Just what we need, cornfield crucifixions.
Seriously though, this is very troubling. The Saudis are explicitly conserving their own resources at home, while exploiting land and water supplies here in America.
CNBC reports:
Saudi Arabia and other Persian Gulf countries are scooping up farmland in drought-afflicted regions of the U.S. Southwest, and that has some people in California and Arizona seeing red.
Saudi Arabia grows alfalfa hay in both states for shipment back to its domestic dairy herds. In another real-life example of the worlds interconnected economy, the Saudis increasingly look to produce animal feed overseas in order to save water in their own territory, most of which is desert.
Privately held Fondomonte California on Sunday announced that it bought 1,790 acres of farmland in Blythe, California an agricultural town along the Colorado River for nearly $32 million. Two years ago, Fondomonts parent company, Saudi food giant Almarai, purchased another 10,000 acres of farmland about 50 miles away in Vicksburg, Arizona, for around $48 million.
But not everyone likes the trend. The alfalfa exports are tantamount to exporting water, because in Saudi Arabia, they have decided that its better to bring feed in rather than to empty their water reserves, said Keith Murfield, CEO of United Dairymen of Arizona, a Tempe-based dairy cooperative whose members also buy alfalfa. This will continue unless theres regulations put on it.
Recall, this is precisely the type of investment Michael Burry of Big Short fame recently said he was involved in.
In a statement announcing the California farmland purchase, the Saudi company said the deal forms part of Almarais continuous efforts to improve and secure its supply of the highest quality alfalfa hay from outside the (Kingdom of Saudi Arabia) to support its dairy business. It is also in line with the Saudi government direction toward conserving local resources.
Sure, conserve local, exploit American. Just brilliant.
Added Irwin, Were letting them come over here and use up our resources. Its very frustrating for me, especially when I have residents telling me that their wells are going dry and they have to dig a lot deeper for water. Its costly for them to drill new wells.
Local development and groundwater pumping have contributed to the groundwater table falling since 2010 by more than 50 feet in parts of La Paz County, 130 miles west of Phoenix. State documents show there are at least 23 water wells on the lands controlled by Alamarais subsidiary, Fondomonte Arizona. Each of the wells is capable of pumping more than 100,000 gallons daily.
You can use as much water as youd like, as long as its put to a beneficial use, and youre not required to report your water use, said Michelle Moreno, a spokesperson for the Arizona Department of Water Resources, which has scheduled a public meeting for Jan. 30 in La Paz County to hear concerns from residents.
More competition for land and fodder is likely to make things more expensive for dairy farmers in California and elsewhere.
(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});
It will ultimately drive the price up for the West Coast dairy operations, said Robert Chesler, vice president of the dairy group at FCStone, a Chicago-based commodity-risk management company. This is where they are buying that hay. This is where they are buying the farmland for dairy farms as well as and where they are buying the dairy goods, because we are obviously exporting more out of the West Coast.
Just another example of the Saudis giving it good and hard to American public.
For related articles, see:
From Baghdad to Bahrain From Beruit to Tehran Tensions Are Exploding Across the Middle East
German Intelligence Warns Saudi Arabia to Play Destabilizing Role in the Middle East
A Look Inside Saudi Arabias Elaborate U.S. Propaganda Machine
Saudi Arabia and ISIS A Side by Side Comparison
Another New Low Saudi Arabia Threatens to Sue Twitter Users Who Compare it to ISIS
Saudi Arabia Bombs Second Yemeni Wedding in a Week At Least 23 Dead
Saudi Arabia Forces the UN to Drop Humanitarian Inquiry Into Yemen Atrocities
In Liberty,
Michael Krieger