Tag Archives: agriculture

Farm manager looks east in search of fertile investment

Britain’s biggest farm management company is branching out into agricultural investment in Romania, believing eastern Europe offers far more fertile opportunities than those at home. The privately owned Velcourt, which manages 50,400 hectares of arable and dairy farms in the UK for 81 clients, has set up a joint-venture with Mintridge International, a farmland acquisition company focused on Poland and Romania. The pair plan to tap into resurgent demand for farming investment, boosted by rising food prices, that cannot be met by opportunities in Britain. “The UK farmland market is very mature and illiquid,” said Velcourt chief executive James Townshend. “Less than 0.5pc of UK farmland is sold in any one year, so opportunities are very limited and yields are only 1pc-2pc.” Mr Townshend, who has been with Velcourt for 35 years, is married to Charlotte Townshend – one of the UK’s wealthiest landowners, whose estate includes 40 acres around London’s Holland Park and Chesil Beach in Dorset. She has an estimated fortune of about £300m, and is the only person in Britain apart from the Queen who is entitled to own swans. Mr Townshend said he saw “double digit” returns in Romania both from the farming operations and the uplift in land prices. “We’ll get the returns in two ways,” he said. “We’ll ramp up productivity and reduce costs and there’s potential for very profitable agricultural operations with good soil quality. “Then there’s the land arbitrage. Consolidating a large number of indigenous landowners with small plots into one larger block with proper irrigation and crop storage will increase land values, which will rise anyway over time.” He believed that “over six or seven years”, the value of Romanian farmland could rise from the current €2,700 (£2.365) per hectare to Poland’s average of €6,500 to €7,000. “In East Anglia it’s €30,000 a hectare,” said Mr Townshend, noting UK farmland was “fully priced”. The new Bucharest-based joint-venture company, Velcourt SRL, has modelled an initial €14m investment that is targeting an 18.7pc return. It envisages buying 4,450 hectares, each at €2,700 or less, and improving irrigation and storage. By the time an investor exits eight years later, Velcourt envisages land values will have risen to €9,500 per hectare. The model assumes drought in years two and five. Mr Townshend said land had been identified, with a typical investor likely to be “family offices or private equity”. Velcourt is also the UK’s largest manager of dairy farms, spanning 10 businesses and 5,000 cows. But it will focus on arable farming in Romania, notably maize, wheat, sunflowers and oilseed rape. Velcourt was formed in 1967 and made pre-tax profits of £4.56m in 2011 – its latest accounts – on sales of £35.3m. It takes a share of the profits of the farms it manages, whose collective turnover would be close to £100m. Mr Townshend owns more than 20pc of the business. The company has previously invested in Russia, though returns were hit by the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008, which knocked asset values everywhere. “Demand for farm investment is not back to 2008 levels but it is getting there,” Mr Townshend said, noting that “there are a number of vehicles in the offing” aimed at agricultural investors. That is on top of established ventures such as Rabo Farm – a subsidiary of Rabobank. He said Velcourt could “take a 10pc stake in the initial investment” in Romania but would not be drawn on whether his wife would invest. “That would be a decision for her,” he said. Continue reading

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Business Says End Carbon Tax, Bring In ETS

By Nick Perry From:AAP April 18, 2013 A GROWING chorus of business and industry groups is calling for Australia’s carbon tax to be scrapped now and replaced with an emissions trading scheme (ETS) and a floating price. Opposition to the fixed-price regime – currently $23 per tonne of CO2 emissions – has grown since a failed bid to improve Europe’s ETS saw market-based prices there plummet to below $4 per tonne. Market analysis released on Thursday forecasts Australia’s carbon price could plunge to $2.70 when Labor’s carbon pricing mechanism links with Europe’s ETS in July 2015. The fixed price is due to rise to $24.15 in July this year and $25.40 in 2014, before the price is set by the market in 2015. Industry is calling for an earlier transition to a floating price, arguing it would help drive down power costs for businesses and households. Wesfarmers chief Richard Goyder said companies didn’t want to pay significantly more for emissions than the rest of the world. “I think business would welcome a more market-based price, considering the cost pressures we’ve got at the moment,” he said on Thursday. The Australian Industry Group said by abolishing the fixed-price period and linking with Europe, Australia’s emissions targets would still be met but at a lower cost to business. “We should make the most of the opportunity to meet our own targets at least cost,” said AiGroup chief executive Innes Willox. In its latest forecast, energy and carbon advisory firm RepuTex predicted Australia’s carbon price would average just $2.70 when it’s floated until 2020. Treasury anticipated a carbon price of $29 in 2015/16, but since Europe’s price spiral Labor has confirmed the forecast would be revised in the May budget and an updated revenue outlook provided. RepuTex executive director Hugh Grossman said the price plunge would see companies meet their emissions targets at a much lower cost and spur a revival in coal-fired power generation. The total impact would be an immediate reduction in wholesale electricity prices. “They’ll basically drop to levels pretty close to what we would have seen before the introduction of the carbon pricing mechanism,” Mr Grossman told AAP. Meanwhile, opposition climate action spokesman Greg Hunt says the coalition agrees using markets was the best way to tackle global warming – but not with a carbon tax. Using a “classic market mechanism”, Mr Hunt said the coalition would directly fund activities that reduced CO2 emissions – known as abatement – like revegetation and improving soil carbon. Abatement would then be purchased at the lowest possible cost via a reverse auction, a process where prices are driven down by competing sellers. In a speech to the Australian National University on Thursday evening, Mr Hunt will argue this carbon buyback approach would reward innovation and initiative while meeting Australia’s climate targets. “Whereas the carbon tax tries to drive up the price of basic services in order to force down use … we will not provide a dollar unless there is an actual reduction of emissions,” he will say. “Our Direct Action Plan is a simple, low-touch market mechanism.” Continue reading

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Sugar To Ethanol Rule

Mintz Levin Cohn Ferris Glovsky and Popeo PC David Leiter , Bryan M. Stockton , Jordan M. Collins and R. Neal Martin USA April 8 2013 Author page » Author page » Author page » Author page » On April 6, the Department of Agriculture’s Farm Service Agency and Commodity Credit Corporation sent to the White House a proposed rule that would allow the federal government to trade excess sugar for biofuel. The rule, which the White House Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs has 90 days to review, would allow the federal government to purchase excess sugar and sell it to biofuel manufacturers under the Feedstock Flexibility Program for Bioenergy Producers. Continue reading

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