Land and investment: improving access in low-income countries

Here's the deal

6 January 2017

Sam Szoke-Burke explains the benefits of improving public access to investment deals in low-income countries


The last decade saw a spike in the acquisition of land in low-income countries by investors seeking to carry out agricultural or forestry projects. In many of these countries, agricultural and forestry concessions are granted through investment contracts between the government and the company. These are seldom made available to the public, despite their important implications for public policy. In some circumstances, they can even change the way in which domestic laws apply to the investment.

OpenLandContracts.org is a new tool that makes agricultural and forestry contracts easier to access and understand. This offers a range of benefits, including the encouragement of more sustainable land-use practices and fresh opportunities for public participation in decision-making on such investments.

Land-based investments and development

Governments in low-income countries often view large-scale land-based investments, including in agriculture and forestry, as a potential vehicle for accelerating national development. Such investments are often framed as offering opportunities for job creation, increased public revenues, skills and technology transfers for local actors, improved infrastructure, and even, in the case of agricultural projects, the potential for increased food security.

Interested companies seek to capitalise on the cheap rent, guaranteed access to water and other negotiated benefits that governments may offer. Where possible, investors – including domestic companies and wealthy citizens, as well as foreign companies – may seek large tracts of land for such concessions, in order to maximise economies of scale and increase their profit margins.


Governments in low-income countries often view large-scale land-based investments, including in agriculture and forestry, as a potential vehicle for accelerating national development

While these opportunities may be attractive to investors and governments, the potential adverse impacts for stakeholders, and their subsequent effects, for local residents need to be taken properly into account.

Central to this risk is the question of land, which is the basis of livelihoods and culture for many rural residents of low income countries, including subsistence farmers who grow crops on small plots of land, pastoralists who graze livestock, and nomadic and indigenous peoples who rely on lands, forests and waterways as sources of sustenance, medicine, income, culture and self-identity.

While such stakeholders' land rights are often not formally recognised by the government, they may still have legitimate claims to the land that must be respected, as asserted in international documents such as the Voluntary Guidelines on the Responsible Governance of Tenure of Land, Fisheries and Forests in the Context of National Food Security. Land can also be so intertwined with local residents' social, spiritual and economic networks that it may not be possible to remedy such impacts adequately through the provision of money or replacement land.

These high stakes illustrate why deals to facilitate land-based investments need public scrutiny and participation. Yet in practice, the investment contracts tend to be negotiated in private. They cannot usually be accessed by the general public; neither, in some cases, by some government bodies charged with regulating such investments.

What are investment contracts?

These are agreements made between host governments and investors. In exchange for the government granting the right to access the land and invest for a given period of time, investors generally agree to pay land rents, and in some cases provide other benefits to the government or local communities.

Unlike a residential lease of the kind that a tenant may sign with the owner of a house or apartment building in which they wish to live, these contracts have the potential to alter how national laws apply to the investment. For example, governments may decide to offer tax holidays to attract investors, or even agree to freeze regulation at the point the contract is signed, so that any laws passed subsequently – whether they concern tax, environmental protection or even human rights – will not apply to the investor's operations.

Transparency and the rule of law

Investment contracts not only affect how countries pursue development, but also can undermine the integrity of their legal systems and democratic processes.

By excluding the public and the legislature from negotiations, the power of granting land concessions is effectively concentrated in the hands of small groups of, or individual, government representatives, who will not be subject to the usual checks and balances. This may not be a problem for a minister committed to soil quality management or sustainable timber harvesting; however, for a government representative charged with attracting large investments, the political victory of securing a large investment may be won at the cost of deals that undermine rather than augment the country's development opportunities.


Investment contracts not only affect how countries pursue development, but also can undermine the integrity of their legal systems and democratic processes

Negotiating contracts behind closed doors may also exclude valuable perspectives from other government agencies and departments, which could offer expertise on important issues such as resource management and environmental protection.

These concerns have led to calls for increased transparency around land deals, which governments are starting to heed. Notable efforts include the disclosure of agricultural and/or forestry contracts by the national governments of Liberia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Ethiopia. Sierra Leone has also committed, through the Open Government Partnership, to disclose 70% of its agricultural investment contracts. Further efforts are needed to ensure the disclosure of contracts from a broader range of countries.

How to make contracts more accessible

The Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment has sought to build on government transparency commitments by creating OpenLandContracts.org, the world's first repository of publicly disclosed investment contracts in agriculture and forestry.

The site assembles publicly available contracts in a searchable database. This means that users in low-income countries can search by country, company or commodity type – for instance, oil palm or rubber – to see what deals their governments, or governments in other countries, have made.

The repository also seeks to make the contracts accessible to a wide range of users by providing plain language summaries of key environmental, social, operational and fiscal terms. These annotations often draw from different parts of the contract, making it easier for a user to acquaint themselves quickly with a contract and grasp complex issues without getting bogged down in confusing cross-references or having to flip between different pages. OpenLandContracts's sister site, ResourceContracts.org, offers a similar repository for contracts regulating extractive industry projects.

Who benefits?

OpenLandContracts is designed for many different users.

For public bodies such as tax offices or environmental protection agencies, the task of monitoring an investment – already made difficult in some places by a lack of resources and/or limited capacity – can be further complicated if the investor's obligations under the contract are not known. OpenLandContracts can bridge this knowledge gap.

Host governments can also use the resource to survey the practices of other countries and generate ideas for improving their contracts, for example by strengthening environmental protections or requiring more robust reporting from the investor.


For public bodies such as tax offices or environmental protection agencies, the task of monitoring an investment – already made difficult in some places by a lack of resources and/or limited capacity – can be further complicated if the investor's obligations under the contract are not known

OpenLandContracts offers governments the opportunity to use the site's infrastructure to establish their own contract repositories. This would have the dual benefit of encouraging governments to disclose more contracts and providing them with a platform they can use for information provision and communication with constituents.

Increased transparency and accessibility can also help reduce community grievances. Enabling access and understanding of investment contracts can help manage people's expectations and create opportunities for communities to provide constructive comment on government practices. Communities may also seek to monitor a company's activities, which can complement government monitoring efforts while also strengthening community capacity.

Journalists are using the site as well to report on land deals, which leads to further scrutiny of land-based investments. Members of the press, alongside researchers and civil society representatives, can use the site to identify trends across contracts, gaining a deeper understanding of how such investments are being negotiated around the world and what opportunities exist to improve them.

Finally, investors can use OpenLandContracts to ensure responsible investments by identifying how other companies deal with issues such as environmental protection or preserving the traditional forest usage rights of indigenous peoples. In addition, the site can potentially act as a due diligence tool for companies that are planning to enter a new market for the first time.

Conclusion

Transparency in itself will not solve the myriad challenges of land-based investments. But it is a vital means of ensuring that all stakeholders are better informed, which can enable more robust public dialogue and more inclusive participation in investment planning.

OpenLandContracts creates opportunities to alleviate some of the negative impacts that communities, citizens, and even governments stand to experience after large tracts of land have been signed away.

Sam Szoke-Burke is a legal researcher at the Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment, a joint initiative of the Columbia Law School and the Earth Institute at Columbia University

Further information

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This feature was taken from the RICS Land journal (October/November 2016)