc2004/poster/3/6/2/1952_grewal.htm

Kumar, L. & J.L Monteith. 1981. Remote sensing of crop growth, In: M. Smith, Ed., Plants and daylight spectrum. Academic press, London. pp. 133 144.

Lamaddalena, N., C. Bogliotti, M. Todorovic, A. Scardigno (Eds), 2007. Water saving in Mediterranean Agriculture & Future Research Needs, Proceedings of the International Conference, 14-17 February 2007 – Valenzano, Italy; Options Méditerranéennes Série B n. 56, 289 pp.

Lauciani, E, & A. Ponticiello, 1993. Photosynthetically active radiation, empirical determination and literature survey. FAO Agrometeorological working paper series N. 7. FAO, Rome. 85 pp.

Li, H.L., Y. Luo & J.H.Ma. 2011. Radiation-use efficiency and the harvest index of winter wheat at different nitrogen levels and their relationships to canopy spectral reflectance. Crop & Pasture Science, 62:208–217.

Mahmood, Naeem & R.N. Ahmad. 2005. Determination of Water Requirements and Response of Wheat to Irrigation at Different Soil Moisture Depletion Levels. Int. J. Agric. Biol., 7(5):812-815. http://www.fspublishers.org/ijab/past-issues/IJABVOL_7_NO_5/28.pdf.

Miranzadeh, H., Y.Emam, H.Seyyed & S.Zare. 2011. Productivity and Radiation Use Efficiency of Four Dryland Wheat Cultivars under Different Levels of Nitrogen and Chlormequat Chloride. J. Agr. Sci. Tech., 13:339-351.

Morgan, J.M. 2003. Making the most of available water in wheat production. NSW agnote ISSN 1034-6848, 3pp. http://www.dpi.nsw.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0005/164669/water-wheat-production.pdf

Rehman, S. 1998. Solar radiation over Saudi Arabia and comparisons with empirical models. Energy, 23(12):1077–1082.

Sadras, V.O., F.F.Angus. 2006. Benchmarking water-use efficiency of rainfed wheat in dry environments. Australian J. Agric. Res., 57(8)847-856.

Siddique, K.H.M., R.K.Belford & D. Tennant. 1990. Root:shoot ratios of old and modern, tall and semi-dwarf wheats in a mediterranean environment.  Plant and Soil,  121:89-98.

Sinclair, T.R. and R.C. Muchow. 1999. Radiation use efficiency. Adv. Agronomy, 65:215-265.

Steduto, P. 2006. Biomass Water-Productivity; Comparing the Growth-Engines of Crop Models. WUEMED training course “Integrated approaches to improve drought tolerance in crops”. June 5-10, 2006 – Faculty of Agriculture, Bologna. http://www.distagenomics.unibo.it/wuemed/P_steduto_biomass.pdf

Taley, S.M., R.S. Patode and A.N. Mankar. 2003. On-farm increased production, income and wateruse efficiency through micro- irrigation in india. (http://afeid.montpellier.cemagref.fr/Mpl2003/AtelierTechno/AtelierTechno/Papier%20Entier/N%C2%B046%20%20INDE_USA_BM.pdf)

Xu,J., S.Peng, Y.Luo & Z.Wei, 2009. Influences of Angstrom’s coefficients on estimate of solar radiation and reference evap[otranspiration bt Penman-Monteith equation. Proceedings of 16th IAHR-APD Congress and 3rd Symposium of IAHR-ISHS, Nanjing, 2008. Advances in Water Resources and Hydraulic Engineering
2009, Vol. I, 339-344.

Yin, X. & A.H.C.M. Schapendonk. 2004. Simulating the partitioning of biomass and nitrogen between roots and shoot in crop and grass plants. NJAS 51(4):407-426.

Zhu, Xin-Guang, S.P.Long & D.R.Ort. 2008. What is the maximum efficiency with which photosynthesis can convert solar energy into biomass? Current Opinion in Biotechnology 19:153–159. http://ddr.nal.usda.gov/bitstream/10113/36097/1/IND44280883.pdf

Zhu,Xin-Guang, S.P.Long & D.R.Ort, 2010. Improving Photosynthetic Efficiency for Greater Yield. Annu. Rev. Plant Biol. 2010. 61:235–61. http://www.tbi.univie.ac.at/~raim/harvest/workshop.brno/references/zhu10.pdf.

Zwart, S.J. & W.G.M. Bastiaanssen. 2004. Review of measured crop water productivity values for
irrigated wheat, rice, cotton and maize. Agric. Water Management 69: 115–133.

Zwart, S.J., W.G.M. Bastiaanssen, C. de Fraiture & D.J. Molden. 2010. A global benchmark map of water productivity for rainfed and irrigated wheat. Agric. Water Man., 97:1617-1627.

 

 

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Oscar Rojas
Oscar Rojas
12 years ago

Rene, very interesting how you combine the technical facts with political ones…the “land grab” has a lot of similarities to the multinationals, and it is clear that this does not mean that there will be an improvement for the society and/or the host country. A good example of the consequences is of Unit Fruit Company in the Central American countries (nowdays replaced by Chiquita Brands International and Del Monte Foods). China and South Africa are doing also contracts for renting the land in Ethiopia, Mozambique and in others african countries. Who should revised this contracts? the local government or should be an international entity that should clearance the conditions to favor a balance of the terms?

rene
rene
12 years ago
Reply to  wergosum

Oscar, after answering to Jacques (below) who mentions important vulnerability issues, can you tell me if there have been serious conflicts with Chiquita or Del Monte (of course, the US government is behind them!) Do you know any good sources on the subject?

