Global land and water grabbing
Politecnico di Milano · University of Virginia
Abstract
Societal pressure on the global land and freshwater resources is increasing as a result of the rising food demand by the growing human population, dietary changes, and the enhancement of biofuel production induced by the rising oil prices and recent changes in United States and European Union bioethanol policies. Many countries and corporations have started to acquire relatively inexpensive and productive agricultural land located in foreign countries, as evidenced by the dramatic increase in the number of transnational land deals between 2005 and 2009. Often known as "land grabbing," this phenomenon is associated with an appropriation of freshwater resources that has never been assessed before. Here we gather…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 230.11
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 25
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Land grabbing
- Food security
- Per capita
- Virtual water
- Rainwater harvesting
- Natural resource economics
- Agricultural economics
- Population
- Zero hunger