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Arkansas Orders Syngenta to Sell Land in State, Pay Hefty Fine

BY CHRIS CLAYTON

 In the push to end Chinese ownership of U.S. agricultural land, the state of Arkansas on Tuesday ordered Chinese-owned Syngenta Seeds and its subsidiary Northrup King Seed Co. to sell land holdings in the state.

The company also was ordered to pay $280,000 for failing to file paperwork on its land holdings in the state in a timely manner.

The move elevates the efforts against Chinese-owned agricultural land in the U.S., which includes efforts by Congress also to clamp down on Chinese-owned agricultural assets.

According to USDA, Chinese businesses and investors own about 380,000 acres in the U.S. Some high-profile efforts by Chinese companies to build in the U.S. have raised attention to the issue, including a failed effort by a company to build a corn mill in North Dakota that Air Force officials said was too close to their base near Grand Forks.

Still, companies such as Syngenta Seed and Smithfield Foods, also owned by a Chinese company, have largely been left alone until now.

Northrup King, known as NK, is one of Syngenta's largest seed brands in the U.S., along with Golden Harvest.

Arkansas Attorney General Tim Griffin issued a letter ordering Northrup King Seed to sell 160 acres of land in the state.

Arkansas officials held a news conference Tuesday announcing the move, which is the first under a state law signed by Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders earlier this year. The law prohibits Chinese entities from owning land in the state.

"Seeds are technology," Huckabee said. "Chinese state-owned corporations filter that technology back to their homeland, stealing American research and telling our enemies how to target American farms."

Huckabee noted ChemChina is on a Department of Defense list of Chinese military companies "posing a clear threat to our state."

Huckabee said Chinese and Russians who have left those countries are welcome in the state, but this act is about loyalty, she said. "We simply can't trust anyone who pledges allegiance to a hostile foreign power."

Arkansas will require Syngenta subsidiary Northrup King to sell the land within the next two years. Northrup King will also face a fine of $280,000, which is 25% of the value of the company's $1.12 million acreage holdings, for being late in reporting its land holdings to the state.

Syngenta, in a statement, criticized the move. "The order for Syngenta to divest itself of 160 acres of agricultural land in Craighead County, which the company has owned since 1988, is a shortsighted action that fails to account for the effects of such an action, intended or not, on the U.S. agricultural market," Syngenta stated. The company added, "Our people in Arkansas are Americans led by Americans who care deeply about serving Arkansas farmers. This action hurts Arkansas farmers more than anyone else."

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