Gulf states to launch $2b fund for food security

Plans to buy stakes in region's agricultural firms

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Dubai (Reuters) Gulf Arab states will pour $2 billion (Dh7.34 billion) into a new agricultural fund in coming months to secure food supplies by buying stakes in existing agricultural firms, an executive involved in the fund's creation said yesterday.

Gulf countries mainly reliant on food imports, have ramped up efforts to secure food supplies through buying farmland in developing nations or buying stakes in agriculture companies.

The new Arab agricultural holding company will be part of the broader Arab Authority for Agriculture Investment and Development (AAAID), an organisation made up of 20 Arab and African states all keen to lock in food supplies.

"We are now at a stage where the holding company is being established and the name will be announced soon," Rajagopal Ramamoorthy, director of financial investments at AAAID, told Reuters.

"The $2 billion fund has already been approved since January and the money basically comes from members of the Gulf states...to buy listed and unlisted food companies in the Middle East and Africa."

Unlike other Gulf investments in agriculture which have primarily focused on buying or leasing farmland, the new company will acquire stakes in existing food companies in Africa and the Middle East, said Ramamoorthy.

"Buying stakes in companies has been our line of expertise so far and we wouldn't want stray away from it," he said.

The AAAID, launched in 1967 and headquartered in Sudan with an office in Dubai, has $400 million in capital, Ramamoorthy said.

It already holds stakes in 25 Middle East and African food companies, including a 30 per cent stakes in UAE food producers Al Rawabi Dairy Company, Rowadh Poultry and Fujairah Poultry.

"But now more than ever the issue of food security has become more important to Arab nations as the prices of commodities have been on the rise that's why this new company is being launched now," Ramamoorthy said.

He said the global econ-omic crisis, coupled with poor infrastructure in developing African countries, had forced the authority to put projects on hold in Mauritania, Tunisia and Comoros.

"I can say that some of our projects in Africa lacked success because of the bureaucracy and lack of resources in places such as Sudan really slowed us down," he said.

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