Oscar Rojas
Oscar Rojas
12 years ago
Reply to  rene

Rene, the conflict with the United Fruit Company is well documented; even Pablo Neruda dedicated a poem (“La United Fruit Co.”.) to denounce the involvement of the multinational in the local policy and thanks to this the term of Banana republic was born (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banana_republic), nowadays I am not very sure about the terms or contract on which the multinationals are working in the Central America or even in Costa Rica (Dole, Banana Chiquita and Del Monte); however Wikipedia mentions some concerns for the extensive use of pesticides in the pineapple production http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pineapple :
“Three quarters of pineapples sold in Europe are grown in Costa Rica, where pineapple production is highly industrialised. Growers typically use 20 kg of pesticides per hectare in each growing cycle,[22] a process that may affect soil quality and biodiversity. The pesticides – organophosphates, organochlorines and hormone disruptors – have potential to affect workers’ health and can contaminate local drinking water supplies.[22] Many of these chemicals have potential to be carcinogens and may be related to birth defects.[22]
Because of commercial pressures, many pineapple workers – 60% of whom are Nicaraguan – in Costa Rica are paid low wages.[quantify] European supermarkets’ price-reduction policies have lowered growers’ incomes.[22][citation needed] One major pineapple producer refutes these claims.[23]”

Jacques
Jacques
12 years ago

Très intéressant et clair. Cela soulève de multiples problèmes, je n’en évoque que quelques uns… Les terres au loin impliquent une puissance militaire qui peut être projetée (une des raisons pour l’augmentation de la capacité militaire de la Chine et aussi de sa maîtrise grandissante du commerce maritime) pour “défendre” les contrats. Sinon le pays est vulnérable et à la merci d’un gouvernement qui revient sur ses engagements.

Le locataire a intérêt à ne pas bien gérer les terres , mais à les exploiter… Le pays qui loue perd sur tous les plans: terres et leur qualité, sécurité alimentaire, déplacement de populations, corruption et l’argent de la location placé dans des comptes à l’étranger.. D’où un grand risque d’instabilité sociale qui peut facilement se focaliser sur l’étranger… et les locataires avec quelques massacres en perspective.

En fait sur le long terme c’est une forme de délocalisation qui ne réduit pas la vulnérabilité réelle du locataire à moins qu’il ne diversifie suffisamment ses sources d’approvisionnement comme peut le faire la Chine…

En fin de compte on risque d’aboutir à deux pays sans ressources au lieu d’un seul et the buck (wheat) has to stop somewhere!

wergosum
wergosum
12 years ago
Reply to  Jacques

Evidemment, vu sous cet angle, le nouveau porte-avions chinois, le Shi Lang (55 000 tonnes, 300 mètres de long pour 70 de large) s’explique un peu mieux! (Voir: http://www.rtbf.be/info/monde/detail_premier-porte-avions-pour-la-chine-les-etats-unis-inquiets?id=6580963)

Je suppose que la situation de pays comme l’Arabie Saoudite et celle la Chine sont très différentes! La Chine a des ressources renouvelables, et l’Arabie Saoudite n’en a que peu. Selon la source habituelle (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oil_reserves_in_Saudi_Arabia) les réserves en pétrole ne sont pas bien connues, mais seraient voisines de 43 km³. C’est le même ordre de grandeur que l’eau consommée par l’agriculture depuis 1981! Amusant, si on veut… Les réserves en eau de l’Arabie Saoudite sont 8 fois supérieures à ses réserves en pétrole.

Ton observation sur la vulnérabilité est très juste aussi! Comment l’Arabie Saoudite, qui n’a pas de porte-avions, pourra-t-elle défendre son approvisionnement en céréales? On voit se profiler, juste pour commencer, l’explulsion de tous les étrangers…

wergosum
wergosum
12 years ago
Reply to  wergosum

Je me demande aussi de quels moyens l’AS dispose pour faire pression… à moins que l’accord ne soit un troc: tu me
donnes des terres et je te donne du pétrole. C’est la chose la plus logique, puisque les détails des accords ne sont pas connus

jacques
jacques
12 years ago
Reply to  wergosum

Même dans ce cas de troc, l’AS reste fragile s’il y a un troisième larron, comme c’est probable… Par exemple, la Chine peut offrir à l’Ethiopie du pétrole si les accords avec l’AS sont violés… Pétrole qu’elle importe
elle-même du Moyen Orient. Un pays hésitera à remettre en cause un accord avec l’Inde ou la Chine, mais l’AS ne fait tout simplement pas le poids sur le plan démographico-militaire.

Riad Balaghi
12 years ago

The expression “International food security” is amazing for a country like Saudi Arabia. It looks like to the expression “energy security” for the USA…. except that USA is a superpower country with a super power army.

One the other hand, what Saudi Arabia wants to do, is like the delocalization of the US and european industry in China. China learned how to process and produce high tech goods at a very competitive price (due, of course to very restrictive rights) !

Is there any sustainable solution for this very rich country (who cares?). I think the only solution is a peacefull middel east region where food goods can be exchanged between high rainfall (Ex. Lebanon, Turkey) and dry countries (Ex. Saudi Arabia, Irak, Jordan).

R.

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wait to take a look when I get home. I’m amazed at how fast your blog loaded on my phone .. I’m not even using WIFI, just 3G ..
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