Your reading list

Saudi company eyes 500,000 acre farm in Australia

Reading Time: 2 minutes

Published: February 22, 2019

A Saudi-owned company that bought a share of the former Canadian Wheat Board is in negotiations to acquire a massive 500,000 acre farm in Western Australia, according to reports in the Australian media. | Screencap via thewest.com.au

A Saudi-owned company that bought a share of the former Canadian Wheat Board is in negotiations to acquire a massive 500,000 acre farm in Western Australia, according to reports in the Australian media.

The West Australian, a newspaper based Perth, reported this week that the Saudi Agriculture and Livestock Investment Company (SALIC) is a front-runner in negotiations to buy a 500,000 acre farm owned by Western Australia’s largest broad-acre producer, John Nicoletti.

The C$66 million deal involves land that’s owned and leased by Nicoletti and requires the approval of Australia’s Foreign Investment Review Board (FIRB), according to Australian newspaper reports dated Feb. 21.

Read Also

A black cow looks over its shoulder toward some of its herd in the distance in a pasture on a partly cloudy day.

Canadian Food Inspection Agency slammed for handling of bovine tuberculosis case

The federal government leans heavily on producers to “take one for the team” and risk their livelihoods without any reassurance of support.

News of the pending sale, which was publicized earlier in the week, prompted harsh criticisms from some Australian farmers who believe the landholdings should be retained by local owners.

According to Nicoletti, advertisements inviting local bids were placed in Australian newspapers for a period of 30 days, in accordance with FIRB requirements.

Not a single bid from potential Australian buyers was received, Nicoletti said.

SALIC is an agricultural investment company controlled by Saudi Arabia’s state-owned Public Investment Fund.

In 2015, SALIC struck a deal with American-based agribusiness Bunge Ltd., and formed a joint venture holding company named G3 Global Holdings.

G3 Global Holdings acquired a 50.1 percent stake in the assets of the former Canadian Wheat Board.

Western Canadian farmers retained a 49.9 percent share in CWB assets, which are now part of Canadian grain-handling company G3 Canada, based in Winnipeg.

In 2016, SALIC increased its stake in the joint venture with Bunge, boosting ownership in the G3 Global Holdings to 75 percent from 49 percent previously.

Saudi Arabia has been acquiring agricultural assets around the world and phasing out crop production efforts at home due to limited fresh water supplies.

In 2018, SALIC UK, a subsidiary of SALIC, acquired a majority stake in Mriya Group’s Ukraine farming assets at a reported cost C$375 million.

Mriya, located online at mriya.ua/en/, is the English parent company of one of the largest Ukrainian agricultural groups, farming more than 350,000 acres in six regions of Western Ukraine.

Nicoletti told the West Australian that if the pending land deal with SALIC gets FIRB approval, he will work for SALIC in a consultancy role for 12 to 18 months.

After that he will focus on running his string of John Deere equipment dealerships in the state of Western Australia.

Contact brian.cross@producer.com

About the author

Brian Cross

Brian Cross

Saskatoon newsroom

explore

Stories from our other publications