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Lawmakers Want to Ban Chinese Companies From Buying US Farmland Due to ‘National Security’ Threat

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Chinese companies have acquired over 500,000 acres of farmland in Texas, the agriculture powerhouse of the United States that leads the country in exporting a host of crops. The acquisition of that much acreage has been a concern for Texas lawmakers, particularly for Texas Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller, who told The Epoch Times in an exclusive interview on Nov. 16 that it presents a national security threat and needs to be stopped.

“It should be a matter of urgency; the stupidest thing we could do is let the Chinese buy our farmland,” said Miller. “It would give them access to our food sources or electric grid … there’s no good reason to allow this to happen.”

Miller said he first became alarmed about the issue in 2016 when the company Guanghui Energy Co. Ltd., owned by Chinese billionaire Sun Guangxin who is reportedly connected to the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), began purchasing up to 140,000 acres of farmland in the border town of Del Rio—right next to Laughlin Air Force Base. The company said it would use the land to build wind turbines.

“They could be spying on our military, performing espionage,” said Miller, who is working with lawmakers to create a national ban on foreign-owned companies purchasing land near critical infrastructure sites.

“I’m working with the Texas Legislature to stop it at the state level; I’m also working with the congressional delegation to stop it at the federal level.”

Chinese Firms Purchase More Farmland

In the summer of 2022, more lawmakers became alarmed when it was revealed that a Chinese agriculture company called the Fufeng Group, which has ties to the CCP, purchased hundreds of acres of farmland in Grand Forks, North Dakota, near another Air Force base.

The Grand Forks Air Force Base is home to a low-Earth orbit satellite mission that would advance military intelligence and surveillance, according to Sen. John Hoeven (R-N.D.). “We’ve been working with SDA (Space Development Agency) and the Air Force to secure this new mission, which is essential for our nation to stay ahead of our adversaries in developing critical new technologies.”

Epoch Times Photo
Grand Forks Air Force Base is located about 12 miles from the city of Grand Forks, N.D. Residents have organized to oppose a corn mill investment by a Chinese company with reputed ties to the Chinese Communist Party through its company chairman. (Allan Stein/The Epoch Times)

Hoeven said the new mission will serve as “the backbone for all U.S. military communications across the globe.”

According to a report from the U.S.-China Economic and Review Commission, the location of the land close to the base is “particularly convenient for monitoring air traffic flows in and out of the base, among other security-related concerns.”

The Fufeng Group maintains it will use the land to build a wet corn milling plant that extracts high-valued amino acids, lysine, and threonine, which are essential ingredients in animal nutrition feed formulations.

States Respond

Since the pattern of Chinese companies buying up U.S. farmland has been brought to light, several states have begun trying to stop the practice. “There are eight states that forbid it now, there’s 34 that have some kind of restrictions, but we really need a national policy over this,” said Miller.

Rep. Dan Newhouse (R-Wash.) introduced a bill in the U.S. House of Representatives called the Prohibition of Agricultural Land for the People’s Republic of China Act, which would “prohibit the purchase of public or private agricultural land in the United States by foreign nationals associated with the Government of the People’s Republic of China.”

“We hail from the greatest country in the world, and there is simply no reason we should be reliant on a communist country like China for our food supply. If we begin to cede the responsibility over our food supply chain to an adversarial foreign nation, we could be forced into exporting food that is grown within our own borders and meant for our own use,” said Newhouse in a press release.

Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.) and Rep. Rick Crawford (R-Ariz.) have also introduced a bill called the Promoting Agriculture Safeguards and Security (PASS) Act, which would “protect our national security by preventing foreign adversaries from taking any ownership or control of the United States agriculture industry.”

“Food security is national security, and I am proud to stand up against our foreign adversaries as they attempt to exploit any potential vulnerability and assert control over our agriculture industry,” Stefanik said in a press release. “The United States cannot allow malign ownership bids of American assets by China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea to undermine the efforts of our farmers.”

The Extent of China’s Presence Unclear

It’s unclear exactly how much farmland Chinese companies have purchased in the United States due to a lack of government transparency on farm sales. A 1978 law called the Agriculture Foreign Investment Disclosure Act requires those who purchase farmland in the United States to report the purchases to the Department of Agriculture. However, the data on those purchases has not been well kept, according to media sources.

But as tensions continue to grow between the United States and China, several legislators and state officials like Miller say the time to reveal the true foreign owners of farmland in the United States is now.

“They could contaminate several truckloads of wheat or corn or whatever they’re raising on this agriculture property and steal trade secrets, or even try to shut off the electric grid,” Miller said.

He added that “we should just use a little cowboy logic and say, ‘hey, if we can’t buy farmland in your country, we can’t see any good reason that you should buy any of ours.’”

Joe Gomez

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Joe Gomez is an award-winning journalist who has worked across the globe for several major networks including: CBS, CNN, FOX News, and most recently NBC News Radio as a national correspondent based out of Washington. He has covered major disasters and worked as an investigative reporter in many danger zones.



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