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Tuesday, July 08, 2025
U.S. to ban Chinese purchases of farmland, citing national security. (Cate Cadell, WaPo, July 8, 2025)
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U.S. to ban Chinese purchases of farmland, citing national security
Top officials said the Trump administration will use executive action and work with state officials to ban sales of farmland nationwide to Chinese buyers and other foreign adversaries.
Karrie Brewer mows land on her family farm in front of a flag-painted barn on June 7, 2025, near Loring, Kansas. (Charlie Riedel/AP)
U.S. Department of Agriculture chief Brooke Rollins announced Tuesday that the U.S. government will move to ban sales of farmland nationwide to Chinese buyers and other foreign adversaries, citing threats to national security and food security.
In a joint news conference with Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi L. Noem, Rollins said the administration would work with state partners and pursue executive actions to halt the purchases.
She also announced plans to increase oversight of existing farmland owned by entities from countries including China, Russia and Iran.
Chinese investors currently own 265,000 acres of U.S. land, according to USDA data,about half of which is tied to a single company — Smithfield Foods, which was acquired in 2013 by WH Group, a Chinese conglomerate led by tycoon Wan Long.
Chinese ownership of U.S. farmland has dropped sharply in recent years, declining from 384,000 acres in 2021.
“No longer can foreign adversaries assume we’re not watching,” Hegseth said Tuesday. He added that the Pentagon would move to bar sales of farmland to foreign adversaries near military bases and said the effort would help secure the U.S. food supply for soldiers, “especially in a contingency.”
Lawmakers have stepped up scrutiny of farmland acquisitions by Chinese entities after a controversial land deal in North Dakota. In 2022, Chinese-owned Fufeng Group purchased 370 acres for a corn milling facility roughly 12 miles from Grand Forks Air Force Base. Local officials ultimately blocked the project, citing national security concerns.
The case drew attention to loopholes in the Treasury Department’s Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) regulations that allowed Chinese-owned firms to purchase land near military installations not formally designated as sensitive sites.
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