Arkansas officials took steps Tuesday to force a Chinese government-owned agricultural company to divest itself of 160 acres of Craighead County farmland and pay a $280,000 fine for failing to file timely disclosures to the state.
“The land in question is owned by Northrup King Seed Co., a subsidiary of Syngenta Seeds LLC, which is ultimately owned by China National Chemical Co. (ChemChina), a state-owned enterprise,” according to Attorney General Tim Griffin.
Griffin and Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders jointly announced the moves at a press conference at the state Capitol along with Agriculture Secretary Wes Ward. Several legislators also were in attendance.
Arkansas is “the first state to take an action like the one we’re announcing this morning” thanks to laws passed by the Legislature this year, Sanders said.
Sanders referred to the landowner as Syngenta and said the company uses the Northeast Arkansas acreage primarily for seed research. ChemChina is on a U.S. Department of Defense list of Chinese military companies, “posing a clear threat to our state,” the governor said.
“Seeds are technology,” Sanders said. “China’s state-owned corporations filter that technology back to their homeland, stealing American research and telling our enemies how to target American farms. That is a clear threat to our national security and to our great farmers.”
She noted that the Chinese government requires its citizens who live abroad to collaborate with its intelligence services. Arkansas welcomes Chinese and Russian citizens who have “given up foreign oppression for American freedom.”
“This is about where your loyalties lie. We simply cannot trust those who pledge allegiance to a hostile foreign power,” Sanders said.
Act 636 of 2023 bans parties from nine countries from owning agricultural land in Arkansas, Sanders said.
Griffin announced at the press conference that he was sending a letter to the Chinese company, giving it two years under the new state law to divest itself of the Northeast Arkansas farmland.
“This is smart. This is strategic,” the attorney general said.