Media: China owns very little farmland in US
Lawmakers seeking to erect high walls around plots, a move sparking concern

Fears of China buying up land in the United States have been grabbing headlines for quite a while despite the fact that China owns very little land in the country.
Since 2017, a company called Flannery Associates has been buying large plots of land in an agricultural region nearly 100 kilometers northeast of San Francisco near Travis Air Force Base, spending more than $800 million.
Unfamiliar with the firm, local people and some lawmakers speculated that it might be the Chinese buying the land with "potential to harm US security".
However, court documents revealed recently the land was purchased by a group of wealthy Silicon Valley investors, including the co-founders of LinkedIn and Stripe, along with other billionaire venture capitalists.
Despite the small acreage of agricultural land purchased by Chinese interests, fears and rumors of China buying up US land have prompted legislative moves from state legislatures to the federal government.
By the end of May, at least 33 US states had introduced some form of alien land and property bill to exclude Chinese from purchasing land or even homes. While some bills died, at least 12 states passed them into law.
At the federal level, the Senate voted in late July to block businesses based in China, Russia, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea and Iran from purchasing farmland in the US out of so-called concerns that Chinese entities are creating a national security risk by acquiring swaths of US farmland, with some near sensitive sites.
However, an extensive review by NBC News of thousands of documents filed with the US Department of Agriculture, or USDA, confirmed previous reports that the total amount of US agricultural land owned by Chinese interests is less than 1 percent of foreign-owned land.
In total, the Chinese ownership is rather minuscule at less than 0.03 percent of total US agricultural land of 1.3 billion acres (526 million hectares).
The review also found that very few purchases were made by Chinese buyers in the past year and a half. In purchases in 35 states reviewed by NBC News, USDA data showed 11 purchases by Chinese entities, with total acreage below 1,400 from Jan 1,2022, to June 30, 2023.
Some notable purchases made by Chinese entities include 186 acres that Smithfield Foods purchased in 2022 and 2023 in Missouri and North Carolina. The company was acquired by a Chinese firm in 2013 and owns about 128,000 acres of US land.
'Not one of them'
"There are important issues to be addressed between the US and China," Jim Monroe, Smithfield's vice-president of corporate affairs, told NBC News. "Ownership of US agricultural land is not one of them."
Another China-acquired company, Syngenta Group, filed a report that it bought a total of 772 acres across Iowa, Florida and California. However, those purchases had already been reported to the USDA when they were made under the company's former owner, a Swiss company. Syngenta was bought by a Chinese company in 2017.
Saswato Das, a spokesman for Syngenta, told NBC News that the company owns or leases a total of 6,000 acres in the US, and a significant portion of it is being used for research as required by the USDA and the Environmental Protection Agency.
Fufeng USA, a company located in Hong Kong, bought 365 acres in North Dakota but didn't disclose its purchases to the USDA until it became news. Its proximity to Grand Forks Air Force Base raised an alarm in Washington. The size of the land is less than a quarter of the average size of a family farm in North Dakota.
Eric Chutorash, COO of Fufeng USA, dismissed concerns that the plant could be used to spy on the Air Force base. "I can't imagine anyone that we hire that's going to even do that," he told NBC News.
Nevertheless, development of the Fufeng plant was stopped by local, state and federal officials.
The review showed that roughly 3.1 percent, or 400 million acres of US agricultural land, is owned by foreign entities, about half of which is forest.
Canadian interests rank No 1 with the ownership of about one-third of all foreign-owned agricultural land in the US.
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